Postal Experts Hunt for 60,000 Missing Ballots in Florida
Tuesday, November 2, 2004 at 02:58AM
TheSpook
U.S. Postal Service investigators on Wednesday were trying to find
thousands of absentee ballots that should have been delivered to voters
in one of Florida's most populous counties, officials said. The
issue evoked memories of the polling problems that bedeviled the
Florida election in 2000 and which the state has been trying to address
before next Tuesday's presidential election, which is again expected to
be a very tight race. Broward deputy supervisor of elections Gisela
Salas said 60,000 absentee ballots, accounting for just over 5 percent
of the electorate in the county north of Miami, were sent out between
Oct. 7 and Oct. 8 to voters who would not be in town on election day.
While some had begun to be delivered, her office had been inundated
with calls from anxious voters who still had not received their
ballots. "It's really inexplicable at this point in time and the matter
is under investigation by law enforcement," Salas told Reuters. "It was
basically our first major drop of the absentee ballots," Salas said.
She said postal service officials had assured Broward elections
supervisor Brenda Snipes that the ballots had moved out of the post
office to which they had been taken by the elections office. U.S.
Postal Service Inspector Del Alvarez, whose federal agency is
independent from the U.S. Postal Service, said it had yet to be
determined if the ballots reached the post office. "It's highly
unlikely that 58,000 pieces of mail just disappeared," he said. "We're
looking for it, we're trying to find it if in fact it was ever
delivered to the postal service." [more]
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