Ohio vote count battles escalate amidst new evidence of potential criminal activity
Wednesday, December 22, 2004 at 11:59PM
TheSpook
The epic legal battle over Ohio's
presidential vote count is back in the state Supreme Court, with an
election challenge claiming George W. Bush was wrongly declared the
winner on Nov. 2 and seeking a court-ordered reversal of that victory.
Meanwhile, efforts to recount Ohio's vote may have been fatally tainted
by the Republican Party, raising questions of what the GOP has to hide,
and prompting demands for criminal prosecution. New affidavits point to
possible criminal activity by top Ohio election officials, raising yet
more questions about the 2004 vote. Rhonda J. Frazier, a former
employee of the Ohio Secretary of State's office, has confirmed in an
affidavit taken by Cynthia Butler, working with freepress.org, that the
Office had secret slush funds. Frazier says it also failed to comply
with the requirements of "The Voting Reform Grant" that required all
the voting machines in Ohio to be inventoried and tagged for security
reasons. "I was routinely told to violate the bidded contracts to order
supplies from other companies for all 17 Secretary of State offices
throughout the State which were cheaper vendors, leaving a cash surplus
differential in the budget," Frazier states, "After complaining about
the office's repeated practices of violating grants and contracts I was
fired." Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell has come under intense
fire for his role in officiating the disputed Ohio balloting and vote
count. Blackwell served as co-chair of the Bush-Cheney campaign while
running an election he says went "smoothly." [more]
Congressman Feeney implicated in vote fraud [more]
American democracy hangs by a thread in Ohio [more]
Ohio recount: Ballot after ballot examined in hushed room as campaigns watch [more] and [more]
Theft of the Election, Redux. Why 2000 was Prelude to 2004 -- and the Democratic Party Got Mugged a Second Time [more]