• Voter registration fraud?

    From Ross Sauer@1:123/789 to All on Sat Apr 17 02:49:32 2010
    There needs to be a congressional proclamation to stop these ACORN voter fraudsters...oh wait a minute...

    Oh this is different...

    Petitioners conned voters into switching to the GOP
    By BRIAN JOSEPH
    THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

    Petitioners prowling parking lots and community college campuses tricked
    dozens of young Orange County voters into registering to vote as
    Republicans, an Orange County Register investigation has found.

    The con occurred at the end of January and the beginning of February at
    places like Cypress College and Golden West College, and outside of
    discount stores like Wal-Mart and Food 4 Less. It appears to be the same
    kind of voter registration fraud that engulfed Orange County four years
    ago and landed eight signature gatherers in jail.

    Since mid-March, state elections officials have received written
    complaints from at least 99 people who say they were registered to vote
    as a Republican without their consent. The Register found an additional
    74 voters who said they were duped or coerced into registering to vote
    as a Republican by signature gatherers who initially asked them to sign petitions for causes like legalizing marijuana, fighting cancer or
    cleaning up beaches.

    In all, the Register called 348 registered Republicans in central Orange
    County and reached 90 of them. Of those, only 16 said they wanted to be Republicans. The rest told stories of fast-talking petitioners, some advertising free sunglasses if they signed.

    All of the voters identified by the Register are listed as under 28
    years old; many said they knew little about politics or voting. A few,
    when told they were listed on the county voter rolls as a Republican,
    asked, "What is a Republican?"

    The voters are all residents of the 34th State Senate District in
    central Orange County, where the Republican Party has high hopes of
    ousting incumbent Democrat Lou Correa in the fall. The California
    Republican Party has a controversial policy of paying signature
    gatherers who sends them new GOP voter registration cards and the
    Republicans are offering as much as $8 for each new GOP registration in
    that district.

    Many believe the $8 "bounty" gives petitioners an incentive to commit
    fraud.

    In 2006, The Register found a similar fraud pattern in Orange County
    that was blamed, in part, on the bounty paid to signature gatherers.
    That year 167 voters complained to election officials that they were
    switched to Republican registration without their permission; The
    Register found another 112 voters who said they were tricked. Eleven
    signature gatherers were eventually convicted of falsifying
    registrations and other charges; eight went to jail.

    The Republican Party isn't likely to benefit from this scheme because
    many of the voters contacted by the Register said they don't vote
    Republican. The only beneficiaries appear to be the signature gatherers themselves.

    "I'm already anti-Republican and now they have people scamming people
    just to get money and just to get more voters?" said 25-year-old Bobbi
    Lee Smart, who says she was tricked into registering to vote as a
    Republican by a signature gatherer at Cypress College. "You guys suck."

    Four signature gatherers reached by The Register denied any wrongdoing.
    But a spokesman for the California Republican Party said it is taking
    the Register's findings seriously and has launched an extensive,
    internal review to see what happened.

    "The CRP has its most robust voter registration verification program in
    its history going on right now," said Mark Standriff, communications
    director for the California Republican Party. "We are committed to accountability and transparency throughout the process... Even one (bad registration) is not acceptable."

    Who are the signature gatherers? Using the affidavit numbers on each
    voter registration card, the Register traced the fraudulent
    registrations to at least 17 different petitioners, many of whom were
    employed by vendors with ties to the California Republican Party.

    Nine of those signature gatherers - Patrick Smith of Irvine, Andrew
    Ernst of Orange, Riley Youngdahl of San Clemente, Eduardo Roman of Aliso
    Viejo, Daniel Anthony of Rosemead, Louise Breneiser of Glendora, Ryan
    Kevane of Anaheim Hills, Eric Houskeeper of Laguna Beach and Helene
    Stanton - signed for 53 of the fraudulent registration cards identified
    by the Register, certifying they were present when the voters filled
    them out.

    http://tinyurl.com/y65x3wx

    --- Xnews/5.04.25
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