[Mb-civic] OHIO: The Greene County Lockdown
ean at sbcglobal.net
ean at sbcglobal.net
Wed Dec 15 22:26:39 PST 2004
http://www.truthout.org/docs_04/121404Z.shtml
Author's Note | I delivered the following remarks during a
rally on Boston Common on Sunday, December 12, 2004.
While I was there, I received this press release from the office
of Rep. John Conyers:
Conyers Alarmed at Efforts to Obstruct Ohio
Recount Effort, Calls Witness to Monday Hearing
to Detail Such Efforts
Yesterday, it came to the attention of the House
Judiciary Committee Democratic Staff that efforts
to audit poll records in Greene County, Ohio are
being obstructed by County Election officials
and/or Ohio Secretary of State Ken Blackwell.
According to Joan Quinn and Eve Robertson, two
election observers researching voting records,
Greene County officials initially gave Quinn and
Robertson access to poll records, and then abruptly
withdrew such access. Greene County Director of
Elections Carole Garman claimed that she had
withdrawn access to the voting records at the
direction of Secretary Blackwell. Regardless of who
ordered the denial of this access, such an action
appears to violate Ohio law. Later, at the same
office, election observers found the office unlocked,
and what appeared to be locked ballot boxes,
unattended. Prior to the withdrawal of access to the
books, observers had found discrepancies in
election records, and possible evidence of minority
vote suppression.
House Judiciary Committee Democrats wrote a
letter to Blackwell on December 2 requesting
answers to 34 questions about election
irregularities and fraud in Ohio. This letter
included questions about major discrepancies in
Perry County poll books. Since that letter,
additional documentation has been provided to the
Democratic staff demonstrating similar problems
in other counties.
Because of the urgency of the Greene County
matter, Congressman John Conyers, Jr., Ranking
member of the House Judiciary Committee, has
requested that Ms. Quinn testify at a hearing
scheduled Monday in Columbus, Ohio. Ms. Quinn
has agreed to do so and will also present sworn
statements from corroborating witnesses. Conyers
issued the following statement:
"The Recount effort is simply a search for the truth
of what happened during the 2004 Presidential
election in Ohio. We have now repeatedly seen
election officials obstruct and stonewall this search
for the truth. I am beginning to wonder what it is
they are trying to hide."
When all is said and done, the activities taking place in
Greene County could become the most important story from
the 2004 election. My remarks below expand further on this
issue. - wrp
The Greene County Lockdown
By William Rivers Pitt
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
Monday 13 December 2004
There are people out there who think we are crazy, who think
we are bitter-enders, sore losermen, conspiracy theorists and
tinfoil hatters. We just cannot accept the outcome of a truly
legitimate American election, and we are flailing about like
pathetic boated fish trying to change what cannot be changed.
Hm. I wonder why. Maybe because of stories like this one,
which started popping off late Friday night. This was the story
as it first began to develop: On Friday December 10, two
certified volunteers for the Ohio Recount team assigned to
Greene County were in process recording voting information
from minority precincts in Greene County, and were stopped
mid-count by a surprise order from Secretary of State
Blackwell's office. The Director Board of Elections stated that
"all voter records for the state of Ohio were "locked-down,"
and now they are "not considered public records."
The volunteers were working with voter printouts received
directly from Carole Garman, Director, Greene County Board
of Elections. Joan Quinn and Eve Roberson, retired attorney
and election official respectively, were hand-copying voter
discrepancies from precinct voting books on behalf of the
presidential candidates Mr. Cobb (Green) and Mr. Badnarik
(Libertarian), both of whom had legitimately requested the
recount.
One of the goals of their work was to determine how many
minority voters were unable to vote or denied voting at the
polls. Upon requesting copies of precinct records from
predominantly minority precincts, Ms. Garman contacted
Secretary of State Blackwell's office and spoke to Pat Wolfe,
Election Administrator. Ms. Wolfe told Ms. Garman to assert
that all voter records for the State of Ohio were "locked down"
and that they are "not considered public records."
Quinn and Roberson asked specifically for the legal authority
authorizing Mr. Blackwell to "lock down" public records.
Garman stated that it was the Secretary of State's decision.
Ohio statute requires the Directors of Boards of Election to
comply with public requests for inspection and copying of
public election records. As the volunteer team continued
recording information from the precinct records in question,
Garman entered the room and stated she was withdrawing
permission to inspect or copy any voting records at the Board
of Elections. Garman then physically removed the precinct
book from Ms. Roberson's hands. They later requested the
records again from Garman's office, which was again denied.
Ohio Revised Code Title XXXV Elections, Sec. 3503.26 that
requires all election records be made available for public
inspection and copying. ORC Sec. 3599.161 makes it a crime
for any employee of the Board of Elections to knowingly
prevent or prohibit any person from inspecting the public
records filed in the office of the Board of Elections. Finally,
ORC Sec. 3599.42 clearly states: "A violation of any
provision of Title XXXV (35) of the Revised Code constitutes
a prima facie case of election fraud within the purview of such
Title." (Source attribution)
By late Saturday night, however, this story had taken even a
wackier turn. The records taken from Quinn and Roberson's
hands on Friday stood in an unlocked Board of Elections
office Saturday morning, apparently overnight. Several
observers arrived Saturday morning, noticing cars in the
parking lot, and looked for officials in the office, but found
nobody in the unlocked building. Law enforcement and media
contacts had been alerted and were at the site before County
officials arrived. Deputy Director of Elections Lynn McCoy
arrived later and stated that all election records were still
"locked down" and remained unavailable to the public.after
having spent the night unsecured in an unlocked building on
the eve of a recount. (Source attribution)
Hm.
So there's that. But then there's this. On election night, Warren
County Ohio commissioners ordered a complete security
lockdown at the County Administration Building, citing a
terrorism threat. No one has offered a clear explanation for
why the lockdown happened. The lockdown was done upon
the recommendation of Frank Young, the county's emergency
services director, who said he got information from an FBI
agent. According to one source, the county was ranked 10 on a
1-to-10 threat scale. Young refused to identify the agent he
said gave him the warning, and the FBI said they never issued
any such warning, nor did they have any reason to suspect a
specific threat against Warren County. No one but the officials
in Warren County saw the need to lock all the doors, refuse
entry to the press or other observers of the vote count, and
generally treat the county building as if it were the Pentagon
itself.
So there's that. But then there's this. Most of you are aware, I
am sure, of the hearing held by Representative John Conyers
last week in Washington. Can we take a moment for a cheer
for Mr. Conyers for having the courage of his convictions.
The process towards that hearing began with the letter from
Rep. John Conyers to Ohio Secretary of State Blackwell. In
that letter, Conyers described a long series of irregularities in
the Ohio Presidential election that amounted to an accusation
of fraud. The letter was the basis for the hearing, and made
sure to invite Blackwell to participate. It is worth noting that
Blackwell did not show up.
The hearing itself was a showcase for both fact and passion.
The witnesses, the Representatives before them, and the
crowd that filled the room lit the place up with a concerned
electricity. Some believed the irregularities and outright fraud
which marred the Ohio vote require immediate redress, a
successful completion of which could come to overthrow the
results of last month's election. Others saw the hearings as a
gift to their children and the future, a means to ensure that any
and all elections to come will not suffer the kind of nonsense
that afflicted both November of 2004 and November of 2000.
The hearing took place in a unique moment in our history.
Election fraud and voter disenfranchisement are not new in
our history, but have been as much a part of the process as
campaign buttons and baby-kissing. The fact that the
electorate's voting habits are becoming more clearly drawn,
and the fact that so many were watching like hawks after
Florida in 2000, means that the standard-issue fraud which has
always existed now has a bright light shining upon it, and
means the new kinds of fraud involving electronic machines
and computer tabulators are likewise suffering intense
scrutiny. In this moment, that bright light means the problems,
both new and old, can be and must be addressed, repaired, and
purged from our democratic process.
Why, then, in this historic moment that benefits all Americans
regardless of party, is the Ohio GOP thwarting all attempts at
reform, thwarting attempts at even airing problems? You see,
the Ohio GOP got wind of Conyers' intention to hold a
hearing tomorrow in Columbus, at the City Hall, in the
chambers of the City Council. The Ohio GOP has denied all
requests for a room to hold this hearing. Conyers is going
anyway, along with all his people, and will have their hearing
on the damn City Hall steps if they have to.
But it is telling indeed that the Ohio GOP is refusing, flatly
refusing, to allow the public the opportunity to hear of the
problems that threaten the very basis of participatory
democracy.
There are people out there who think we are crazy, who think
we are bitter-enders, sore losermen, conspiracy theorists and
tinfoil hatters. We just cannot accept the outcome of a truly
legitimate American election, and we are flailing about like
pathetic boated fish trying to change what cannot be changed.
But the Ohio Secretary of State is brazenly breaking the law
by denying public access to public records. The terrorism
bugaboo was thrown in the way of those who wished to
observe the counting process in Warren County, though
nobody seems to know who tossed out the warning nor why
terrorists would want to blow something up in southwestern
Ohio. And now, legitimate hearings on these issues are being
thwarted.
If demanding answers to these questions, along with all the
other questions that have arisen - more than 30,000 reports of
voting irregularities and fraud all across the country, including
thousands of reports of malfunctioning electronic touch-screen
voting machines, plus the disenfranchisement of as many as a
million minority voters, and the startling reality that virtually
every single 'malfunction' or error favored George W. Bush -
if demanding answers to these questions makes me crazy, then
damn it, bring on the boys with the butterfly nets, because I
am completely out of my mind.
Hell, even the centrist shrinking violets at the DNC are
apparently joining the crazy wacko club. The Democrats used
their weekly radio address just yesterday to focus on ensuring
accurate ballot counts and elections free of voter intimidation.
Donna Brazile said on the radio, "America's story is one of
expanding opportunity and suffrage, and one of our
fundamental principles is that every eligible citizen is entitled
to cast his or her vote and have that vote counted. We owe it
to the students of Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, who
waited up to 10 hours to vote. We owe it to thousands of Ohio
voters who wonder whether their votes were counted with the
use of new electronic voting machines, and we owe it to
countless other Americans. There is no place in our
democracy for faulty voting equipment, long lines at the polls,
untrained poll workers and any forms of chads. As a nation,
we should not rest until our elections are free from the
problems of elections past and until all Americans can cast
their ballots on Election Day fully confident that their votes
have been counted."
I'd like to get back to the Conyers hearing last week for a
moment, and focus on the presence of Reverend Jesse
Jackson, and his son, at that event. Representative Jesse
Jackson Jr. made the point that we must have a standardized
national voting process and take the matter out of the hands of
individual states, which can keep the process "separate and
unequal." We must have a constitutional amendment
guaranteeing the right to vote. How can people argue that the
right to own a gun is explicitly stated in the constitution, and
then turn around and say it is acceptable to have the right to
vote only be 'implicit' in the constitution?
It was this last point, made over and over again by Reverend
Jackson, that drew the most applause from the audience and
attention from the Congressmen. In demanding a
constitutional amendment cementing the simple right to vote,
Jackson spoke of the long line that reached from Selma,
Alabama to Ohio, and into this room. "This is not about who
won or lost," he said. "This is about participating in
democracy. The 2004 election is not past-tense. We are not
whining. It is time to take this struggle to the streets and fully
legitimize this struggle." Well, here we are, Reverend. Here
we are.
The importance of the presence of Reverend Jackson was
described best by Cliff Arnebeck, who chairs Common Cause
Ohio. "If you look at who was here," said Arnebeck, "you had
leaders from the generally white political reform movement,
and leaders from the black civil rights movement. This is a
powerful coalition. We are not talking about one group having
dominance over the other, but a real partnership of the
traditional political reform community with the traditional
civil rights community, and Reverend Jackson is the one that
proposed it, has initiated the organization of it."
At the end of the day, the hearing was a beginning, a chance
for those fighting this fight to look upon one another and
know they are not alone. Rep. Conyers and his fellow
Congressmen are to be commended for putting the process in
motion. The most striking moment came when the hearing
ended, and all of the people assembled began embracing one
another. They had made their voices heard, they knew they
were not alone, and it smelled like vindication in there when
all was said and done.
The hearing was a beginning. There will be more, especially
in Ohio. The lawsuits will continue. Rep. Conyers intimated
that he might object to the seating of the Ohio Electors when
the certification process begins. The protests will continue to
grow across the country. Perhaps, if we can follow through
and accomplish the cleansing of our democratic process, we
will look back on that day in room 2237 of the Rayburn House
Office Building and know that yet another popular movement
towards achieving that more perfect union began there, in that
time, and in that place.
On this day, this very day four years ago, a man was anointed
President of the United States by the Supreme Court who did
not win that office. There are many reasons why this
happened, so many that I am not going to bother explaining all
of them. At the end of the day, the main reason why this
happened is straightforward and clear: George W. Bush
gained his office because we did not count all of the votes that
were cast, and the mainstream media smiled their way through
all the reports of voting irregularities and fraud. Every study
that came out after that election stated flatly that, had all the
votes been counted, George W. Bush would be peddling his
papers in West Texas, the war in Iraq would still be a
neoconservative pipe dream, and perhaps two towers would
still be casting their long shadows over the island of
Manhattan.
We did not count all the votes in 2000, and we are on the edge
of making the same mistake once again. Ohio Secretary of
State Blackwell is doing everything he can to make sure the
votes in his state are not being counted. Yet the fight
continues. Jon Bonifaz of the National Voting Rights Institute,
along with Cliff Arnebeck, will be filing their suit to demand
a recount tomorrow, armed with statistical analyses of vote
fraud, exit polls, and armed further with subpoenas for
forensic examinations of the voting machines.
I asked Bonifaz about his suit at the Conyers hearing. He said:
"The main focus is that we want a full recount of all votes cast
in Ohio for President in the 2004 election. While that recount
will continue past the time of the Electoral College meeting
on December 13th, we will insist that it be completed in a
timely manner, and by January 6th, when that recount is
completed, there may in fact be a different set of Electors. I
can't say for sure whether that will happen, but a recount is
important to ensure the proper counting of every vote."
If you want to help Bonifaz, go to DefendTheRecount.org and
join the legal defense fund. While you are at it, call or write
Representative Conyers and support him in his stated desire to
object to the seating of the Ohio electors if that recount is still
in process. Join with Common Cause and demand the recusal
of Secretary of State Blackwell from any process that involves
a recount, and alert the media to his blatantly illegal actions in
Greene County. Join the coalition being formed by Conyers
and Jackson.
Push your Senators and House Representatives to support the
GAO investigation into the election. Donate to the
organization that brought us all here today - you will find out
how shortly. I also strongly, strongly recommend that you join
the forums at DemocraticUnderground.com and seek out the
specific forum called 2004 Election Results and Discussion.
90% of what I have learned about this last election was
located thanks to the remarkable researchers and activists in
that place. Arm yourself with the facts.
By the way, Bonifaz and Arnebeck are working together on
this, as I said before.and the recounters who got shut out of
Greene County by Blackwell on Friday have contacted an
attorney.one Cliff Arnebeck. So stay tuned on that.
President John F. Kennedy once said, "We are not afraid to
entrust the American people with unpleasant facts, foreign
ideas, alien philosophies, and competitive values. For a nation
that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in
an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people." It
appears all to evident today that the government of this nation
is afraid of its people, afraid of the truth.
This is nothing new. Alexis De Toqueville observed long ago
that, "The surface of American society is covered with a layer
of democratic paint, but from time to time one can see the old
aristocratic colors breaking through."
We are seeing those colors breaking through today in the
privatization of the vote, in the denial of access to the results
of that vote, and in the complete blackout by the mainstream
news media of the simple fact that this is happening. Yet here
we stand, and here we will remain. I support the effort to pass
a constitutional amendment establishing the explicit right to
vote in this country. A federal right to vote would bolster the
National Voter Registration Act standards for voter
registration activities, while also prohibiting voter
intimidation and granting the Attorney General the power to
intervene where voting irregularities of fraud occurs.
You may groan at that last bit, remembering who sits in the
AG chair today, and who will sit there when Ashcroft is gone,
but this is a fight for the future, and we will clean that house
one day and seat an attorney general who is not...how do I put
this? One day we will seat an attorney general who
understands his or her job involves more than frightening
people on cue whenever Bush lands in political hot water. A
federal right to vote makes all of the things we have seen
happening since the November election a matter of
constitutional law. Diebold would be exposed by this.
Blackwell would be exposed by this. The truth would be
exposed by this.
I can think of nothing more important than the defense of our
right to vote, I can think of nothing more important than the
demand that all votes be counted, and I can think of nothing
more important than the fight to cleanse our system of those
who would steal from us these basic, essential democratic
requirements. I can think of no coherent argument against
enshrining our right to vote within the sacred document that
defines us as a nation.
This is not a partisan political issue. I do not know what the
party registration was of the woman going through
chemotherapy, who fainted in line while waiting to vote. She
left the line without voting because the line was too long,
because there were not enough machines at her polling place. I
do not know the party registration of the single mom who
would have gotten fired from her job had she stood in that
long line to vote. What about the man who was in the hospital
and did not receive his absentee ballot, so he stood in that line
with an IV in his arm. I have no idea who these people would
of voted for. I couldn't care less. These people, and millions
more besides, were disenfranchised in this last election. This
is intolerable. Period.
We stand upon the precipice of history. What we do now
defines our future. Thank you for being here, thank you for
standing up, thank you for your patriotism. Thank you.
William Rivers Pitt is a New York Times and internationally
bestselling author of two books - 'War on Iraq: What Team
Bush Doesn't Want You to Know' and 'The Greatest Sedition
Is Silence.'
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