BOMBSHELL: BROWARD COUNTY ELECTION WORKERS REMOVED
BALLOTS FROM VOTING STATION, By Steven
Ahle, 11/9/18.
Broward
County workers removed paper ballots and loaded them into a rental truck,
without officials supervising the move. Considering the fact that in Broward
County for some strange reason there were 24,000 fewer votes for the Senate
than any other statewide race on the ballot and the head of Broward County
elections had destroyed the paper ballots in 2016, it appears to have all the
earmarks of voter fraud.
Why
were these ballots removed on election night before all the counting was
done? Can you think of one reasonable explanation for their removal, because I
sure can’t? In case of a recount, those ballots would be needed, unless of
course there was 24,000 of them with Rick Scott’s name on them. I am not saying
it is definitely voter fraud, but I am saying it doesn’t look kosher.
“This
violates all chain of custody requirements for paper ballots,” argues
Independent Congressional candidate for Florida’s 23rd District, Tim Canova.
They were
transferring ballots around without any security officials in sight! One of the women
moving ballot boxes even asked the witness to help them!
Florida voter JoAnn
Knox posted an extensive play-by-play to her Facebook page explaining what she
witnessed with the paper ballots at a Broward County polling site in
Plantation, Florida District 23 on election night.
By the time I was allowed to
finally enter, (around 7:25) they had already started packing up and had pulled the
tabulation tapes from the scanners. What I witnessed for the next hour was a
room full of people, operating 3 different precincts in the same room,
frantically packing everything up and running around looking for things.
Where’s the zero starts?
Where’s the digital drives and the cases. Who has
the phones? Etc. Packing/signing/bagging/boxing.
It was crazy. One lady even asked me if I wanted to help. They just wanted out.
Quickly.
What struck me the most was the
total lack of “chain of custody”. Everything got sealed with thick plastic zip tie type fasteners.
There were green, red, and blue ones and they did
have numbers on them, but, it didn’t seem to matter what color went on what and
I did not see anyone logging what number zip tie sealed any given thing.
These ties were also used to seal the blue bags filled with the paper
ballots
And, one thing that really stuck
with me was the fact that ziplock bags of these ties were just laying around on
the tables for anyone to take. I kept thinking that there really was nothing
guaranteeing that those ballot bags couldn’t be opened and resealed (with no
way of anyone knowing).
Once they posted the results on
the door, I started photographing the Congressional race tallies
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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