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http://www.bradblog.com/archives/00002261.htm

"The Soon-to-be-Indicted Rep. Bob Ney of Ohio's Connection To Electoral
Fraud"

The Dots Connect Between Abramoff, Ohio 2004 Election Smokescreen and
Ney's Former Staffer Revealed to be on Diebold's Payroll While Working for
White House Law Firm

All the While as HAVA -- America's 'Election Reform' Bill -- is Used for
Political Payoff in the Bargain...


There's been a great deal of speculation, particularly in the light of
Jack Abramoff's recent guilty pleas, concerning the connection of
Congressman Bob Ney (R-OH) to Election Fraud in Ohio, vis a vis his
stewardship and authoring of the Help America Vote Act (HAVA) back in 2001
and 2002. The heavy-handed tactics he has taken since, in order to keep
the flawed act from being changed in any way over the years, along with
going to great lengths to keep the nation's eyes off of massive electile
dysfunction in Ohio and elsewhere since 2004, may finally get the
attention it all properly deserves.

Both Abramoff and his partner Michael Scanlon have directly informed
prosecutors of Ney's alleged wrong-doing in regard to money and gifts
given to Ney, in apparent exchange for support on various legislation and
even personal business deals. Ney, who chairs the important U.S. House
Administration Committee, has been fingered, and now subpoenaed, for
accepting illegal trips, gratuities and other apparent quid pro quo deals
with Abramoff's former firms, partners, friends and groups who had paid
both him and Scanlon as lobbyists.

His direct connection to the HAVA Election Reform bill passed in the wake
of the 2000 Florida Election Debacle, and his various extraordinary
efforts to specifically block amendments to the bill and to smokescreen
attempted investigations into his home state's conduct during the 2004
Election Debacle, has been less widely reported. Until now.

While Common Cause quietly reported in December of 2004 that Diebold --
the much-beleagured-of-late American Voting Machine company -- paid as
much as $275,000 to Abramoff's firm, Greenberg Traurig for lobbying work,
The BRAD BLOG has now found additional details that begin to shed new
light on Ney's personal connections to Diebold lobbyists.

Such personal connections include those with Ney's former chief of staff
turned lobbyist, David DiStefano, who has been working on behalf of
Diebold, Inc. and at least one other Voting Machine Company as a
registered lobbyist in the House going back to at least 2001. One of
DiStefano's online bios crows about his having "an insider’s edge to
hard-to-reach political officials." That "insider's edge" has proven to
have been a very worthwhile investment for the Voting Machine Companies
who'd purchased access into Ney's political office.

Congressional lobbying records reveal that Diebold, Inc. has paid at least
$180,000 to DiStefano and eventually his partner, Roy C. Coffee, to lobby
for the "Help America Vote Act" and other "Election Reform Issues" in
Congress since 2003. Another Electronic Voting Machine Company, AccuPoll,
Inc., also paid DiStefano some $70,000 to lobby for HAVA on their behalf
in 2002, although that relationship was apparently terminated once the
legislation was passed by Congress.

In turn, Ney's former employee DiStefano and Coffee themselves have given
nearly $20,000 to Bob Ney's campaigns dating back to 2002.

The connections of DiStefano and Coffee don't stop at Congress, however.
Both lobbyists now work out of the new Washington office of the
Texas-based law firm of Lock, Liddell & Sapp LLP -- the firm of George W.
Bush's White House Counsel Harriet Miers. And Coffee, himself, had
previously worked as a senior aide to then-Governor Bush back in Texas.

In addition to lobbying in favor of Electronic Voting, DiStefano and
Coffee were also paid thousands to lobby Ney on behalf of an obscure firm
by the name of FN Aviation, which later became known as FAZ Aviation.
FN/FAZ Aviation, the Columbus Dispatch reported last December, paid for
Ney's 2003 trip to England. On that trip, Ney met at a casino with FN
Aviation's director, Nigel Winfield, a three-time convicted felon, and
Fouad al-Zayat, the Syrian-born head of FN Aviation. Zayat, as reported by
NBC News, is known as "one of London's biggest gamblers."

As has also been reported by NBC and others, the apparently once-very
lucky Ney reported winning some $34,000 a few months later at that same
London casino, after an initial $100 bet "on two hands of a three-card
game of chance," according to his spokesperson Brian Walsh. Ney, who
coincidentally carried at least $30,000 in credit card debt in 2002, was
fortunate to be able to report that the debt was paid off in full by the
end of 2003.

The dots begin converging, however, in regard to both large campaign
contributions and lobbying done by Ney's former chief of staff, DiStefano
along with Coffee on behalf of both FN/FAZ Aviation and Diebold, Inc.

Ney was one of the original authors and lead co-sponsors of HAVA, and a
fierce defender of both the act and the effort to keep further legislation
from moving forward in Congress that would mandate Voter Verified Paper
Ballots for electronic voting machines made by Diebold and other e-voting
vendors.

In 2004, prior to the Presidential Election, Ney went so far as to send a
"Dear Colleague" letter signed along with the other HAVA co-sponsors, to
members of congress urging them not to amend the original legislation. He
argued at the time that paper records on such machines would somehow
disenfranchise disabled voters, who had been cleverly afforded a special
provision in the bill which mandated at least one disabled-accessable
device in every voting precinct in the country. That device, of course,
would be a paperless touch-screen electronic voting machine, like the ones
made by Diebold, which, legislators, vendors and lobbyists would later
proffer, were required to meet provisions of the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA).

Ney had also personally gone out of his way to keep Rep. Rush Holt's
(D-NJ) "Voter Confidence and Increased Accessibility Act" (HR 550), which
would mandate paper records for all votes cast, from ever seeing the light
of day in the House Administration Committee. That, despite Holt's bill
having now nearly 160 bi-partisan co-sponsors. Ney has succeeded
brilliantly at squashing Holt's bill, first proposed as HR 2239 back in
2003, as it continues to both gain co-sponsors and gather dust as the
powerful Republican committee chair still refuses to allow it even to be
brought up for hearings.

The American Prospect's Art Levine broke a superb exposé last May
concerning Ney's alleged payoffs from a number of the Indian tribes that
now-disgraced, once-uber-lobbyist Abramoff was representing in exchange
for promises to support their hope for new gambling legislation back in
2002.

"Just met with Ney!!! We're f'ing gold!!!! He's going to do Tigua," wrote
Abramoff to Scanlon in an Email, after Ney reportedly promised to add the
Tribe's hoped-for legislation to HAVA while the bill was still pending.

Ney then told the tribes -- who had been instructed by Abramoff and
Scanlon to give tens of thousands of dollars to his campaign and to pay
for a $100,000 trip to play golf at St. Andrews in Scotland -- that he was
working with the Democratic Senator from Connecticut, Chris Dodd, to add
gambling language in HAVA that would be favorable to the tribes.

In reality, Dodd had rejected the idea early on in no uncertain terms, as
Levine reports, but that didn't keep Ney from spinning tales to the tribal
groups. He told them on several occassions, at least once personally, that
things were moving smartly forward as he kept accepting more cash and
gifts from them along the way.

Finally, when the HAVA legislation was passed, and the promised language
was nowhere to be found, Ney informed the tribes that Dodd had reneged on
the deal at the last minute.

That was, of course, not true, since Dodd had rejected the plan months
earlier.

But as the spotlight of corruption has finally begun to shine bright and
clear in the Mainstream Media onto Ney, renewed interest in his support
and authorship of HAVA itself -- along with the connections between that
legislation, chicanery in Ohio's Election, Abramoff and several other GOP
operative and lobbying firms' merry band of pay-for-players -- are helping
to bubble up towards the surface a few previously overlooked, but very
important, details that may finally now receive the attention they always
deserved from the Mainstream Media...

The BRAD BLOG has been reporting since early 2005 about Ney's role in
authoring and co-sponsoring HAVA along with his various attempts to keep
it from being amended to require Voter Verified Paper Ballots with every
vote cast. More so, we've been reporting on his very specific efforts to
smoke-screen the mountain of evidence suggesting massive fraud in Ohio's
2004 Presidential Election by -- among other things -- holding hearings in
his House Administration Committee meant quite clearly to deflect the
focus from the rampant Electoral Fraud in the Buckeye State in 2004
towards the trumped-up imaginery epidemic of Voter Fraud in that state and
elsewhere around the country.

Ney's hearings, ostensibly publicized as "investigations" into the many
Election Irregularities in Ohio, even went so far as to hear testimony
from a self-described "voting rights" group calling themselves the
American Center for Voting Rights (ACVR). The tax-exempt 501(c)3,
self-proclaimed "non-partisan" group was the only such "voting rights"
group to give testimony to the committee. However, as The BRAD BLOG
discovered at the time, the brand-new organization was little more than a
phony GOP front group. It had been co-founded by two top-level
Bush/Cheney/RNC operatives, Mark F. "Thor" Hearne and Jim Dyke.

As we reported back then, the phony ACVR had been formed just days prior
to their giving testimony to Ney's congressional committee. The hearings
-- held in Columbus, OH -- were on March 21, 2005. Yet the first known
record of ACVR's emergence in the world was on its Internet domain
registration (AC4VR.com) which was created on March 17, 2005 -- just two
business days prior to the hearings!

Hearne -- who had been National General Counsel for Bush/Cheney '04 Inc.
-- identified himself in his testimony at the hearings only as "a longtime
advocate of voting rights and an attorney experienced in election law." He
then was allowed to go on to testify about unsubstantiated, and later
completely discredited charges of voter fraud while others testified
misleadingly about long voting lines in all of Ohio's counties, instead of
just those precincts which leaned heavily Democratic. Many of those
Left-leaning precincts turned out to have had, in several cases, fewer
voting machines deployed in the November general election than they
reportedly had in the primary races just several months earlier.

For his part, Hearne's partner Dyke had been the RNC's Communication
Director up to that point. Dyke now works in the office of Vice-President
Dick Cheney and apparently continues his affiliation with the
"non-partisan" ACVR in the bargain.

The HAVA legislation, while it does not explicitly require states or
counties to upgrade their voting equipment to electronic touch-screen
systems made by Ohio's Diebold, Inc. and others -- even while the
opportunistic Voting Machine Vendors and the lazy Mainstream Media have
otherwise perpetuated that myth for several years -- it does mandate that
every precinct have at least one voting device that is accessable to
disabled voters so that they may be able to cast their ballots secretly
and without assistance.

Hence, Ney and the other original authors and lead co-sponsors of HAVA --
Dodd (D-CT) and Mitch McConnell (R-KY) in the Senate and Steny Hoyer
(D-MD) in the House -- have been playing up the "Disabled Voters Need
Electronic Voting Machines!" card since its inception by hauling out
various spokespeople from disabilities groups such as the National
Federation for the Blind (NFB) and the American Association of People with
Disabilities (AAPD). Representatives from those groups have testified at
hearings and elsewhere to help make the case that their members simply
must have computerized voting machines -- with no paper ballots -- or
their civil rights will be denied.

What is rarely reported, when folks such as the AAPD's Jim Dickson
inevitably show up at these hearings to testify, is that the NFB received
a contribution of one million dollars from Diebold and Dickson's AAPD has
received at least $26,000 from them as well, as reported by the NY Times
and others.

(NOTE: Those spokespeople from disabilities groups not on the Diebold
payroll, who don't buy into the tortured notion that they must have
paperless touch-screen voting machines in order to protect their
civil-rights -- folks like David Dixon of Florida's Handicapped Adults of
Volusia County (HAVOC) -- are rarely called to testify at such hearings as
those trumped-up by Bob Ney and friends.)

In addition to the "Dear Colleague" letter that Ney wrote (signed by him
and his co-sponsors of the HAVA legislation) in 2004, asking members of
congress not to amend the act to require paper trails, Ney has made every
effort to ensure that the myriad reports of massive voter
disenfranchisment and electoral irregularities that occurred in Ohio
remain little more than "conspiracy theory", as far as both the Mainstream
Media and the majority of the American electorate perceive the matters.
He, and others who have lobbied hard on behalf of Diebold have continued
to misleadingly forward the idea that what occurred in 2004, and
subsequently in 2005 -- where some 44 out of 88 counties in Ohio went
electronic for the first time -- is no cause for alarm. It's all little
more than the imaginery ruminations of Democratic-party John Kerry
supporters, according to such folks. That, despite the fact that it has
been the Green and Liberterian parties who have, by and large, waged the
most aggressive attempt to have votes counted in Ohio, along with the
extraordinarily well-documented reports of chicanery exposed nationally
throughout various local media. More information in that regard will
likely surface via the still-pending lawsuit on all of this brought by the
League of Women Voters in Ohio.

Add that to the "staggeringly impossible" results of the 2005 Election
results there which were stunning, to say the least, and the shamefully
under-reported story of the non-partisan Governmental Accountability
Office's (GAO) damning report on HAVA and its gross failures released last
September. All told, it would seem that Ney and the Voting Machine
Companyies like Diebold have had every reason to squash whatever reporting
they could on these matters, and so far, they've gotten the job largely
done. At least in the mainstream outlets.

And finally then, it has recently been revealed that Diebold itself was
also paying Abramoff's firm Greenberg Traurig directly for work in June of
2004 which has yet to be fully detailed or explained in any way.

A payment stub [http://www.bbvdocs.org/moneytrail/greenberg.pdf] and
pre-check-register [http://www.bbvdocs.org/diebold/pre-check-register.pdf]
revealing a $12,500 payment for the month, made from Diebold to Greenberg
Traurig was discovered in a dumpster at Diebold's McKinney, TX facility in
July of that year by electronic voting watchdog group BlackBoxVoting.org.

Perhaps that payment was part of the $275,000 we mentioned previously, as
reportedly paid to Diebold. Though we've yet to find a reference to the
work by Abramoff's old lobbying firm on behalf of Diebold listed in the
Congressional lobbying database. So exactly what those payments were meant
for, and where they ultimately ended up, remains unclear, at least to us,
at this time.

It seems that the Tigua Indian tribe, which paid $32,000 to Ney and his
political action committee on Abramoff and Scanlon's directive, and the
two other tribes who paid $100,000 to send them all golfing in St. Andrews
ultimately received little if anything for their investment.

Diebold, Inc. on the other hand, seems to have received quite a bit in
return for their investment. At least in light of the continued lack of
media scrutiny and congressional oversight their electronic touch-screen
voting machines -- now proven on several occassions to be fully hackable
and wholly unsecure -- have received from legislators like Rep. Bob Ney of
Ohio. The same Bob Ney who has worked so hard on their behalf -- not the
voters' -- to ensure that all of those poor disabled folks would have at
least one voting machine of the type manufactured by Diebold Inc., in
every single precinct, in every single county, in every single state in
the country in 2006. It's mandated by law, after all, by Bob Ney's Help
America Vote Act of 2002. In this case, it seems, they got what they paid
for.

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