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Diebold Memos Disclose Florida 2000 E-Voting Fraud
Friday, 24 October 2003, 11:18 am
Article: Alastair Thompson  

The Diebold Memos' Smoking Gun
Volusia County Memos Disclose Election 2000 Vote Fraud
By Alastair Thompson

http://www.blackboxvoting.com
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"DELAND, Fla., Nov. 11 - Something very strange happened on election
night to Deborah Tannenbaum, a Democratic Party official in Volusia
County. At 10 p.m., she called the county elections department and
learned that Al Gore was leading George W. Bush 83,000 votes to 62,000.
But when she checked the county's Web site for an update half an hour
later, she found a startling development: Gore's count had dropped by
16,000 votes, while an obscure Socialist candidate had picked up
10,000--all because of a single precinct with only 600 voters."
- Washington Post Sunday , November 12, 2000 ; Page A22

Yes. Something very strange happened in Volusia County on election night
November 2000, the night that first Gore won Florida, then Bush, and then
as everybody can so well remember there was a tie.

Something strange indeed. But what exactly? In the above report ( click
for full version), written days after the election, hotshot Washington
Post reporter Dana Milbank goes on to attribute the strange 16,022
negative vote tally from Volusia's precinct 216 to an apparently innocent
cause.

"�. faulty 'memory cards' in the machines caused the 16,000-vote
disappearance on election night. The glitch was soon fixed," he wrote.

But thanks to recent investigations into Black Box Voting by Washington
State writer Bev Harris we now know this explanation is not correct. In
fact it is not even in the ballpark.

According to recently discovered internal Diebold Election Systems memos,
Global Election Systems' (which was later purchased by Diebold) own
technical staff were also stumped by the events in Volusia County/

In Chapter 11 of her new book "Black Box Voting In the 21st Century"
released early today in .PDF format at Blackboxvoting.com and here at
Scoop Ms Harris observes.


"If you strip away the partisan rancor over the 2000 election, you are
left with the undeniable fact that a presidential candidate conceded the
election to his opponent based on [results from] a second card that
mysteriously appears, subtracts 16,022 votes, then just as mysteriously
disappears."
Working in parallel with Ms Harris Scoop has also been inquiring into the
events on election night in Volusia county. Much of the material that
follows is similar to that which appears in Chapter 11 of her book.

The starting point in this shocking discovery about election 2000 came in
a series of internal Diebold ES technical support memos.

The following is an abbreviated version of the exchange concerning the
peculiar events in Volusia county. For the purposes of research the
exchange is included in full as an Appendix to this report (APPENDIX
TWO). The discussion took place in early 2001 as an audit was underway in
Volusia county into the events.


**********
(NOTE: The names below each extract link to the full text of the emails
in the appendices below.)


I need some answers! Our department is being audited by the County. I
have been waiting for someone to give me an explanation as to why
Precinct 216 gave Al Gore a minus 16022 when it was uploaded. Will
someone please explain this so that I have the information to give the
auditor instead of standing here "looking dumb".
Lana Hires � Volusia County Florida - January 17, 2001 8:07 AM

My understanding is that the card was not corrupt after (or before)
upload. They fixed the problem by clearing the precinct and re-uploading
the same card. So neither of these explainations washes. That's not to
say I have any idea what actually happened, its just not either of those�

The problem is its going to be very hard to collect enough data to really
know what happened. The card isn't corrupt so we can't post-mortem it
(its not mort).

Ken Clark � Diebold ES R&D Manager � January 18, 2001 1:41 PM

- the negative numbers on media display occurred when Lana attempted to
reupload a card or duplicate card. Sophia and Tab may be able to shed
some light here, keeping in mind that the boogie man may me reading our
mail. Do we know how this could occur? 

John McLaurin - Diebold ES - 18 Jan 2001 15:44:50

The problem precinct had two memcory cards uploaded. The second one is
the one I believe caused the problem. They were uploaded on the same port
approx. 1 hour apart. As far as I know there should only have been one
memory card uploaded. I asked you to check this out when the problem
first occured but have not heard back as to whether this is true. 

When the precinct was cleared and re-uploaded (only one memory card as
far as I know) everything was fine. 
�
Given that we transfer data in ascii form not binary and given the way
the data was 'invalid' the error could not have occured during
transmission. Therefore the error could only occur in one of four ways: 
�
[4.] There is always the possiblity that the 'second memory card' or
'second upload' came from an un-authorised source.

Tab Iredale - Diebold ES - 18 Jan 2001 13:31

If this problem is to be properly answered we need to determine where the
'second' memory card is or whether it even exists. Heh. Second shooter
theory. All we need now is a grassy knoll.

Ken Clark � Diebold ES R&D Manager � 18 Jan 2001 16:42:50

I will be visiting with Lana on Monday and will ascertain the particulars
related to the second memory card. One concern I�ve had all along is �if�
we are getting the full story from Lana.

I�ll be back in touch and thanks for all of y�alls (that�s southern for
all of you) help.

John McLaurin � Diebold ES - Thu, 18 Jan 2001 16:56:06


**********
Unfortunately whether or not John McLaurin got to the bottom of the
mystery of Volusia County is something the memos cannot tell us.

Searches of the Diebold memos database find a single followup memo from
McLaurin about the Checksum Errors experienced in Volusia, but nothing on
the mysterious 16,022 negative vote count.

Which leaves us where exactly?

What we know from the memos can be summarised as follows:

- Two memory cards were uploaded from Volusia Couny's precinct 216, the
second one was loaded sometime close to 2am in the morning. It
automatically replaced the first card's results and reduced Gore's total
by 16,022 votes and added several thousand votes to Bush plus a variety
of minor candidates;
- Both memory cards loaded into the system clean and without errors,
indicating (contrary to the official line) that they were not faulty;
- After the error was noticed the original card was reloaded and the
mistake was rectified;
- The error was introduced in such a way that the total number of votes
remained unchanged (again something that could not happen by chance.);
- According to the technical boffins, the chance of the memory card being
corrupted and still passing the checksum error test are less than 60,000
to 1;
- The technical managers at Diebold Election Systems considered it a
reasonable possibility that the second card was part of deliberate
conspiracy to rig the election results.

In her book Bev Harris explains the issue of whether the card was a
chance fault or a deliberate example of tampering"


"A memory card is like floppy disk. If you have worked with computers for
any length of time you will know that a disk can go bad. When it does,
which of the following is most likely? In an Excel spreadsheet that you
saved on a "bad disk," might it read a column of numbers correct the
first time: "1005, 2109, 3000, 450�" but the second time, replace the
numbers like this: "1005, 2109, -16022, 450�" Or is it more likely that
the "bad disk" will�fail to read the file at all, crash your computer,
give you an error message, or make weird humming and whirring noises."
source: page 239, Chapter 11, "Black Box Voting in the 21st Century"

However officially, as we learned earlier, the explanation given publicly
- and accepted without demur by the media - for the strange events in
Volusia county is that there was simply a "faulty memory card". 

The "faulty memory card" explanation is also included in a CBS News
Network investigation into the Election 2000 debacle. 

And it is here that we find a considerable amount of information about
just how significant the Volusia County events were on election night.

The first thing we learn from CBS's investigation into the events of
election night is that according to the Voter News Service (VNS) exit
polls for Florida Al Gore should have won comfortably.


7:00 PM: The vast majority of Florida polls close. CBS News decides not
to project a winner in the Florida Presidential race at poll closing,
even though the best estimate, based upon exit-poll interviews from the
45 survey precincts, shows Gore leading Bush by 6.6 points. The Decision
Desk decides to wait for some actual votes from sample precincts to
confirm the exit-poll results.
7:40 PM: The VNS computation shows a "call" status in the Florida
Presidential race. This status means that statistically Gore is leading,
but the Decision Team needs to check more data.

Source 

VNS eventually officially called the Florida race to Gore at 7.52pm,
notwithstanding comments early in the vote count from George Bush that he
was confident he would win both Florida and Pennsylvannia (comments which
were never fully explained).

With the benefit of hindsight we think we now know that the VNS data was
wrong. That is certainly what the CBS inquiry found. 

In the report attached below there are a range of explanations for this
given [click here to view], none of them adequately explain the magnitude
of the error however.

Most of the news networks followed the VNS call giving Florida to Gore.
And by 8.02pm all networks had announced Gore as the winner in Florida.
And it wasn't till 9pm that some doubts about this call started to
emerge.

First up a significant error - attributed to a typing mistake - was found
in the VNS data at 9.07pm. This led to closer examination of the rest of
the data and the incoming returns. By around 10pm the Florida calls to
Gore were all officially withdrawn. This is recorded in the CBS report as
follows:


9:54 PM: The CBS News Decision Desk recommends that the call in Florida
for Gore be withdrawn. CBS is in a local cutaway at 9:54 PM (the seven
minutes at the end of the hour when local stations broadcast their own
election results), and so CBS does not withdraw the call until 10:00 PM.
10:16 PM: VNS retracts its Florida call for Gore.

- Source

The CBS timeline then jumps forward four hours to 2am EST. 

By now an apparently substantial lead of 29,000 votes has opened up in
favour of George Bush.


2:09 AM: VNS adds Volusia County's erroneous numbers to its tabulated
vote. With 171 out of 172 precincts in the county reporting, Gore's vote
drops by more than 10,000 while Bush's rises by almost the same amount.
This 20,000-vote change in one county increases Bush's VNS statewide lead
to more than 51,000 votes.
- Source

What the news networks, and the Al Gore, camp do not realise at this
point in the evening is that over 24,000 of votes that make up this
significant lead are attributable to two Diebold Election Systems
computer errors. 

First there are the 16,022 votes stolen from Gore in Volusia county by
the "faulty memory card". Meanwhile over in Brevard County another error
- also involving Global Elections System (the predecessor of Diebold)
equipment is responsible for a further 4000 votes being lopped off the
Gore total.

And it is also worth noting that nobody knows whether the Brevard and
Volusia county errors were the only ones in play at this time. These
errors were both big ones. They were noticed and corrected on the night.
How many smaller vote subtractions could have taken place on the night?
Theoretically hundreds. As Dana Milbank's Washington Post report shows it
was only because someone noticed the error in Volusia that it was
corrected and remarkably the software itself contains no automatic system
for rejecting negative vote totals being reported by precincts, events
which by definition can only be nefarious and wrong.

At 2am another VNS error came into play. VNS's estimates of the
outstanding votes underestimated those that remained to be counted by
half, around 180,000. The two errors combined led news executives at CBS
to conclude that Bush's final winning margin in Florida would be around
30,000 votes. At this stage Bush had a lead of around 50,000 votes and
late reporting precincts were expected to pare this back as many of them
were in Democrat leaning counties.

At 2.16am Fox and NBC called the race to Bush, unaware that the Volusia
error had now been discovered. Over at Associated Press � the news
service that Network News controllers do not read - the margin to Bush
had by now fallen to 30,000 after correcting the Volusia error.

At 2.17am and 2.20am the remaining two major networks CBS and ABC called
the race to Bush. Their decision continued to be bolstered by the VNS
data stream - which even at 2.47am - was still recording a margin to Bush
of close to 50,000 votes.

Remarkably it was not till 2.51am that VNS fixed the Volusia error in its
data. 

Meanwhile with all the networks showing the race for the White House won
by Bush, the pressure is mounting on Gore to concede. 

In the book, �Too Close to Call� by journalist Jeffrey Toobin, the author
gives a behind-the-scenes account of how Gore reacted when the television
networks concluded that Bush had taken Florida.

�Al Gore happened to be in the staff room on the seventh floor when the
votes spiked up in Bush�s favor. Dressed casually, the vice president was
watching television while lying on the floor, with his chin propped up in
his hands. As a result of the Volusia votes, Fox News called Florida�and
the presidency�for Bush at 2:16 a.m. CBS and NBC followed suit a minute
later and ABC came in at 2:20 a.m.,� Toobin wrote in his book.


"Following the news reports, Gore was silent and absorbed the news. A
moment later he told members of his campaign that he was ready to concede
the election to Bush, which he did several minutes later over the
telephone.
"Unwilling to take the television networks reports at face value, one of
Gore�s campaign staffers did a little investigating and discovered that
the networks erred in stating that 50,000 votes from Volusia county were
cast for Bush. Turns out that Gore was ahead by 13,000 votes in Volusia
and trailing Bush by 6,000 votes overall. Something was wrong in Volusia
it would be revealed later.

One of Gore�s campaign advisers then checked Florida�s law on recounts.
The nearly dead heat between Bush and Gore in Florida and the fact that
Gore was ahead in Volusia County meant a mandatory recount. It was time
to rescind Gore�s concession to Bush and scrutinize the ballots. Gore was
traveling in a motorcade en route to deliver a concession speech to his
supporters. His staff stopped him. At this point, the margin between Bush
and Gore was down to 2,000 votes. A recount was all but certain."

Gore called Bush and Gore�s staff surrounded the vice president to listen
in on what would become a historic conversation at 2:30 a.m.

�Circumstances have changed dramatically since I first called you,� Gore
said to Bush, Toobin wrote. �The state of Florida is too close to call.�

�Are you saying what I think you�re saying?� Bush asked according to
Toobin. �Let me make sure that I understand. You�re calling back to
retract that concession?� Gore sensed an annoyance in Bush�s tone and
shot back �you don�t have to be snippy about it."

Toobin says Bush then told Gore that his �little brother�, Florida Gov.
Jeb Bush, had assured him that he won the state of Florida and for that
matter the presidency of the United States. 

�Let me explain something,� Toobin quoted Gore as saying in his response
to Bush. �Your little brother is not the ultimate authority on this.�

�You do what you have to do,� Bush said and hung up the phone on Gore.
When Gore turned around to face his staff they exploded in cheers. 

It is not till 3.10am that the CBS news controllers notice the huge
difference between their numbers and those of AP which by now show the
margin to Bush at under 10,000.

We also know, thanks to the CBS inquiry report, that by around 3.40am the
Gore camp had decided not to concede. Gore Campaign Chairman William
Daley rang CBS News President Andrew Heyward in the control room and
asked him whether CBS would be reversing its call soon.

CBS's Andrew Heyward waited another 15-20 minutes after the phone call
before ordering CBS to officially withdraw the call to Bush. And by
4.05am all the other networks had also withdrawn the call. 

By 4.10am the reported Bush lead in the race had dropped to 1800 votes,
and thereabouts it remained until the first recount - albeit the Florida
Secretary of State's office website reported the race to Gore on the day
after the vote.

And it is there that the narrative in this tale ends and the analysis
starts.

In its internal conclusions about these events the CBS inquiry team found
the two Diebold County level errors, Volusia and Brevard, were conclusive
in their networks decision to call the race to Bush.


" The mistakes, both of which originated with the counties, were
critical, since there were only about 3 percent of the state's precincts
outstanding at this time. They incorrectly increased Bush's lead in the
tabulated vote from about 27,000 to more than 51,000. Had it not been for
these errors, the CBS News call for Bush at 2:17:52 AM would not have
been made."
- source

You do not get much clearer than that. 

The record already shows that events of election night 2000 turned on the
errors in the Volusia and Brevard vote counts. Both of which occurred on
Global Election Systems (now Diebold) equipment.

Of course we now know Al Gore did not concede. 

But had he done so would that have altered what followed? Would there
have been the hanging-chad phenomena, the lawsuits over recounts and the
recriminations?

Most of what is contained in the preceding analysis is well trodden
territory. Everybody knows that the TV networks screwed up big time on
election night, and the issue of bias at those networks has also been
well traversed. 

What has not been discussed, or even conceived of till now, is that the
events that occurred between around midnight and 4am might have been the
result not of mistakes but of organised voting fraud. 

Yet that is precisely what Talbot Iredale and Ken Clark's memos confirm
is a distinct possibility, in fact, reading between the lines they
suggest it is the most likely possibility. 

Consider this:

How plausible is it that an error such as this - of such magnitude, with
no apparent physical explanation, and in one of the few counties still
receiving incoming results that late in the night � was really the simple
result of a "faulty memory card"?

We also now know, again thanks to the work of Black Box Voting
investigators like Washington State's Bev Harris and California's Jim
March, that the Diebold vote tallying programme used in several Florida
counties, GEMS, is easily hackable, both by outsiders and by insiders. 


[See� Bev Harris's " Inside A U.S. Election Vote Counting Program " for
details and Jim March's "DIEBOLD'S VOTE-TALLY SOFTWARE- Security Review
Instructions"for a kit to demonstrate the hack on your own computer.]
We do not know what would have happened had a full state-wide recount
been undertaken as the efforts to have one were blocked in the courts. 

Would they have discovered other counties where unusual events like those
discovered in Brevard and Volusia counties? 

Is it possible that the original VNS exit polling data was closer to
correct than conventional wisdom suggests?

Is it possible that less egregious vote stealing took place in counties
all over Florida?

Add into the mix the blatant roll scrubbing in Florida discovered by Greg
Palast and exposed in his best-selling book "The Best Democracy Money can
buy" and you have a recipe of reasons to reopen a full scale inquiry into
the Florida debacle.

Perhaps more importantly. With paper-less touchscreen voting systems in
place in many Florida counties come November 2004, should such events
occur again, there will be no record with which to conduct a recount.

And the other big mystery of course is this: if someone did try to rig
the election returns in Florida in 2000, who was it?


----
"If voting could really change things, it would be illegal." - Diebold
Internal Memos

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