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http://www.scoop.co.nz/mason/stories/WO0303/S00325.htm

Nebraska DNC Call For Audits of Voting Machines
Saturday, 22 March 2003, 6:53 pm
Press Release: US Democratic Party

Nebraska DNC Call For Audits of Voting Machines

To Democratic Partners in Leadership,

This an urgent message to alert you to a major crisis facing our Democratic
system. Vigilance has always been required to protect our voting rights
and the ballot box from corruption. However, the use of computers to
record and count the votes has created a major new problem. Today votes
can be stolen electronically with software planted in the voting machines.
It only takes one person to change the election results for a whole state.

We are enclosing a draft resolution we are submitting in Nebraska as the
first step in dealing with this problem. The resolution suggests four
essential features for an audit of voting machines. In addition we have
included documentation and Internet sources so you can do your own
research into the problem and possible solutions.

Please copy this email into your computer, make a hard copy of the
information and pass it along to other people. (If you received this as a Fax
message, send us an email so we can give you an electronic copy.) We
urge you to put this information into the hands of all the key people in
your state who have the power or interest to deal with this issue. Keep us
informed of your actions.

It is imperative to get a voter machine audit system in place before the
2004 election.

Sincerely,


Lincoln B. Justice and Rachel A. Garner,
Members of the Nebraska Democratic Central Committee
416 East 34th St.
Kearney, NE 68847
Phone 308 234-3571 Fax 308 237-9853
Email [EMAIL PROTECTED]


(Draft)

RESOLUTION BY THE NEBRASKA DEMOCRATIC PARTY STATE CENTRAL
COMMITTEE

MANDATORY AUDIT SYSTEM FOR VOTING MACHINES

1] When voting machines are used, it is technically possible for secret
computer programs to be inserted into these machines before elections
that can modify the numbers to produce any desired outcome regardless
of the votes cast. These stealth programs can be designed to self-destruct
once their work is completed without leaving a trace of their presence.
Computer voting machines being used in Nebraska and throughout the
nation are presently being manufactured, programmed and controlled by
three major corporations owned and operated by Republicans--ES&S,
Diebold Election Systems and Sequoia Voting Systems. (See attached pages
for documentation of this information.)

2] Republican Senator Chuck Hagel has ties to the largest voting machine
company, Election Systems & Software (ES&S) located in Omaha, Nebraska.
ES&S was the ONLY company whose machines counted Hagel's votes when
he ran for election in 1996 and 2002. ES&S counts approximately 60
percent of all votes cast in the United States. According to the Omaha
World-Herald, which is also a beneficial owner of ES&S, Hagel was CEO of
American Information Systems, now called ES&S, from November 1993
through June 2, 1994. He was Chairman from July 1992 until March 15 1995.
Hagel still owns up to $5 million in the ES&S parent company, McCarthy
Group. He was required to disclose these positions on his FEC Personal
Disclosure statements, but he did not. This is clearly a potential conflict of
interest.

3] All businesses, government agencies and financial institutions have
regular audits of their financial transactions to protect from mistakes,
fraud and theft. The votes cast by citizens are the most valuable assets in
a democratic election process. Therefore it is imperative that a system of
independent verification and audit in every election be required to
protect citizens from having their votes lost or stolen.

4] Throughout history unscrupulous groups and individuals have attempted
to manipulate elections. Manual voting systems provide a paper trail that
permits recounts. However, the computer-controlled voting machines
being used do not provide a paper trail. A new technique for auditing
votes must be put in place in order to protect our democratic system and
the right of citizens to choose their leaders.

5] In this computer age, a voting audit system needs to have the following
features.

a) Exit poles should be conducted at randomly selected locations by
qualified independent non-political organizations as the first step in
verification of the accuracy of the results reported by the voting
machines.

b) If there is a discrepancy between the exit poles and the computer
reported results of more than the margin of error or 3%, the candidates
would be entitled to ask and receive a manual recount at the expense of
the government agency.

c) In addition each voter should be furnished with a printed report and
the ability to correct mistakes before the machine confirms the vote. This
voting receipt should be given to the election committee and kept on file
in a safe place for at least one year.

d) In addition, the election commissioner should make a copy of the
computer program used in the voting machine immediately prior to the day
of election. This copy should be kept in a safe place and made available to
independent computer programmers for examination if a recount is called
for. Such an examination could help determine if the voting machine was
accurately reporting the votes cast.

Such a vote audit system could help prevent vote fraud, help restore faith
in government and encourage more people to exercise their right and
responsibility as citizens.

(end of resolution)

DOCUMENTATION FOR RESOLUTION

The information in this resolution can be confirmed by contacting the
following persons and web sites.

1] The Hill Article: (listed below)

http://www.thehill.com

2] Bev Harris, researcher -- "Black Box Voting,"

425-228-7131 Fax -3965

http://www.blackboxvoting.com

3] Rebecca Mercuri, expert on computerized voting machines

215/327-7105 or 609 895-1375

4] Dan Spillane, Senior Test Engineer for voting machines:

206-860-2858.

5] http://www.talion.com/election-machines.html

[May 2003]The foundation of American democracy is not just the right to
vote, but also the right to have that vote counted, and counted
accurately. In the 2000 election the Supreme Court took away the right to
have our vote counted, and corporations have taken away the right of
accuracy.

6] Best election sites:

http://www.talion.com/vote-rigging.html http://www.vote.org/fraud.htm

http://Votescam.com/chap1.html

7] Several Nebraska ES&S machines malfunctioned on Election Day, and
Charlie Matulka (who ran against Hagel) filed a request for a hand count on
December 10, 2002. It was denied, because Nebraska has a new law that
prohibits election workers from looking at the paper ballots, even in a
recount. The only machines permitted to count votes in Nebraska are
ES&S.

http://www.commondreams.org/views/121400-108.htm

Charlie Matulka, who ran for office against Chuck Hagel:

402-228-1009 916 North 21st St, Beatrice, NE 68310

8] Senate Ethics Committee: 202-224-2981

9] The Voting Rights Act 1965

http://hcl.chass.ncsu.edu/garson/dye/docs/votrit65.htm

http://www.voterscoalition.com/

10] Help America Vote Act

http://www.ssa.gov/legislation/legis_bulletin_110702.html

@ @ @

>From The Hill 1/29/2003

U.S. CHUCK HAGEL NOW ADMITS OWNERSHIP IN VOTING MACHINE
COMPANY-

SENATE ETHICS COMMITTEE DIRECTOR RESIGNS

"Hagel's ethics filings pose disclosure issue" -- "The Hill" 1/29/2003

On October, 10, 2002 Bev Harris, author of the upcoming "Black Box
Voting: Ballot- Tampering" in the 21st Century, revealed that Republican
Senator Chuck Hagel has ties to the largest voting machine company,
Election Systems & Software (ES&S). She reported that he was an owner,
Chairman and CEO of Election Systems & Software (called American
Information Systems until name change filed in 1997). ES&S was the ONLY
company whose machines counted Hagel's votes when he ran for election
in 1996 and 2002. The Hill, a Washington D.C. newspaper that covers the
U.S. national political scene, confirmed her findings today and uncovered
more details.

Hagel's campaign finance director, Michael McCarthy, now admits that
Senator Hagel still owns a beneficial interest in the ES&S parent company,
the McCarthy Group. ES&S counts approximately 60 percent of all votes
cast in the United States. According to the Omaha World-Herald which is
also a beneficial owner of ES&S, Hagel was CEO of American Information
Systems, now called ES&S, from November 1993 through June 2, 1994. He
was Chairman from July 1992 until March 15 1995. He was required to
disclose these positions on his FEC Personal Disclosure statements, but he
did not.

Hagel still owns up to $5 million in the ES&S parent company, McCarthy
Group. But Hagel's office, when interviewed by Channel 8 News in Lincoln,
Nebraska for the evening news on October 22, 2002, said he had sold his
shares before he was elected. His office issued a fact sheet claiming that
he had made full disclosure.

Last week, Hagel's campaign finance director, Michael McCarthy (currently
an owner and a director of ES&S) admitted to Alexander Bolton of The Hill
that Hagel is still an owner of ES&S parent company, the McCarthy Group,
and said that Hagel also had owned shares in AIS Investors Inc., a group of
investors in ES&S itself. Yet Hagel did not disclose owning or selling shares
in AIS Investors Inc. on his FEC documents, a required disclosure, nor did
he disclose that ES&S is an underlying asset of McCarthy Group, in which
he lists an investment of up to $5 million in 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000,
and 2001.

SENATE ETHICS COMMITTEE CHIEF COUNSEL / DIRECTOR RESIGNS

Harris spoke with Victor Baird of the Senate Ethics Committee office
January 9, and asked him who is responsible for ensuring that FEC
disclosures are complete. She asked whether anyone had followed up to
see why Senator Hagel did not list his positions with the voting machine
company, and she asked about his characterization of the McCarthy Group
as an "excepted investment fund" and his failure to disclose that it owned
ES&S. Baird was silent, and then said "If you want to look into this, you'll
need to come in and get hold of the documents."

Unfortunately, according to Alexander Bolton, a reporter at The Hill, when
he went to the Senate Public Documents Room to retrieve originals of
Hagel's 1995 and 1996 documents he was told they were destroyed. "They
said anything over five years old is destroyed by law, and they pulled out
the law," says Bolton. However, when he spoke with Hagel's staff, they said
had obtained the documents from Senate Ethics Committee files. Copies of
the documents are available at OpenSecrets.org/pfds -- a repository for
FEC disclosures.

In 1997, Baird asked Hagel to clarify the nature of his investment in
McCarthy Group on his 1996 FEC statement. Hagel had written "none" next
to "type of investment" for McCarthy Group. In response to Baird's letter,
Hagel filed an amendment characterizing the McCarthy Group as an
"Excepted Investment Fund," a designation for widely held, publicly
available mutual funds. He never disclosed his indirect ownership of ES&S
at all, but apparently no one questioned this omission, nor his curious
characterization of the McCarthy Group, a privately held company that is
not listed on any public brokerage.

Baird told Bolton that the McCarthy Group did not seem to qualify as an
"excepted investment fund." He reportedly met with Hagel's staff on
Friday, January 25 and Monday, January 27, 2002. Then, also on Monday,
he stepped down. On Monday afternoon Baird's replacement, Robert
Walker, provided a new, looser interpretation of "publicly available"
(though experts disagree, saying that a privately held company like the
McCarthy Group cannot be called "publicly available" in order to avoid
disclosing underlying assets.)

Hagel's challenger in the Nebraska Senate race, Charlie Matulka, wrote to
Baird in October 2002 to request an investigation into Hagel's ownership in
and nondisclosure of ES&S. Baird replied, "Your complaint lacks merit and
no further action is appropriate with respect to the matter, which is
hereby dismissed," in a letter dated November 18, 2002.

SENATE CANDIDATE QUESTIONS HAGEL'S CONFLICT OF INTEREST

Charlie Matulka, the candidate who ran against Chuck Hagel in Nebraska's
U.S. Senate race in November 2002, also wrote to the Nebraska Secretary
of State and to state elections officials in October 2002. He pointed out
that his opponent had ties to ES&S, and asked them to look into the
conflict of interest, but received no answer.

Several Nebraska ES&S machines malfunctioned on Election Day, and
Matulka filed a request for a hand count on December 10, 2002. It was
denied, because Nebraska has a new law that prohibits election workers
from looking at the paper ballots, even in a recount. The only machines
permitted to count votes in Nebraska are ES&S.

CAN VOTING MACHINES BE TAMPERED WITH THROUGH ACCESS TO
PROGRAMMERS?

The Washington Post characterized Hagel's election in 1996 as the biggest
upset of the election season. At the time, voters did not know that he
owned and had held key positions with the company that counted his
votes. But is it improper for a candidate to have ties with voting machine
companies?

Harris examines the issue of tampering security in the upcoming "Black Box
Voting" book. One of her sources, Dan Spillane, a former Senior Test
Engineer for a voting machine company, believes that the computerized
voting machine industry is riddled with system integrity flaws.

"The problems are systemic," Spillane says, and he contends that the
certification process itself cannot be trusted. Despite industry
characterizations that the code is checked line by line, this does not
appear to be the case. Spillane points to frequent, critical errors that
occur in actual elections and identifies omissions in the testing
procedures themselves. His own experience as a voting machine test
engineer led him to address his concerns about integrity flaws with the
owner of the voting machine company, who then suggested that he resign.
He did not, but shortly before a General Accounting Office audit, Spillane
was fired, and so was his supervisor, who had also expressed concerns
about system integrity.

Election Technology Labs quit certifying voting machines in 1992. Its
founder, Arnold B. Urken, says that the manufacturers, specifically ES&S
(then AIS), refused to allow the detailed examination of code needed to
ensure system integrity. Wyle Labs refused to test voting machine software
after 1996; testing then went to Nichols Research, and then passed to
PSINet, and then to Metamor, and most recently to Ciber.

But even if certification becomes adequate, nothing guarantees that
machines used in actual elections use the same programming code that
was certified. Machines with adjusted code can be loaded onto delivery
trucks with inside involvement of only ONE person. To make matters worse,
"program patches" and substitutions are made in vote- counting programs
without examination of the new codes, and manufacturers often e- mail
technicians uncertified program "updates" which they install on machines
immediately before and on Election Day.

Both Sequoia touch screen machines and Diebold Accuvote machines
appear to have "back door" mechanisms which may allow reprogramming
after votes have been cast. Diebold's Accuvote machines were developed
by a company founded by Bob Urosevich, a CEO of Diebold Election
Systems and Global Election Systems, which Diebold acquired. Together
with his brother Todd, he also founded ES&S, where Todd Urosevich still
works. ES&S and Sequoia use identical software and in their optical scan
machines. All three companies' machines have miscounted recent
elections, sometimes electing the wrong candidates in races that were not
particularly close.

For more information, call 425-228-7131.

@ @ @

Sample stories of voter machine problems all over the nation

>From http://www.talion.com/election-machines.html

The Dallas Morning News reported this on 10/24/2002:

"Eighteen of more than 400 electronic voting machines were pulled out of
service after early voting began Monday. Some voters complained that they
selected one candidate but that the touch-screen machine marked a
different candidate."

When there are errors in vote-counting, the explanations sometimes don't
make sense.

For example, in the October 2002 problem in Dallas, where paperless,
unauditable touch-tone screens were used and voters reported that the
machines were registering votes for Democrats as votes for the Republican
candidate, the explanations by county elections commissioner Bruce
Sherbet transmits a ping to the bullshit meter of computer software guys:

"[Sherbet] said technicians were able to 'recalibrate 15 of the 18 machines
taken out of service and return them to use.' The other three were
replaced, he said. 'Every election, we have machines that have to be
recalibrated, Mr. Sherbet said. 'Touch-screens have pluses and minuses.'"

The software engineers I've talked with say there is no such thing as
"calibrating" software.

Potential for manipulation

Can voting systems be manipulated?

Experts say yes, and it's getting worse!

Did you know...

- That even when we use paper ballots, most states forbid even their
election officials from looking at them? The ballots are removed from the
counting machine and sealed in a box; only the number on the counter is
used to tally the votes. Even recounts often don't involve looking at the
ballots themselves (unless a hand recount is ordered). Yes, it's true. The
most progressive states do a spot check with a hand count of 1 percent of
the votes. One percent is inadequate! But most states don't even require
anyone to look at the paper ballots at all.

- That the public cannot send in its own computer guy to audit the code?
Yes, it's true: in most cases, election officials have to ask the company
that provided the machines to troubleshoot problems. The voting machine
companies went to court to have their counting code declared
"proprietary" so no one can look at it. Computer experts who have
analyzed the code say it is "spaghetti code" that is almost indecipherable.

- That there are standards for computer software programming, that make
the code easy to audit, and even spot changes in the programming, and
better yet, even provide a history of all the coding done? These are
industry-wide standards that voting companies should use, but they don't.

- That it only takes ONE "true believer" to compromise a voting system? It
could be anyone who gets access. There are many ways to do this. Implant
a Trojan Horse that, as soon as a particular vote passes a "tipping point"
will start throwing votes the other way; or, stick the mischief into the
message (when the modem transmits a certain result, the receiving
computer sends data back to change the database). For even more fun, a
good programmer can have the code erase itself as soon as it does its
work. Or, you can have the program perform random "errors" scattered
across a system.

- That a touch screen that registers Democrat when you press Democrat
doesn't have to count your vote as democrat. What you see on the screen
involves a different process than how the machine counts the vote.

Can these things be tampered with? If you have any doubt, read this:
article by Ronnie Dugger, who will show you how easy it is for a single
individual with access to fudge the vote-counting on these machines, in
ways that can never be detected.



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