Saturday, November 06, 2004

How to prove fraud

You may have read part of this before. It's still important:

Black Box Voting has taken the position that fraud took place in the 2004 election through electronic voting machines. We base this on hard evidence, documents obtained in public records requests, inside information, and other data indicative of manipulation of electronic voting systems. What we do not know is the specific scope of the fraud. We are working now to compile the proof, based not on soft evidence -- red flags, exit polls -- but core documents obtained by Black Box Voting in the most massive Freedom of Information action in history.

Black Box Voting (.ORG) is conducting the largest Freedom of Information action in history. At 8:30 p.m. Election Night, Black Box Voting blanketed the U.S. with the first in a series of public records requests, to obtain internal computer logs and other documents from 3,000 individual counties and townships. Networks called the election before anyone bothered to perform even the most rudimentary audit.

America: We have permission to say No to unaudited voting. It is our right.
An FOIA request barrage of this magnitude will cost some $50,000. I've never asked my readers for money before, and I've never before linked to anyone asking for money. I know (on a very personal level) that the Kerry campaign left a lot of you feeling tapped out. But folks -- we're not talking about a lot of money, and that tiny investment could make history. So please -- to get the latest info, and possibly to contribute to the good fight, go here.

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