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Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Vote Trust USA Exposes Potential Democrat Fraud

Lets be real clear what the democrats have done. They have received databases to makes hacks to win elections by fraud. They will make this hack and use it anywhere they can. Note this: (Brakey said after the database turnover to Democrats that the information obtained from them will be used to create a computerized tool that will help elections officials and political parties nationwide investigate their own local voting systems for security weaknesses that could be used to rig elections.
"We're going to build it and give it away," Brakey said.) Your vote and mine is up for grabs. Ms hillary will find many ways to use this database to hack our votes and win the election. She will do anything to win and this is just the beginning. We will never see this reported in the national news.



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Arizona databases for elections
Arizona: Databases for Elections Released to Democrats By Garry Duffy, Tucson Citizen
January 12, 2008
Pima County Elections Division officials Friday turned over the computer databases for the 2006 elections to the Pima County Democratic Party, as directed by the Board of Supervisors earlier this week.

Democrats sought the databases - electronic records of the county's Diebold-GEMS voting system and ballot tabulating procedures - to look for irregularities that might show vote tampering.

Party officials also plan to use the information to create a tool that will automatically analyze elections systems and vote tabulations for aberrations that could point to elections fraud.

The Democrats prevailed in a lawsuit filed last year seeking the databases.

Elections officials and County Administrator Chuck Huckleberry had refused their request to examine them.

The surrender of the databases to a political party as part of their role as official elections observers may set a precedent.

"This is the biggest release of electronic data files ever in this country," said John R. Brakey, one of the computer experts assisting the Democrats in their case.
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Databases for elections released to Democrats
GARRY DUFFY
Tucson Citizen
Pima County Elections Division officials Friday turned over the computer databases for the 2006 elections to the Pima County Democratic Party, as directed by the Board of Supervisors earlier this week.
Democrats sought the databases - electronic records of the county's Diebold-GEMS voting system and ballot tabulating procedures - to look for irregularities that might show vote tampering.
Party officials also plan to use the information to create a tool that will automatically analyze elections systems and vote tabulations for aberrations that could point to elections fraud.
The Democrats prevailed in a lawsuit filed last year seeking the databases.
Elections officials and County Administrator Chuck Huckleberry had refused their request to examine them.
The surrender of the databases to a political party as part of their role as official elections observers may set a precedent.
"This is the biggest release of electronic data files ever in this country," said John R. Brakey, one of the computer experts assisting the Democrats in their case.
It didn't come easy. Superior Court Judge Michael Miller last month ordered the county to surrender most of the elections databases sought by the Democrats.
But the county delayed, contending that remaining legal issues from the lawsuit prevented it from doing so.
That prompted the Board of Supervisors on Tuesday to order the release of the databases to Democrats, including those from the May 2006 Regional Transportation Authority election that were not part of Judge Miller's order.
Supervisor Ray Carroll, a Republican, pushed the board to release the information.
Friday, elections officials and local Democratic leaders sparred for three hours before agreeing on protocols for the copying and transfer of the databases.
The surrender of the electronic elections records could hold national implications for elections where computerized voting systems are used.
News reports of security weaknesses in such systems to errors or possible hacking to change election results have appeared frequently since the 2004 presidential election, where charges of fraud were voiced by Democrats in key states that helped re-elect President George W. Bush.
Brakey said after the database turnover to Democrats that the information obtained from them will be used to create a computerized tool that will help elections officials and political parties nationwide investigate their own local voting systems for security weaknesses that could be used to rig elections.
"We're going to build it and give it away," Brakey said.
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They want to give it away, which means a computerized tool which could be a virus or a firmware modification to a voting machine which is allready wide open to hacks and virus makers. Voting Machine Facts
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Are unexamined ballot definition files accurate and trustworthy?

A little-known but crucial moving part in election software is the ballot definition, prepared relatively close to the time of an election. This is unique programming for each election, defining all the races and candidates for each precinct. Faulty ballot definition programming can thwart accurate electronic vote tabulation of DREs and optical scanners. "Every voting system includes a key component, called the ballot definition file (BDF), that is never subjected to an outside review. Given that BDFs determine the way votes are recorded and counted, the lack of independent oversight of these files is a major security vulnerability," writes Ellen Theisen.

(Webmaster comment: This ballot definition file that is not subject to review seems to be an easy way for county officials or anyone to skew, fake, steal etc the election results. This is an amazing security flaw, it is not subjected to any review which means the vote count can be flipped or anything. How can anyone in their right mind think when voting on an electronic voting machine their vote is safe and will be counted correcty?)

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