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Absentee ballots 'lost' in Florida

by More Florida Vote Fraud
Nearly 58,000 absentee ballots for the US presidential election may never have reached Florida's Broward County voters, who had requested them more than two weeks ago, election officials said.

State police are investigating the matter, they said.

Hundreds of people have called the county elections office to complain that they never got their ballots. The phone system was so overwhelmed some frustrated voters could not get through.

The election office said the problem involved ballots mailed on October 7-8, though the number of those actually missing was uncertain. Some absentee ballots mailed on those dates have already been returned to be counted.

"We are trying to determine what occurred and whether there was any kind of criminal violation," said Paige Patterson-Hughes, spokeswoman for the Florida Department of Law Enforcement.

The county blamed the US Postal Service. "That is something beyond our control," Deputy Supervisor of Elections, Gisela Salas, said. "We really have no idea what's going on."

But postal officials said the post office has not to blame.

"We have employees that we assign to handle the absentee ballots that come in," said Enola C Rice, a Postal Service spokeswoman in South Florida. "So all the absentee ballots that are received by the Postal Service are processed and delivered immediately."

Absentee voters who did not receive a ballot can request another, which officials said would be sent by overnight mail.

http://in.rediff.com/news/2004/oct/28us.htm

ome of the problems have plagued other Broward elections over the past four years. Long lines of frustrated voters were common in the 2000 and 2002 elections, while 268 absentee ballots were misplaced during the September 2002 primary.

A calm and collected Snipes defended her election preparations. She said voters should have confidence in the Nov. 2 balloting.

"There's been a whole lot of partisanship about the election, so everything that happens is magnified," she said. "But when we see something functioning like it shouldn't, we fix it immediately."

Not everyone agrees. The Southern Christian Leadership Conference called late Wednesday for Gov. Jeb Bush to suspend Snipes, a retired educator whom he appointed last year to replace Miriam Oliphant. The civil rights group charged that Snipes is making the same missteps that Bush cited in suspending Oliphant.

"I alerted them to these problems, only to be attacked for political reasons," said Oliphant, who lost the Democratic primary in August to Snipes. "I warned them about the poll workers, I warned them about the phones, and I warned them about the absentee ballots."

The breadth of the problems is putting Broward County again in the national spotlight it held during the 36-day recount in 2000.

State officials said the only complaints they've received about early voting have come from Broward and Palm Beach counties. A national hotline set up by a coalition of civil rights groups reports twice as many complaints about Broward than any other community.

Snipes said she first became aware absentee ballots were missing a week ago and has been working since to figure out what went wrong and fix it. Her staff thinks many of those missing were in the first batch of ballots mailed after the office began processing requests on Oct. 7.

Although there are about 58,000 ballots not accounted for, Snipes said many are actually in the hands of voters waiting to be mailed back and thus the problem will turn out to be much smaller.

She said that about 14,000 completed ballots arrived Wednesday and that others had been deposited in the office's drop-off box and at early voting locations. She estimated that she will resend no more than 20,000 ballots.

She pointed the finger at the U.S. Postal Service as the source of the mix-up. She said that all ballots are postmarked the day voters request them and that they are then are couriered to the post office's main facility in Fort Lauderdale for delivery.

But the Postal Service says it is not to blame. The agency said in a statement that special employees are assigned to handle all ballots and that those sent locally should arrive in one day.

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement launched an investigation into the missing ballots Wednesday but concluded there was no criminal wrongdoing. Postal inspectors also investigated and determined there had been no delays in the agency's handling of ballots.

Volunteers began helping Snipes' office package the ballots Wednesday evening. All should be mailed out by Friday morning at the latest but must be returned by the end of business Tuesday.

Officials argue that there is no conspiracy to prevent voting but said the number of people seeking to vote is overwhelming Broward's election machinery. Turnout is expected to top 70 percent, with almost 90,000 people already casting ballots at early voting sites and 127,000 requesting absentee ballots by mail.

Those waiting for ballots are expressing deep dissatisfaction with the handling of the election.

Linda Lemle-Goldberg said she requested a ballot in early October for her mother, who is homebound with Parkinson's disease in Pompano Beach, but has never received it. She said officials told her more than two weeks ago that it had been mailed and then promised to send another one, but it also has not arrived.

"I'm angry and frustrated and feel like crying," said Lemle-Goldberg, who said she will drive to Fort Lauderdale today to pick up her mother's ballot.

Murray Hirsh of the Century Village condo community in Pembroke Pines said he finally received in Wednesday's mail the absentee ballot he requested on Oct. 7. It was postmarked Oct. 19, meaning it took Snipes' office 12 days to process his request and the post office eight days to deliver it.

"Someone is trying to sabotage this election," Hirsh said.

Snipes said she will ask county officials for extra money to pay for the new mailing, but did not know how much the added expense will be. County Mayor Ilene Lieberman and other county commissioners said they are willing to give her additional money or staff to ensure the election is successful.

The county initially gave Snipes $2.9 million to cover the election's cost and bought her $3.2 million in new voting equipment as part of this year's budget. Commissioners also agreed to loan her 800 employees to help at the polls on Election Day.

"I'm tired of Broward being the laughingstock of the nation, and I want to get it right," said Commissioner Suzanne Gunzburger, who served on the vote canvassing board during the 2000 election dispute. "All voters need to be assured they can vote and that their vote will be counted. These people who applied for an absentee ballot want to vote."

Both the Republican and Democratic parties expressed concern, but the Democrats may have the most to lose because Broward is such a major base for the party.

Charles Lichtman, lead Florida attorney for Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry, met with Snipes and Lieberman on Wednesday afternoon and asked them to defer finding out what went wrong and concentrate on getting ballots to voters. County Commissioner Diana Wasserman-Rubin, a major player in Kerry's campaign, on the other hand, sought to downplay the missing ballots, fearful it could prompt some not to vote.

Absentee ballots traditionally are used heavily by Republicans, but Democrats mounted a major effort this year to get their supporters to vote early. To win the state, Kerry will need a heavy turnout in Broward to offset conservative areas in Northern and Central Florida.

"It's disturbing that we have the greatest voter interest in my lifetime, and people aren't getting their ballot," said Mitch Ceasar, chairman of the Broward County Democratic Party.

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/southflorida/sfl-cvoting28oct28,0,5959567.story?coll=sfla-home-headlines

In 2000, Broward gave Democrat Al Gore his biggest margin among Florida counties. He received 67 percent of the vote there, while losing the state to George W. Bush by just 537 votes.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apus_story.asp?category=1110&slug=Missing%20Absentee%20Ballots

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Thu, Oct 28, 2004 9:29AM
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