Posted on Wed, Dec. 15, 2004
Congressman calls for FBI investigation into Ohio election
MALIA RULON
Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee asked the FBI on Wednesday to investigate an Ohio election worker's concern that a software company employee could have tampered with election results when working on machines before a ballot recount.
The company provides vote-counting software used in 41 of Ohio's 88 counties.
Rep. John Conyers of Michigan sent a letter to the FBI office in Cincinnati and Hocking County Prosecutor Larry E. Beal asking them to immediately confiscate election machinery in the southwest Ohio county.
According to a sworn statement from Sherole Eaton, the county's deputy director of elections, a representative of TRIAD Governmental Systems Inc. told her on Friday he wanted to inspect the county's tabulating machine. A company representative told Eaton he wanted to check the computer and go over "tricky questions" that attorneys might ask them about the recount started this week by county election boards at the request to two minor party candidates, she said.
The representative told her that "the battery in the computer was dead and that the stored information was gone," she said.
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http://www.ohio.com/mld/beaconjournal/news/state/10424719.htmConyers: "Maintenance" violates state and federal laws (Keith Olbermann)
SECAUCUS— Congressman John Conyers' request that the FBI investigates the actions of a voting equipment manufacturer in Hocking County, Ohio last week, includes the assertion that those actions may have violated two federal laws, and as many as four state statutes.
Conyers, who will appear live on tonight's edition of "Countdown," notes in his letter to the FBI (and the Hocking County Prosecutor), that "for a period of 22 months from the date of a federal election... it (is) a felony for any person to 'willfully steal, destroy, conceal, mutilate, or alter' any such record."
The Michigan representative also wrote that under Ohio law, "during a period of official canvassing, all interaction with ballots must be 'in the presence of all of the members of the board and any other persons who are entitled to witness the official canvass'." Conyers notes that just last week, Ohio Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell had declared that the so-called "canvassing period," which usually expires ten days after an election, had been extended to cover the period of the Ohio recount.
Conyers' office indicated there had not yet been a response from the FBI field office in Cincinnati, nor from the Hocking County Prosecutor's Office.
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http://msnbc.msn.com/id/6667405/