Posted on Tue, Oct. 21, 2003
ELECTIONS
Extra ballots cause worry
Mail-in ballots have been sent to people who moved, raising questions about fraudulent votes in mail-in elections in four Broward communities.
BY ERIKA BOLSTAD
ebolstad@herald.com
Extra ballots spark fears of fraud
People who have moved but who remain on Broward County's voter rolls have been sent ballots in an ongoing mail-in election, underscoring the county's problems in purging its list of voters who have died, moved or who just don't vote.
Florida Secretary of State Glenda Hood is investigating the matter and has sent it to her legal department for review, said Broward County Mayor Diana Wasserman-Rubin, who received three extra ballots at her Southwest Ranches home over the weekend.
Ballots for the special mail-in election came for Wasserman-Rubin, her husband and three of the previous occupants of the house. The last owners moved out in July 1999, Wasserman-Rubin said.
The extra ballots raise concerns about a fraudulent election, the mayor said.
''I don't know how many people this has happened to,'' Wasserman-Rubin said. ``How do we make sure the right vote from the right voters gets counted? It's a matter of concern for the integrity of the election.'' (snip/...)
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/7062762.htmAs a quick grab from google shows, election fraud, and especially fraudulent absentee ballots are not new problems in Florida:
(snip) BOSTON - MONDAY, MAY 4,
1998 Florida Makes a Move to Rein in Voter Fraud
Latest move comes in wake of widespread absentee-ballot fraud in Miami election.
Warren Richey
Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
MIAMI
Nothing says election fraud like a ballot cast from a cemetery.
On paper, Manuel Yip seemed an active and regular voter in Miami, casting ballots four times between 1993 and 1997.
There was just one problem: He passed away five years ago.
The illegal vote made under Mr. Yip's name in 1997 is perhaps the most obvious example of what prosecutors and election officials say was a massive, well-orchestrated attempt to illegally influence the outcome of last fall's mayoral election in Miami.
Last week the Florida legislature passed an election-reform package that supporters say will make it more difficult to attempt to undermine the election process. But critics of the bill say it doesn't go far enough in outlawing the kind of partisan vote-brokering of absentee ballots that led to Miami's large-scale fraud.
(snip/...)
http://search.csmonitor.com/durable/1998/05/04/p4s1.htm