(Suggest placing repetitive disruptors on ignore to avoid thread-locking)
This update doesn't include what we found out about remote access connectivity, which is the most important part, but it explains the E.T. call home thing.
A file was found on the Diebold FTP site containing a vote tally saved at 3:31 in the afternoon on election day in San Luis Obispo County, California.
I spoke with the Elections Registrar at some length, and so did Jim March. The answers from Diebold were, as usual, nonexistent, but the Elections Registrar, Julie Rodewald, willingly answered questions.
She provided a plausible explanation for one of the most serious problems identified, though the explanation reveals poor accounting practices and has not entirely checked out in a review of the database.
Some of her other answers didn't seem to make much sense, especially those regarding Internet and network connectivity, but we'll check those out further.
The most serious problem has not been addressed at all by anyone, and that is the security of the vote data during a live election.
============================================
The central points are:
1) Vote tallies were available for SLO County before the polling places closed
2) Security of the GEMS central count computer was breached when its midstream vote tabulation file was placed on an unprotected web site
- Understand that we've been promised that physical security is in place, limiting GEMS access to the county elections official, placing the machine in a locked room no one can enter, and making sure it is not hooked up to the Internet or to the county network.
- Those of you who have downloaded this file (
http://www.talion.com/SLOprimary-ORIG.mdb) know how large it is, and how long it takes to upload/download to FTP! Somehow this large GEMS file from the midst of the SLO County primary election made its way from the "secure, inaccessible, locked-in-a-room, not-connected computer" onto the Diebold company web site.
- This appears to have happened on election day, since the file is tagged to "sophia" and Sophia is a Diebold employee who was present at the San Luis Obispo County elections office on election day.
- This pretty much blows up Diebold's defense to the Hopkins/Rice report, which claims that physical security and election procedures prevent access, so the software security flaws don't matter.
- SLO County Elections Registrar Julie Rodewald says that neither she nor any of her staff put that file on the Diebold web site, and she does not know how it got there.
========================
Now let's look at the plausible explanation for how the votes got into the file: Ms. Rodewald says that the votes in the SLO file as of 3:31 in the afternoon on primary election day, March 5 2002, were absentee votes, which were counted on March 1,2,3 and 4. She says they are not votes cast at the precincts, and therefore the machines in 57 precincts did not "call home" as we alleged.
I believe this will prove to be the case. If so, we've got new problems:
1) Why are absentee votes being marked "polling place votes?" (the explanation for this is inadequate)
2) Why are absentee vote tallies being compiled into GEMS before the polls close?
An unanswered discrepancy - In the SLO database, absentee votes are tagged with "1" and votes cast at the polling place are tagged with "0."
- This means all of the votes, if they are absentee votes, should be marked with a "1." But the first 15,000 votes in the database are all tagged with "0" which appears to indicate they come from a polling place. However, scrolling quite a ways down the list are more votes, these marked with "1". It would appear that, therefore, some votes are absentee and some at the polling place, which would support our contention that machines called in.
- Enter strange accounting that gives me a headache: Julie Rodewald says that there are precincts which have both polling places and absentee voters, but there are also about a hundred precincts where people cannot go to any polling place, but can only mail in a ballot to vote. These precincts are called "mail ballot" precincts. Has anyone heard of this? I mean, this is California, not Outer Mongolia, but I suppose there is a good reason? Or maybe they just do this in a primary?
- Then, explains Rodewald, the mailed in ballots from the "mail ballot" precincts are called "polling place" ballots. (Correct accounting would call them either "mail ballots" or "absentee ballots" -- the one thing it would NOT call them is "polling place" ballots).
- Rodewald explained to me that you can tell the "mail ballot" precincts apart because they do NOT start with the letters CON.
- So therefore, the absentee votes marked "0" would be the "mail ballot" ones, right? Well no. She then explained to me that only the polling place precinct absentee ballots were counted, not the mail ballot precincts. Mystery of absentee ballots marked "0" remains unexplained, though I have a theory that they actually did include some "mail ballots" in their count. I'm checking on that now.
- Either "some" or "none" of the "mail ballots" were counted early but according to Rodewald, all of the absentee ballots were counted early.
- And were all of the absentee ballots that were in early counted early? Rodewald said they were, but I find a few dozen precincts that lack absentee ballot counts altogether. Hopefully, they didn't show up in a glob later...
Now this may sound like minutia, but in accounting, precision is correct and confusion is incorrect.
I'm reminded of this: NOV 2002 --
• Candidate declared victory prematurely: New Mexico candidate Heather Wilson declared herself the victor and made a speech, even though the margin was only 51:49 and votes weren’t fully counted. First reports explained that “thousands of new votes had been found but not counted.” Later, when thousands of new votes were not discovered after all, the reason for her victory premonition was changed to an influx of uncounted absentee votes, 2:1 for Wilson.=========================
Here is a site where you can get ammunition:
http://www.tomatoes.com/Please feel free to throw them at me for my assumption that votes marked "0," (with "0" designated as "polling place votes") were votes cast at the polling place. Apparently they were not, they were mailed in and counted early, except that Rodewald denies that "mail ballots" were counted early. I find this to be a mostly plausible explanation (though a terrible way to do accounting).
For now, we'll take Rodewald's word that no machine at the polling place called in early.
Now, about security:Let us examine what can happen if an absentee vote tally taken in the middle of election day is placed on the Diebold company web site.
1) Why should Diebold employees be privy to midstream election tabulations, when it is against the law? But first, is it against the law to tally the vote in the middle of the day before the polls close?
RESEARCH: Can someone find out if it is legal in California to get a vote tally before the polls close? We are not talking about an exit poll, we are talking about counting and tabulating votes cast before the polls have closed.
2) Why should Diebold allow anyone, with no login or username, to access live election files during the middle of the election? This file was placed on an unprotected web site that anyone could access.
3) Why should Diebold take any election vote file and keep it on a company web site?
And now we get to the really important stuff:1) How did Diebold get access to this file, which can ONLY be created on the "supersecure" county GEMS computer?
2) Why did Diebold take a live election file during the middle of an election and put it on a file transfer site?
3) Who authorized this? Julie Rodewald, County Elections Registrar, says she did not.
4) What mechanism was used to get this file off the GEMS computer? A CD burner? A zip drive?
5) Who took the file from Rodewald's computer?
6) Who put it on the Diebold web site?
7) What was this file used for?
==================================
Thank you, and have a nice weekend.
Bev Harris