Voting Machine Company Tries to Blackmail Dutch Government
by BaldEagle3
Wed Feb 28, 2007 at 01:54:31 PM PST
According to a Dutch grassroots group called "We don't trust voting computers", the head of the voting maching consortium Nedap/Groenendaal tried to blackmail the Dutch government in order to continue to cooperate in running its elections. Like many election offices in the US, the Dutch government needed the help of the voting machine company in order to hold an election.
The company owner even tried to force the Dutch government to buy its stock in order to cooperate, as documented by both the original Dutch email and its English translation.
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http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2007/2/28/161117/088Here's part of the original article and the link. I don't know what the little smilies are about, and I have no idea how to get rid of them, but they're not mine. Voting systems company threatens Dutch state
“Buy my company now or you won’t have provincial elections”
February 28th, 2007
After invoking the Dutch Freedom of Information Act, the "We do not trust voting computers" foundation has received a number of unnerving documents from the Dutch Electoral Council. These documents describe the wheeling and dealing of Jan Groenendaal, whose company is responsible for all the software sold by the Nedap/Groenendaal consortium that sells the voting computers used in over 90% of Dutch municipalities. Groenendaal's company writes the software that tabulates the election results on both the local and the national level. The Dutch government depends on Groenendaal's company to the extent that it currently cannot hold elections without his help. The Electoral Council also concludes this in Image:Pdf_icon.png worried letters (Dutch) to the responsible minister that are part of the correspondence now made public.
The letters also show that Groenendaal was more or less blackmailing the Dutch government at the time of the previous parliamentary elections. On November 10th, he sends an Image:Pdf_icon.png e-mail (english translation) warning the ministry that his company will cease all activity if Rop Gonggrijp of the "We do not trust voting computers" foundation becomes a member of the independent commission that is investigating the future of the electoral process. This commission was instituted after earlier exposés by the foundation Gonggrijp founded. Despite this intervention, Groenendaal probably senses that the commission's report (due in October 2007) is likely to negatively impact the value of his company. Therefore, Groenendaal makes a very straightforward business proposal in the same e-mail, : "The ministry buys the shares of our company at a reasonable price, <...> and we will still cooperate during the next election (the Dutch 2007 provincial elections to be held March 7th).
On November 22nd (the day of the national elections) he writes Image:Pdf_icon.png a letter (Image:Pdf_icon.png english translation) which doesn't spell blackmail as explicitly to minister Nicolaï in which he indicates his need to sell quickly because he would like to “acutely” retire. But when that letter fails to elicit a fast response, Groenendaal writes an Image:Pdf_icon.png alarming e-mail (Dutch) to the Electoral Council in which he says: "We are heading towards a very dangerous situation". Right in the heat of election preparation, he writes: "I have ordered my employees to halt all activity until we have received an answer that is acceptable to us", and asks the secretary-director of the Electoral Council to intervene on his behalf. As far as we know, the Dutch government never filed criminal charges in relation to this attempted extortion.
The mails also show that Groenendaal was contemplating going to court to force the public prosecutor to arrest Rop Gonggrijp, founder of the "We do not trust voting computers" foundation. Groenendaal writes: "After all, his activities are destabilizing society and are as such comparable to terrorism. Preventive custody and a judicial investigation would have been very appropriate." The company also contemplated suing Gonggrijp as well as the TV-program EénVandaag for damages. In their October 4th broadcast, EénVandaag showed that Nedap voting computers could easily have their software exchanged and that large numbers of these computers were stored in unprotected locations. Groenendaal would also like to see the foundation's two legally bought voting computers confiscated.
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http://www.wijvertrouwenstemcomputersniet.nl/English/GroenendaalDiscussion and original post by kster: http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=203x468531