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Former Federal Elections Commission staffer says Illegal aliens are voting in U.S. elections and changing election outcomes |
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District Attorney in San Antonio, TX alleges voter fraud by Illegal Aliens Read story here. 7-20-08 |
| Georgia Supreme Court tosses out Voter ID challenge... Read about it here! 6-11-07 |
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Voter Registration Fraud Case in "Sanctuary City" of Chicago Cook County judge Dennis Dernbach sentenced three Chicago women to two years of probation for their involvement in a voter registration fraud scam. Jalissa Santiago, 21, Migdalia Echevarria, 37, and Windaliz Santiago, 21, pleaded guilty to theft and mutilation of election materials. The Cook county Prosecutor said the women were fraudulently registering people using names from phone books. |
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Another example of Illegal Alien Voter Fraud Venezuelans' Abraham E. Gomez, 46, and his wife, Mayen C. Gomez, 41, had little difficulty registering to vote in Boone County, Kentucky. The ease in which the Gomez's became US voters is an indictment of how susceptible US elections are to fraud and manipulation by foreign nationals. All the Gomez's had to do to register to vote was to claim US citizenship on their voter registration forms. No proof was required--no verification conducted by the board of elections. If not for a tipster who put law enforcement on the Gomez's trail, the fraudulent registrations probably would have never been detected. The Gomez's now face deportation for being in the US illegally. Just how many illegal aliens are illegally registered and or voting in US elections? The actual number might reach millions. Even a lesser number of fraudulent votes would be sufficient to steal an election from the control of US citizens. Since most if not all boards of election do not verify an applicant's citizenship, the actual number of illegal aliens' voting in US elections remains unknown. Registration standards obviously need to be raised if the citizenship requirement for voter eligibility is to have integrity. Note: In a very few cities in the US, non-citizens have been granted the right by local governments to vote in certain types of local elections. OJJPAC believe only US citizens should have the right to vote in any US election. |
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10-year-old Voter summoned for Jury Duty |
| August 5, 2006
By Steve Salvi Ohio voter Quardaris Reading recently got a summons for jury duty in Summit County, Ohio. The odd thing about Quardaris Reading getting a summons for jury duty is that he is a 10-year-old boy from Alabama. So how did a 10-year-old boy get a summons for jury duty? It's easy when a 10-year-old boy is a registered voter in Summit County -- and when voter registration rolls are used to select potential jurors. The question people should be asking is: How did a 10-year-old boy from Alabama become a registered voter in Summit County, Ohio? What's alarming is that the Summit County Elections Board doesn't know how it happened. They point out that know one has never used the name to vote. The Board also has stricken Quardaris's name from the voter rolls. But that does not relieve the Summit County Elections Board from explaining to the public how unqualified individuals can become voters, and go undetected for years. If the boy's family had not notified the court, the voter fraud (which it is) would probably have never been detected. The Ohio Legislature recently passed legislation that will require voters to show valid identification before voting. Some critics claim the ID requirement causes "voter suppression," preventing qualified voters from voting, as they claim some people don't have identification. If this argument has any merit, the state should assist otherwise qualified voter to obtain a valid ID. And if voters who don't have an ID don't wait to election day to get an ID, they should have more than sufficient time to secure an acceptable form of identification. Ohio has basically been using an honor system when it come to voter registration. That perhaps was a sufficient system before 20 million illegal foreign nationals chose to disregard our laws and set-up house in the U.S., in some cases using stolen identities of Americans. Times have changed, and so should Ohio's extremely lax voter registration rules that invite voter fraud. To my knowledge, none of Ohio's 88 county election boards have programs that proactively seek out potential voter fraud. Obviously you can't find what you're not looking for. For some counties, starting a program now might seem like opening Pandora's box.-- perhaps bringing to light cases of voter fraud --and unwanted negative publicity. |