[The Last Refuge] This admission published today will likely help the lawsuit filed by Georgia plaintiff Garland Favorito who previously won a legal fight to audit 145,000 Atlanta area absentee ballots. The county has appealed the judge’s ruling granting access, and filed a motion to dismiss the case (squashing the audit). The judge will hear arguments later this month. Today they admit 24% of the absentee ballots (one in four) are missing chain of custody documents.
GEORGIA — In a stunning admission about the critical chain of custody documents for absentee ballots deposited into drop boxes in the November 3, 2020 election, a Fulton County election official told The Georgia Star News on Wednesday that "a few forms are missing" and that "some procedural paperwork may have been misplaced."
A Star News analysis of drop box ballot transfer forms for absentee ballots deposited in drop boxes provided by Fulton County in response to an Open Records Request showed that 385 transfer forms out of an estimated 1,565 transfer forms Fulton County said should have been provided are missing — a number that is significantly greater than "a few" by any objective standard.
This is the first time that any election official at either the state or county level from a key battleground state has made an admission of significant error in election procedures for the November 3, 2020 election.
#6
that's southern US for stfu and that's my opinion.
Posted by: Chris ||
06/15/2021 0:55 Comments ||
Top||
#7
You may have noticed (r) my responses to your comments... "facts don't matter" (to you). You frequently apologize. Perhaps in the future you will consider mature thought. In the meantime, find a prepubescent to tutor.
Posted by: Spoter B ||
06/15/2021 1:02 Comments ||
Top||
#8
And Pleeeeze don't do the "TW, can we skype?"
weenie
Posted by: Spoter B ||
06/15/2021 1:07 Comments ||
Top||
#9
"What does it matter now"?
Posted by g(r)omgoru
Posted by: Spoter B ||
06/15/2021 1:09 Comments ||
Top||
#10
In the meantime, find a prepubescent to tutor.
#12
No. But Bai-Den will be proven a fake and have no moral authority (as is already the case). This should energize Reps for 2022
Posted by: Frank G ||
06/15/2021 6:59 Comments ||
Top||
#13
It doesn't matter as much as if it had been revealed six months ago, but the fact that it took seven months to corner the County so they had to admit it.
Perhaps our progressive friends will explain why it took seven months for the truth to come out?
Posted by: Bobby ||
06/15/2021 8:24 Comments ||
Top||
#18
Yes, grom. It matters a lot. People who perpetrated this fraud on the American people need to go to jail and this is one of the steps that must be taken to get to that point. Even the low level perps, perhaps most importantly the low level perps, need to go to jail so that everybody in the future sees that these crimes will not go unpunished, so that it will never happen again and so the next election will be free and fair and so in 2024 we can boot Biden's ass out of the White House.
Posted by: Abu Uluque ||
06/15/2021 11:57 Comments ||
Top||
#19
Spoter B, I have just done my best to provide the explanation that grom requested. I don't always agree with grom but I don't like picking unnecessary fights with people and your response seems particularly unnecessary because all he did was ask a question.
Posted by: Abu Uluque ||
06/15/2021 12:02 Comments ||
Top||
#20
The statement as quote is NOT an admission of significant error in election procedures. The terms mealy-mouthed and weasel wording come to mind instead. I don't want the perps to admit anything -- I want to see them in prison
Posted by: Bubba Lover of the Faeries8843 ||
06/15/2021 12:09 Comments ||
Top||
#21
It can matter in a sense that an argument would exist for Executive Orders and new AFT guidelines can just get shoved up their asses.
A good argument could be made Senate decisions within 2 are suspect, and even the sessions in general.
And the "Mandate of the People' Palosi Agenda would not longer be.
#23
they admit 24% of the absentee ballots (one in four) are missing chain of custody documents.
So Georgia has no idea who won the 2020 election. Trump could have easily won (most likely that he did). Seems like the Georgia election results have grounds for decertification. Also seems like cleaning house would be a good idea.
#27
I truly hope the conservative's unrelenting faith in constitutionalism in the face of sheer thuggery and third world level top down corruption, is not misplaced. I pray what Abu said can really be achieved.
[The Last Refuge] I give this report from the audit in Maricopa County, Arizona, a little more weight for two reasons: First, Patrick Howley is generally accurate in his reporting by disposition; and second, the source of the information is on record, not anonymous.
If this reporting turns out to be accurate, this will be an explosive development. However, that said, if this report is accurate... this is likely the reason why Maricopa County officials have been fighting the audit, hiring lawyers and positioning themselves in an attempt to undermine the chain-of-custody of the ballots.
Remember, the county Board of Supervisors would not let the State Senate audit take place in their tabulations center. In an effort to block and stall the audit, the county officials forced the audit organizers to transfer the tabulation machines and truckloads of ballots to the Veterans Coliseum. Then the board of supervisors held closed-door meetings (shutting out the public) with their lawyers.
ARIZONA — Several hundred thousand votes that were counted in Maricopa County, Arizona are associated with missing ballots, according to an audit organizer who is speaking regularly with people on the audit floor.
"We found a ballot shortage, anywhere from 5 to 10 percent of the votes," Josh Barnett, an audit organizer who led the affidavit drive to make the audit happen, tells NATIONAL FILE. "It looks like a couple hundred thousand ballots are unaccounted for. The ballots are missing."
"I also know that there were boxes filled with blank ballots in those pallets. There were blanks in there," Barnett said, citing a person who is frequently at the audit site as part of the audit process. "They (election officials) were doing it for appearance, to try to hide the fact that ballots are missing by saying, ’It’s okay, they’re all right here.’ But the ballots are blank."
#8
There has been tremendous pushback in swing states seeking audits. The culprits must know what was done on election night and thereafter. Most likely, all that Biden has done is illegal if he is not legally POTUS.
#10
Either someone removed the real ballots and replaced them by blank paper, or the so called ballots were blank from the start, inserted to agree in number with those obtained from the machine coun
t.
Is there a third possibility?
Is there an explanation other than fraud on a massive scale?
#12
Would be interesting to see:
The ratio of missing ballots which went to Biden verses Trump. I suspect they went almost overwhelmingly to Biden. If you had a tally of the 'real' ballots you can compare it to the election night tally and see the difference.
What the tally is of the actual 'real' ballots?
Where the F is the DOJ in this?
[THEPOSTMILLENNIAL] Speaking on the One NYCHA podcast, Senator Chuck Schumer ...Senator-for-life from New York, renowned for his love of standing in front of cameras and microphones. Schumer has been a professional politician since 1975, when disco was in flower, which is 45.52436 years, or 318.67052 years in dog years. Senate minority leader as of 2017... referred to mentally disabled children as "retarded." That word has long since gone out of favor with those who seek to destigmatize children and adults who are developmentally disabled.
Not many years ago that was the technical terminology, as earlier idiot and imbecile were technical terms. The change came from people being supersensitive on their behalf, not from those with the condition.
This initiative will actually house the homeless population that is actually living on our streets," the host for the New York City Housing Authority said. "We see them every day, and we are about to house them, and they are against it! It's unbelievable." The full recording of his appearance is on Facebook.
"Yes," Schumer said. "I have found that my whole career. I wanted to build, in my first, in Assembly. They wanted to build a congregant living space for retarded children. The whole neighborhood was against it! These were harmless kids, they just needed some help. We got it done," he said.
I hear no malice or mockery in that statement, but only caring. Some people need to get over their need to show their assumed superiority by playing gotcha.
A spokesperson for Schumer has since acknowledged that the senator "used an inappropriate and outdated word" during the recent interview.
"For decades, Sen. Schumer has been an ardent champion for enlightened policy and full funding of services for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities," the politician's representative told the Washington Examiner. "He used an inappropriate and outdated word in his description of an effort he supported that was led by the AHRC to build a group home in his Brooklyn district decades ago to provide housing and services to children with developmental disabilities. He is sincerely sorry for his use of the outdated and hurtful language."
Posted by: Fred ||
06/15/2021 00:00 ||
Comments ||
Link ||
[11128 views]
Top|| File under:
#1
Considering Schumer lived the majority of his life in the 20th Century, this is not hard to understand, his language is not in keeping with the 21st Century vogue - Destroying & Criticizing People, Places, Ideas and Ideals, if any are not reflective of their dictitorial socialist model of societal engineering.
Don't apologise, the message is whats important; tell the Socialists that they are petites, not grown adults, their thoughts and behavior are like out of control children - very small, petite children. Their intellectual priorities matches children too.
Posted by: Bill Tingle3980 ||
06/15/2021 6:00 Comments ||
Top||
#2
According to a dictionary of names Schumer is middle low German for "good-for-nothing": vagabond.
Posted by: Deacon Blues ||
06/15/2021 7:45 Comments ||
Top||
#3
Sometimes I play the fool in public. It's strategic. My behavior is designed to draw out displays of arrogance and superiority from those I (and others) would be better off disregarding completely. It's also very efficient.
Posted by: Bubba Lover of the Faeries8843 ||
06/15/2021 12:05 Comments ||
Top||
#4
Schumer is morally retarded. That's even worse.
Posted by: Abu Uluque ||
06/15/2021 12:22 Comments ||
Top||
#5
Far too many of the Washington crowd and their extended friends and associates appear to have rather troubling proclivities which involve young children.
[FOXNEWS] Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson of North Carolina emphasized the importance of the American work ethic and his success story Saturday night on "Unfiltered with Dan Bongino."
Robinson is the first African American to hold the office of lieutenant governor in the state and caught the public's eye at a Greensboro City Council meeting, when he defended the Second Amendment.
Fox News host Dan Bongino asked Robinson what politically motivated him.
"Well, what honestly pushed me into it was something that someone said to me at work about 'talk.' They said talk's not going to do anything," Robinson said.
"I said, there's nothing you can do about it. You can go down there and talk, but that's not going to get anything done. And I reminded that person that, you know, the revolution in this country didn't start with the ’shot heard round the world' - it started with ’talk.’ Friends and neighbors talking to each other about ideas like independence and liberty and freedom and establishing our own nation. And so it starts with a conversation" said Robinson.
Robinson spoke at the North Carolina Republican Party State Convention last Friday where he discussed topics such as child sacrifice abortion, race, and the American work ethic.
Bongino noted that the Republican party doesn't have a "message problem," but rather a "messaging problem."
"Lower taxes, health care, freedom, school choice. These are all popular things when people hear about them," Bongino said.
The Fox News host continued to note that Robinson's speech to the North Carolina Republican Party State Convention addressed the dignity of work, and that "nothing in Republican messaging ... addresses that."
"One of the things in this nation, apart from any other nation, is the American work ethic," Robinson said.
Robinson noted that for decades, people have denigrated the American work ethic, saying "we see a strong vein of that happening right now from our federal government where we are actually paying people not to go to work, which is ridiculous."
Posted by: Fred ||
06/15/2021 00:00 ||
Comments ||
Link ||
[11127 views]
Top|| File under:
#1
Try looking at the work ethic as "tough love", you work for food , shelter and clothing...its tough...but if you love your job...many consider it your calling and so will you.
Remember, the All Mighty has many callings instore for you, be ready, be happy, be ready to share your work ethic...just like this man is doing.
Posted by: Bill Tingle3980 ||
06/15/2021 5:40 Comments ||
Top||
#3
Of course it's unfair to think of an anecdote as being a metaphor, but my lasting remembrance of NC was a kid at a gas station revving his unmuffled Mustang so much I had to go around behind the building to listen to my phone call. He was working awful hard at annoying me...
Posted by: M. Murcek ||
06/15/2021 9:46 Comments ||
Top||
[NYPOST] Violent crime in New York City is soaring: Murder is up 11.7 percent over last year; shootings, a staggering 68 percent. And it’s likely here to stay.
Don’t blame poverty or the pandemic: Squalid arguments and score-settling continue to motivate most gun violence. A longstanding squabble over parking apparently led to the recent killing of 10-year-old Justin Wallace. An obscure beef between Farrakhan Muhammad and his brother allegedly precipitated a daylight shooting spree in Times Square last month.
Mayor Comrade Bill de Blasio ...cryptocommie mayor of New York and for some reason a Dem candidate for president in 2020. Corrupt and incompetent, his qualifications for office seem to consist of being married to a black woman, with whom he honeymooned in Cuba. He has a preppy-looking son named Dante, whose Divine Comedy involved getting his back hair up when a police car drove past him slowly. New Yorkers voted for him, so they deserve him... resolutely deflects responsibility for the horrific rise in crime, now entering its second year. He insists — ludicrously — that his "Cure Violence" program, which he touts annually and which has at best a track record of no impact, will fix everything.
So it’s no accident that New Yorkers are counting the days ’til this bad dream is over, nor that the leading mayoral candidates are the ones who promise to make public safety a priority.
Voters hope that, once de Blasio is gone, the new mayor will restore a New York City where ordinary people feel secure taking the subway alone at night, without worrying that someone will slash their faces with a box cutter.
Not so fast. De Blasio has been a terrible mayor, having wrecked a safe and prosperous city. But he didn’t act alone. His cronies and comrades in the City Council and state Legislature have substantially and systematically refashioned the law to ensure that criminals will have the upper hand, while law enforcers are hobbled.
These legal changes won’t soon or easily be undone.
In 2014, de Blasio dropped the city’s appeal against several spurious, anti-anti-crime suits pertaining to patrolling and instead submitted to the supervision of an outside "NYPD Monitor." The monitor oversees training and procedures, audits the NYPD’s patrol practices and reports to the federal court on progress toward its goals.
Some of the measures implemented under the monitor, such as body cameras, have been salutary. But others — such as the elimination of the Trespass Affidavit Program, which helped keep drug pushers, loiterers and other miscreants out of private apartment buildings — appear to have contributed to the crime problem.
Then, in 2016, the council passed — and the mayor signed — a major set of "reforms" that have contributed to the deterioration of safe streets and the quality of life.
The measures effectively decriminalized "open containers," urinating in public, littering and hanging out in parks after closing. Then-Councilman and now-Rep. Ritchie Torres, a supporter of the legislation, joked about opponents’ fears of a coming "apocalypse of public urination."
Smelled the streets much lately, Congressman?
The council also passed the 2018 Right to Know Act, which short-circuits the cops’ constitutionally protected ability to conduct searches. The law, unique in the nation, forces cops to tell suspects that they are not obligated to consent to being searched, effectively making the police act as legal advisers, working against themselves and for evildoers. No doubt many guns have remained concealed as perps were told they could walk away.
At the state level, bail "reform" has allowed thousands of criminals to leave their arraignments and go out to commit more crime, often in a matter of 24 hours. Discovery "reform" has led to fewer witnesses coming forward to report what they have seen, since they know that their personal information will be immediately turned over to the defense.
Posted by: Fred ||
06/15/2021 00:00 ||
Comments ||
Link ||
[11123 views]
Top|| File under:
#1
Just ask yourself this question -
Knowning what you know from the article, Would you visit New York City as a tourist ?
#2
Well since even dangerous perp get let loose anymore and thinking outside the box, why not outsource public order to the mob? What's the cost per capita? Give everyone a voucher to hire their own security (and justice). (do I need to put a /sarc on that?)
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.