By Ernest A. Canning
While we've been covering multiple cases
of on-screen vote flipping by the 100% unverifiable Direct Recording
Electronic (DRE, usually touch-screen) systems, another electronic
vote-related system failure, relating to the state's Electronic Voter ID
(EVID) system, has also emerged in the state of Florida.
The state Democratic Party filed an emergency Motion for Ex Parte Relief [PDF]
earlier this evening seeking to compel Broward County election
officials to keep polls open until 9:00 p.m. They alleged, among other
issues, that an "EVID system throughout the day has prevented voters
from being able to update their address on the day of the election, as
they are permitted to do by law."
Instead of being allowed to vote, voters were "asked to present
themselves at the Supervisor of Elections office in order to update
their address and return to the polling place at a later time to vote a
regular ballot." That and other issues may have prevented the lawful
casting of ballots in an extraordinarily close Governor's race...
According to the Broward County Supervisor of Elections website,
the EVID "is used to verify a voter’s address, status and signature
information at Early Voting and the polls. The voter presents his (or
her) Florida Driver’s License or Florida Motor Vehicle Identification
Card (with the magnetic strip) to the clerk at the precinct and the card
is swiped through the EVID unit, which accesses the voter database and
displays the information for the voter so that it can be verified as to
precinct, address, etc."
Miami Herald is reporting
former Governor Charlie Crist (D) complained that there had been
"individual and systemic breakdowns," which also entailed "a polling
station that went offline for more than 90 minutes."
Crist, a former Republican Governor turned Democrat, is currently in a
deadlocked battle with Florida's current Republican Gov. Rick Scott. If
results are as close as pre-election polls have predicted, any problems
at the polls on Election Day could become part of a potential legal
contest by either candidate.
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