election FRAUD in Murlin???? No way Duuuuuuude.

GregV814

Well-Known Member
ANNAPOLIS (Nov. 3, 2023)—An audit released Friday, Nov. 3, found that the Maryland Board of Elections did not report for more than a year its findings that people voted or tried to vote more than once in the 2020 general election—well after the results were certified, according to The Office of Legislative Audits.

The state elections board identified 134 voters who voted more than once and 1,371 voters who attempted to vote multiple times in the 2020 general election, but it did not report these individuals to the The Office of State Prosecutor until April 2022, the audit said. The audit is part of a routine physical compliance audit of the SBE conducted every three to four years.

"Definitely the (reports) for the 2020 general election were significantly late and I think they indicated that was due to staff turnover within their office," said Matthew Streett, an assistant director for the Compliance and Performance Audit Division of the OLA. "They reported them after the election results were certified."

In the July 2022 primary election, the audit found, the elections board identified four individuals who successfully voted multiple times and 263 voters who attempted to vote multiple times, referring the information to the state prosecutors office in a "timely" manner.

Election integrity has become a high-profile issue with former President Donald Trump and his supporters repeatedly challenging the outcome of the 2020 presidential election.

The audit also noted that the elections board could enhance its procedures to fully identify deceased or duplicate voters. The audit identified 2,426 "potentially deceased individuals" whose voter registrations were active and 327 individuals with potential duplicate voter registrations.


POTENTIALLY DECEASED?
 

PeoplesElbow

Well-Known Member
ANNAPOLIS (Nov. 3, 2023)—An audit released Friday, Nov. 3, found that the Maryland Board of Elections did not report for more than a year its findings that people voted or tried to vote more than once in the 2020 general election—well after the results were certified, according to The Office of Legislative Audits.

The state elections board identified 134 voters who voted more than once and 1,371 voters who attempted to vote multiple times in the 2020 general election, but it did not report these individuals to the The Office of State Prosecutor until April 2022, the audit said. The audit is part of a routine physical compliance audit of the SBE conducted every three to four years.

"Definitely the (reports) for the 2020 general election were significantly late and I think they indicated that was due to staff turnover within their office," said Matthew Streett, an assistant director for the Compliance and Performance Audit Division of the OLA. "They reported them after the election results were certified."

In the July 2022 primary election, the audit found, the elections board identified four individuals who successfully voted multiple times and 263 voters who attempted to vote multiple times, referring the information to the state prosecutors office in a "timely" manner.

Election integrity has become a high-profile issue with former President Donald Trump and his supporters repeatedly challenging the outcome of the 2020 presidential election.

The audit also noted that the elections board could enhance its procedures to fully identify deceased or duplicate voters. The audit identified 2,426 "potentially deceased individuals" whose voter registrations were active and 327 individuals with potential duplicate voter registrations.


POTENTIALLY DECEASED?
Whats funny is that with a day or two of someone passing away their social security is cut off. My dad had a check he received two weeks before passing away pulled back out of the bank account.
 

stgislander

Well-Known Member
PREMO Member
I imagine some counties are better than others. I asked my brother check with the local Board of Elections to take our Mom's name off the rolls about 1 month after she passed. It was already taken care of.
 
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NorthBeachPerso

Honorary SMIB
Whats funny is that with a day or two of someone passing away their social security is cut off. My dad had a check he received two weeks before passing away pulled back out of the bank account.
That's pretty standard. Social Security is paid in arrears and you have to be alive for the whole month.
EX: Guy dies on 6/29 and his Social Security check for June is direct deposited in 7/7. It gets withdrawn back because he wasn't alive all of June.

I turned 62 in June, my first check came in August for July. As a note, my pension started dated for the day I applied for it.

Back to voter fraud in the State .

Why the surprise? Calvert County regularly reported more votes for Democrat candidates from after the Civil War up though Kennedy than there were people who lived in the County.

People also were allowed to vote in many Maryland jurisdictions if they owned property there. Live in Prince George's and own a summer cottage in North Beach or Chesapeake Beach (as well as many other towns) and you could vote where you owned the property.

That wasn't thrown out until 1986 by Tobin, et al v. Town of North Beach.


My mother never voted in her 89 years. In September of 2010 I got a call from an elections clerk where she lived. Turns out the Elections Board had received a voter registration and application for an absentee ballot from my mother. She'd died in July. The clerk and I had talked at her funeral. This was Pennsylvania.
 

PeoplesElbow

Well-Known Member
That's pretty standard. Social Security is paid in arrears and you have to be alive for the whole month.
EX: Guy dies on 6/29 and his Social Security check for June is direct deposited in 7/7. It gets withdrawn back because he wasn't alive all of June.

I turned 62 in June, my first check came in August for July. As a note, my pension started dated for the day I applied for it.

Back to voter fraud in the State .

Why the surprise? Calvert County regularly reported more votes for Democrat candidates from after the Civil War up though Kennedy than there were people who lived in the County.

People also were allowed to vote in many Maryland jurisdictions if they owned property there. Live in Prince George's and own a summer cottage in North Beach or Chesapeake Beach (as well as many other towns) and you could vote where you owned the property.

That wasn't thrown out until 1986 by Tobin, et al v. Town of North Beach.


My mother never voted in her 89 years. In September of 2010 I got a call from an elections clerk where she lived. Turns out the Elections Board had received a voter registration and application for an absentee ballot from my mother. She'd died in July. The clerk and I had talked at her funeral. This was Pennsylvania.
In my dad's case it was a year's worth of backpay from when they decided he was disabled. The kicker is they never warned us they were doing it, the funeral check bounced, and three months after they did it we got a notice that it would happen.

But my point is that they are on the ball and know right when someone dies and the election board thinks maybe someone is dead, maybe not.
 

SamSpade

Well-Known Member
We all know that voter fraud and election fraud will only be taken seriously if it results in the election of Republicans.

As Hillary noted, Hitler was duly elected. Hence, if Democrats get elected it’s no big deal if it’s fraudulent since the greater good is served by their election.
 
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