What Happened In Ohio?: A Documentary Record of Theft in the 2004 Election

Robert J Fitrakis,Steven Rosenfeld,Harvey Wasserman

What Happened In Ohio?: A Documentary Record of Theft in the 2004 Election
Format
Paperback
Publisher
The New Press
Country
United Kingdom
Published
1 June 2006
Pages
336
ISBN
9781595580696

What Happened In Ohio?: A Documentary Record of Theft in the 2004 Election

Robert J Fitrakis,Steven Rosenfeld,Harvey Wasserman

In the first in-depth look at the most critical state’s voting process in the 2004 presidential election, three path breaking investigative journalists (one a member of the legal team that sued the state of Ohio for election fraud), compile documentary evidence of massive potential theft and fraud in the presidential vote - problems that may have changed the outcome of the presidential election in Ohio, and thus the nation. What Happened in Ohio? includes trucking receipts that show voting machines were pulled back from minority districts; ballots that contain evidence of tampering; mathematical analysis demonstrating the statistical impossibility of voting totals; testimonials from hundreds of voters, campaign workers and poll workers about conditions that effectively disenfranchised thousands of voters; copies of flyers instructing Democrats to vote on Wednesday ; official letters sent to tens of thousands of long time voters incorrectly noting that they had been deemed inactive and ineligible to vote; photos taken of the original exit poll data broadcast on election night before it was retroactively corrected by the networks; and much, much more. For anyone suspicious of the Ohio vote, here’s the evidence you’ve been waiting for. This work includes: total number of votes by which George W. Bush won Ohio: 118,775; total number of ballots, mostly from Democratic precincts, that were rejected and remain uncounted: 92,672; total number of provisional ballots, many from Cuyahoga County, which includes Cleveland and other Democratic centres, that were ruled invalid and not counted: 35,000; total number of votes added in Miami County after 100 per cent of precincts had already reported their vote totals: 18,000; and total number of voting machines that sat unused in Franklin County, which includes Columbus, while voters in Democratic, inner-city districts faced up to 7-hour waits and often left without voting: 122.

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