Thursday, February 3, 2022

Sabanes Oxley For Secretaries of State?

You may remember that Jay Valentine is the guy who exposed voter fraud using the same fraud detection methods he uses in business. At the article at the American Thinker entitled We Need A Sarbanes Oxley Law for Voter Rolls, he points out that the voter rolls in at least 30 states are filled with improbable voters. For example, he points out that in Alabama there are at least 9 voters over the age of 1,000. The oldest man recorded in the Bible was Methuselah who "only" lived to 969 years old. Shouldn't the Secretary of State of Alabama check out these 9 individuals? It is possible that they made a mistake filling out their registration form, but these 9 individuals are very low hanging fruit. But there is more:
In Alabama, there are over 3,300 voters on the rolls over the age of 100. The top 9 are over 1,000 years old.
Most Americans have never met someone over 112 years of age. Just go to Alabama: They have 482 of them on their current election roll.
2,500 or more Alabama voters share a phone number, some of whom started using that number in 1972.
There are even 18 active voters in one of their city jails.
Valentine goes on to share states as diverse as Georgia and Ohio. Whether red states, or blue, the voter rolls are filled with anomolies that open the door to cheating and the rigging of elections. What Valentine suggests is a Sarbanes Oxley law for Secretaries of State and Election officials. What Sarbanes Oxley does is require CEOs under criminal penalties, to certify that the data sent to investors is true and accurate.
America needs a Sarbanes-Oxley equivalent for voter rolls and any candidate for secretary of state must commit to the following:
All voter rolls will be made available without onerous fees. For you political types, that means no more than $100.
The secretary of state will cross-search the voter rolls monthly to identify phantom voters who live in hotels, UPS Boxes, cemeteries, and scores of other non-residential housing units. Then, remove them.
The secretary of state will apply a voter ID numbering sequence incrementing by 1 where any new voters come at the end of the sequence. That eliminates Wisconsin-style voter ID insertions.
90 days before early voting begins, and during early voting, the list of who voted will be made available via a URL so citizens can track who votes and how many times.
The secretary of state and election officials will sign off on the voter roll each year and, if there is fraud found in such a roll, those election executives are liable to criminal prosecution.

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