Bald-Faced Lies About Black Box Voting Machines
Bald-Faced Lies About Black Box Voting Machines
and
The Truth About the Rob-Georgia File
By Bev Harris *
* Bev Harris is the Author of the soon to be published book " Black Box Voting: Ballot Tampering In The 21st Century "
Pre order at… http://www.blackboxvoting.com
Scoop.co.nz has now revealed for the first time the location of a complete online copy of the original data set. As we anticipate attempts to prevent the distribution of this information we encourage supporters of democracy to make copies of these files and to make them available on websites and file sharing networks.
Download the Diebold files
(See also... http://www.scoop.co.nz/mason/stories/HL0307/S00065.htm
Inside
A U.S. Election Vote Counting
Program
and
http://www.scoop.co.nz/mason/stories/HL0307/S00064.htm
Sludge
Report #154 – Bigger Than Watergate!**)
A Diebold touchscreen
voting machine
Makers of the walk right in,
sit right down, replace ballot tallies with your own GEMS
vote counting program.
CONTENTS
LIES
Someone needs to get their story straight.
Diebold voting machines are used in 37 states. The entire state of Ohio is considering dumping its old system to buy Diebold. Georgia already did.
The Diebold files, supposedly secret voting machine files left on an unprotected web site for nearly six years, are unlocking the truth.
Official stories about voting machine security, acceptance testing and last-minute program changes are beginning to slide around like hot grease on a Georgia griddle.
What was the program patch known as rob-georgia.zip used for? What were they doing with that ftp site, anyway? Hang in for the first part of this article, the finger-pointing and obfuscating part, because it concludes with a straightforward explanation of what went on in Georgia that has never been made public before.
DO ANY OF THESE PEOPLE TELL THE TRUTH?
"We protect the Bill of Rights, the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence. We protect the Hope Diamond," [Diebold CEO Wally] O'Dell told The Plain Dealer in May 2002. "Now, we protect the most sacred treasure we have, our secret ballot."
If they can't tell us the truth about simple things like "does it connect to modems," can we really be confident that they are protecting our vote?
CNBC asked Diebold CEO Wally O'Dell this question on election day, Nov. 5, 2002: "How tamper proof are these voting machines? That seems to be a concern of some who feel that it only takes one person, one hacker who can screw up an entire election. How valid is that criticism Mr. O`Dell?"
"Well, there`s always risks," replied O'Dell, "but, you know, these things are not connected to the Internet. They`re individual precinct by precinct, location by location. They`re double checked before they`re sent out. We think the technology is fabulous and very bulletproof. (Come back here after reading rob-georgia, ask him to repeat this.)
"The GEMS computers are not connected to any communication system, including the Internet, and contain no software other than the Windows operating system and the Global Election Management System object code," wrote Dr. Brit Williams on Apr. 23, 2003. He is the official voting machine certifier for the state of Georgia, and a key member of the panel that chooses national Independent Testing Labs for voting machines.
Lies.
"The central host system (GEMS Software) is generally a stand-alone system so that no physical access via network is allowed...This computer can download files for the Internet with dial-out only capability, but is generally not allowed to be linked to the Internet for obvious security concerns." This, in documents submitted during a purchasing decision, answering questions from Santa Clara County, California on Feb. 7, 2003.
If the GEMS computer isn't connected to anything, why is the following diagram found in a file named GApresentation3-02.zip, found on the Diebold ftp site? This diagram depicts the GEMS computer connecting directly to the Internet on election night.
http://img.scoop.co.nz/stories/images/0307/22b4e4cd0e52315e48ae.jpeg
CLICK IMAGE FOR BIG VERSION
Not connected to any communication system are they, Dr. Williams? I spoke with James Rellinger, the technician who installed all 159 GEMS host computers in Georgia.
Harris: "I understand that you worked for Diebold Election Systems in Georgia. Can you tell me what you did?"
Rellinger: "They contracted us here in Georgia to basically follow a recipe book and we ran down and built these things."
Harris: "By 'build these things' -- I think of build, like a hammer and a screwdriver -- What do you mean by build, what were you building?"
Rellinger: "Oh, that's a good point. There were 159 of these servers that went out. All we did was run through a series of tests to make sure they could log on and communicate and make sure everything jived with the touch screen.
"When you say build they were actually just a Dell server and we added some hardware to it for instance CD burners, a tape came in them already, but we'd add things to make them modem capable.
"When you say build a server it's not physically assembling a hardware. We added a component or two to make it do what we needed to do, modems, we load the Windows 2000, put the software in then we test it against their touch-screen machines."
Let's look at just how big a whopper Dr. Williams told when he said they aren't connected to anything: Sandy Baxter, Elections Supervisor for San Juan County, Washington, also says she had modems and Internet capability:
"I think it was about 1999 we bought a new server. They gave us recommendations for servers, like Dell. They had Dell ship them to McKinney, Texas and they loaded the systems on and various modems, digiboards and stuff...The server can handle multiple PCs, but I only have one at this time, so my PC is also my server...I have two modems. I have a modem that is for going out and it is not connected to the GEMS system. So I can go to the web. I have what's called a digiboard on my server that allows multiple modem connections. I have a second modem on the GEMS system but its only for the AccuVote systems. My precincts modem me the results on that. The second modem is the only one that goes to my GEMS system. It doesn't have the capability to go in and out. I just plug it in when I use it."
The User Manuals are filled with references to modems, ports, uploading, downloading, TCP/IP protocols, transmissions, and ways to use "JResults" to upload to the web continuously on election night. Technical specifications, including manufacturer's components lists, show that not only are there modems, but wireless communications.
All right, so
they lied to us about modem hook-ups. Shall we let this
cloud our trust in everything else they are telling
us?
Consider this:
Diebold's official spokesman, Joseph Richardson assures us that the open ftp site was inactive. In interviews with Salon.com and the Baltimore City Paper, he said the site was old and the files were out of date. Was this the truth?
Not at all. The site was taken down on Jan. 29, 2003. The most recent file on the ftp site is dated Jan. 23, 2003. How much information was in the files? See for yourself by visiting the download site at the top of this article.
Michael Barnes, of the elections division with the Georgia Secretary of State's office, said "That ftp site did not affect us in any way shape or form because we did not do any file transferring from it."
Let's have Dr. Brit Williams weigh in. In Feb. 2003, he said "I'm not familiar with that site." On April 23, he wrote a letter that was a bit more precise:
"Apparently, there was an FTP site that Diebold employees
used to store and transfer versions of the system that were
under development. The contents, or even existence, of the
'rob georgia' folder has not been established. However, for
the sake of this discussion, we will assume that the FTP
site existed...
This would have had absolutely no effect
on the election system as implemented in Georgia. The State
does not obtain its election system code from an FTP site or
even from Diebold."
Dr. Williams went on to outline an elaborate scheme whereby he claimed that the program files are obtained solely from ITAs (Independent Testing Labs).
What about the Secretary of State? A memo by Chris Riggall, spokesperson for Georgia Secretary of State Cathy Cox, stated that last minute "patches" were installed on all 22,000 voting machines in Georgia. Dr. Williams admitted to me that they were never examined -- not by a testing lab, not by him, not by anyone outside of Diebold. Suddenly, no one could get their stories straight on the patches either.
The patch was from Microsoft and it was for Windows, said the Secretary of State's office. But wait -- Dr. Williams says it came directly from the ITA. What does Diebold say? Diebold says they have no indication there ever was a patch.
We're going to meet one of the guys who actually installed that patch in a minute, but first let us observe the art of evasion from Diebold's Joe Richardson:
Harris: "Did you say, when interviewed by Salon.com, in reference to whether patches were put on the machines in Georgia, "We have analyzed that situation and have no indication of that happening at all."
Richardson: "Well, that is what I said at the time, however, we have continued to investigate the matter and … (very, very long pause) Yes that is what I said to Salon.com."
Harris: "Do you stand by that now?"
Richardson: "We have continued to look into the matter."
Harris: "As you have continued to investigate this, do you have any new information as to whether patches were put on in Georgia?"
Richardson: "No."
Harris: "Has anyone thought to just call them up and ask? The Secretary of State's office?"
Richardson: "I can't say."
Harris: "What was the rob-georgia file? Who is responsible for it?"
Richardson: "I'm not privy to that information."
Harris: "Who would be able to answer that question?"
Richardson: "I can't tell you. I can look into it."
Harris: "Yes, could you do that please? In two publications, you are quoted as saying that the information on the open FTP site was old and out of date. Yet, I can tell you the most recent file on it was dated January 16, 2003. Did you do any checking to see whether the site had been used recently when you made that statement?" (A more recent file, dated Jan. 23, was later discovered.)
Richardson: "The site had already been taken down."
Harris: "Surely Diebold has access to its own site?"
Richardson: "I'm saying I didn't have access."
Harris: "Did you ask anybody?"
Richardson: (sound of shuffling papers) "Our ongoing investigation has found no merit to the insinuations of security breaches in our election solutions."
Harris: "So if there were up to 20,000 files including hardware, software specs, testing protocols, source code, you do not feel that is a security breach?" (more files have since been discovered inside a mammoth zipped directory, bringing the estimated total up to nearly 40,000 files)
Richardson: "Our ongoing investigation has found no merit to the insinuations of security breaches in our election solutions."
And now, Dr. Brit Williams on the Georgia patch:
Harris: What was the security around the creation of the cards used to implement the patch?
Williams: "That's a real good question. Like I say, we were in the heat of the election. Some of the things we did, we probably compromised security a little bit -- Let me emphasize we've gone back since the election and done extensive testing on all this." Dr. Williams latest 180 degree reversal (This link leads you to a forum discussing files from the ftp site, which contains several absurd statements from Dr. Williams).
And now, Michael Barnes on the Georgia patch:
Barnes: "Wyle said it did not affect the certification elements. So it did not need to be certified." (at the above-referenced link, you can also find information from a Freedom of Information Act request, in which officials admitted they did not have any certifying documents on the patch).
Harris: "Where's the written report from Wyle on that? Can I have a copy?"
Barnes: "I'd have to look for it I don't know if there was ever a written report by Wyle. It might have been by phone."
Everyone assured me they knew of
no one named Rob. Move along.
But I received an e-mail:
"I think I may be the Rob in rob-georgia," it said. And now
I know why they didn't want us to interview him. I think
you'll agree that his interview is worth the length, for the
picture you get of what was really going on. If you prefer
to skim, check the sections in italics. Citizens, meet Rob Behler,
straight talker:
Harris: What was the FTP site for?
Behler:One of problems we had was an issue with the GEMS database. They had to do an update to it, so they just post the update to the web site.
Harris: What was rob-georgia?
Behler: I believe what that file was for, I did a -- well, there were a ton of holes with the programs on those machines. When they all came into the warehouse, I did a quality check, this was something I did on a Saturday. I found that 25% of the machines on the floor would fail KSU testing --
Harris: "What is KSU testing?"
Behler: "Kennesaw State University. We knew basically what they would be testing and the trick was to make sure the machines would pass the testing. So I went and checked a pallet and found it was bad. And I checked another, and another, and I knew we had a problem."
Harris: "Was that both you and James
Rellinger?"
Behler: "James dealt with the network, but I was dealing with the touchscreen machines themselves.
Harris: "What kind of problems were you seeing?"
Behler: "…One of the things we had wrong was the date wasn't sticking in the Windows CE. The real time clock would go to check the time on the motherboard, and it would have an invalid year in it, like 1974 or something, and basically the machine would continue to keep checking. Every time it checked, it saw that the date was not right and this put it into a loop.
"They had to do an update in CE to fix all those dates. So the way we did that in the warehouse was, they would post whatever the update was on the FTP site. James would go get the file and put it on the [memory] cards. Because you load everything through the PCMCIA cards. You boot it up using the card and it loads the new software.
"This was done in the warehouses -- once the machines were sent out to the county, these updates were done just to make sure the machines were running correctly. I went over to Dekalb [County]. We updated 1800 machines in basically a day and a half. I still remember ol' Rusty, down at the warehouse, we ended up touching every single machine off the pallet, booting 'em up, update it, we had a couple hundred machines done when in comes a new update over the phone.
Harris: "You mean you used a modem or they called you on the phone?"
Behler: "No. A phone call. They'd say 'Oh no no, the way we had you do, that's not going to work, here's another thing to do. Okay, we just did a few hundred machines, now we gotta do it this way -- But we got it done.
Harris: "Did you personally ever download anything at all from the FTP site?"
Behler: [it was] mostly James.
Harris: "Did you work for Diebold, or James Rellinger?"
Behler: "I worked for ABSS. So did James."
Harris: "What about the rob-georgia file?"
Behler: "I think they put it out there for me when we were doing the Dekalb thing, but I was busy managing the whole crew so, I had my laptop out, and one of the engineers used my laptop -- or maybe it was James -- one of them had to go in and get it from the FTP, put it on a card, make copies of the cards and then we used them to update the machines."
Harris: "So one of the people downloaded the patch and then made copies of it?"
Behler: "They use my laptop. It was not secure, either. They just used the laptop to repro the cards. Diebold never gave us anything with a PCMCIA slot, then they'd tell us, 'Go download this,' so we'd have to get out our own laptop to do it."
Harris: "Who instructed you about the FTP site? Was it a Diebold employee?"
Behler: "It was Diebold."
Harris: "Was it the people in Ohio or the people in Texas?"
Behler: "The people in McKinney [Texas]."
Harris: "Who were some of the Diebold people? Do you remember any names?"
Behler: "Ian. I remember one of the guys, Ian, I can't remember his last name. One of the main guys we dealt with was a guy named Ian. He was actually involved in the design of the motherboard. He was very much involved in trying to figure out how to fix the problems. So they sent us upgrades, but then after we did it KSU still failed a ton of machines."
Harris: "As I understand it, they send the system to Wyle labs for certification, and also to Ciber to test the software. But from what you are describing, I can't understand how the machines got through what they are telling us is 'rigorous testing.'"
Behler: "From what I understand they ended up figuring out that the cards that we were loading that fix that Diebold provided for us, well they were never tested, they just said 'Oh here's the problem, go ahead and fix it.'
Harris: "So what is your opinion about
the certification testing?" Behler: "No, it's not
just that. NOBODY even tested it! When I found that out -- I
mean you can't not test a fix -- I worked for a billing
company, and if I'd put a fix on that wasn't tested I'd have
gotten FIRED! You have to make sure whatever fix you did
didn't break something else. But they didn't even TEST the
fixes before they told us to install them. "Look, we're
doing this and 50-60 percent of the machines are still
freezing up! Turn it on, get one result. Turn it off and
next time you turn it on you get a different result. Six
times, you'd get six different results." Harris:
"Can you give me an example of different
results?" Behler: "Meaning the machine does
something wrong different each time you boot it up. One time
and it would freeze on you, next time it would load the GEMS
program but have a completely different type of error, like
there'd be a gray box sitting in the middle of it, or you
couldn't use a field." Harris: "Was this all
due to the clock?" Behler: "I don't know for sure.
They [the machines] were not originally doing it. Then they
fixed the real time clock, and it was supposed to make it
work normal. It fixed the clock problem -- the clock problem
had caused it to come up and not show the battery at one
point. It was supposed to say either 'low battery,' 'high
battery' or 'charging.' But when the real time clock was
messed up, you'd boot the machine and
it would say 'No battery!' I mean, you don't have the
machine plugged in, you boot it up, and it starts, and says
it 'has no battery.' That's like saying, 'this morning I got
out of bed and I stood up and I had no brain.' "And
that's how they ended up finding it, the problem. What it
was doing was it was checking for the right time, and kept
going back trying to get a better time, and while it was
doing that, it was supposed to get the battery status but it
was still busy trying to get the time. "And then when we loaded the software to fix
that, the machines were still acting RIDICULOUS! "I was
saying, 'This is not good! We need some people that know
what this stuff is supposed to do, from McKinney, NOW! These
machines, nobody knows what they're doing but Diebold, you
need some people to fix them that know what's going on! They
finally brought in guys, they ended up bringing in about 4
people. "When they left, they still did not know why it
was still sporadic. My understanding is, after I was
dismissed, they came back the following week. That's when
they figured out what the real problem was. But they'd
already had us do their 'upgrade' on thousands of machines
by then." Harris: "How did this work? Did
Dr. Brit Williams get the machines first and do acceptance
testing, or did you guys get them first?" Behler:
"When the machines came in, they came to us first. They were
in the warehouse. We assembled them. They'd come in a box
with a touchscreen, and another box with the booth. We
assembled the machine and we ran it though series of tests.
We'd check the power cord, boot up the machine, check the
printer, bar code it, update Windows CE, then send it on to
Brit. He did the KSU testing the L&A [Logic & Accuracy] was
done at the county level, right before the
election." Harris: "So…the L&A was not done at
acceptance testing?" Behler: "It got so there
wasn't time. They did it before the
election." Harris: "How long does it take to do a
Logic & Accuracy test? Doesn't it take like, 15 minutes per
machine?" Behler: "When we did the updates in
Dekalb, they kept saying it would take a really long time.
But they don't think about the different overlapping things.
You can update a bunch of machines simultaneously. Same
thing with an L&A test. You have a whole group of cards,
they have to touch every machine. What we had done before,
we had 10 material handlers throw the machines up there, use
the key to open it up, stick 10 cards in, boot 'em all up
which installs the patch." Harris: "But what about
the L&A testing?" Behler:
"The L&A testing -- You would just enter, like, one vote and
-- you just choose one -- you don't need to be specific on
which one. When they did this L&A testing, that's when they
did the FINAL update to the
software." ... Behler:
"Of course you have to have the touchscreens assembled in
the warehouse, and do some testing. It turned out that there
were a lot of problems that needed to be dealt with, and
they simply weren't dealing with them." Harris:
"How long did you work there?" Behler: "They let
me go only one month into it. The Project Manager let me go.
He didn't like my management style. I'm very matter of fact.
If this is wrong, fix it. I'm a simple person -- if
something is broke, do you stand around and talk about why
its broke for a month, or do you solve the
problem?" Harris: "After your experience with
Diebold, how confident are you that the machines count votes
accurately?" Behler: "If you were to ask me to
tell you how accurate I thought the vote count was, I'd have
to say 'no comment' because after what I saw, I have an
inherent distrust of the machines. "I was absolutely
astounded that they functioned at all in the election.
Here's me, I'm at the polling place looking around, waiting
for someone to get frustrated... "I took this because of
James, who is my friend, and because I'm A-plus certified.
But when I came in there was a bunch of internal bickering.
They had no inventory control in the warehouse. I guarantee
you that the state of Georgia can't accurately reflect where
each machine is. "Diebold was impressed with what I
accomplished, and asked me if I was available for some other
states they'd be doing... "The problem, what they were
doing with the inventory on the machine was this: Inside the
case is the serial number. They would hand write the serial
number on a post-it, stick it to the front of the machine,
and there would be a sheet hand-written from that list. Now,
you've got 20 machines sitting on a pallet. The guy making
the list would look at the post-its and he'd record all the
post-it numbers on a list. Look, if you're writing numbers
by hand, twice, by two different people, there is a real
good chance you'll transpose some numbers. Then, they
used the list for bar codes, but I would say probably 1-2%
of the machines are incorrectly bar coded. They couldn't track them in the Access
database, because they'd punch in and it would say 'that
number's already been used.' Then they'd check the machines,
and they had the right number, so the wrong bar code was
sitting on some machine that had already been shipped out to
the counties. "Ironically, they would send a
spreadsheet of all the numbers of the machines that they
shipped straight from the factory. This was from the same
computer that generated the labels. They had copies of it
all along. I said, 'Hey guys, if you check these when they
come in the door you'll never miss a label.'" "I was very
down on Diebold, because they were very sluggish and didn't
move well. I worked there from mid-june
to mid-july. The whole time they were upgrading the software
and doing some sort of fix to it. This was supposed to be
prior to KSU testing." Harris: "What about
the program patches begun in August?" Behler: "Aug
20, they started to put these teams together and go out and
update the machines. You have to
understand that the patching all started when I did the
first quality check that Saturday. They'd never have done
it. They had shipped us 6,000 machines and NO ONE had ever
done a quality check. I'd come in on a Saturday, I had two
of my sons with me, and I thought I'm going to just look.
And it was bad. "Then first thing Monday morning I raised
the question, I said, 'Hey guys, we've got a problem --
there's 20-25% of the machines that are palletized that are
failing, and then they had a new update come out and I was
doing an update, and then they sent a new one. I updated a
whole bunch of machines. Then they finished about the time I
left. But later they put in another one, I guess. In
August. "You've gotta go take care of this JS [junk shit]
equipment, I told them. Finally, I raised it as high as
you go, I raised it to Bob Urosevich, he's the head of
it. I told him personally, 'This is bad, I don't see us
putting an election on with these machines!' "That's where
they finally assembeld the teams. They got some big ol' vans
we loaded up as many people as could fit in. "They were
actually swapping parts out of these machines that were on
site. They'd cannibalize a machine with a bad printer or
whatever, they'd grab the screen off of that to put on
another machine with a failing screen, they'd retest it.
They were not just breaking them down, they were taking
pieces off and putting it back together. "Even the
machines that are updated, that had the right release of the
software, exactly like the company wanted it, you'd boot it
up and all kinds of crazy things would happen. That led to
my belief that when voting took place, there would be
problems." Harris: "Do you remember what
release number it was? What version of
GEMS?" Behler: "Release -- I don't remember the
number because what they did was it was always the date. I
had to take it to the level of these testers, they knew that
the machine either did pass the test or didn't. We'd check
the date to make sure it was the right version. "The date
was…let me see…June 28. No, the last one, the date
that was supposed to be on there was July 5. (Note: a patch
labeled Georgia062802.zip is on the ftp site, and when you
review it, you will see that it contains much more than just
the "Windows updates" claimed by Georgia officials.) "There was about three updates, the CE
software, the date that would come up would be the last.
After that they came up with another fix, that's the August
one at that point. "I told Darryl Graves, the
Project Manager, I told everyone at Diebold, 'I have zero
confidence in the ability of these machines to
perform.' Harris: "I understand that they go
through Wyle testing labs and so forth. How in the world do
so many critical errors get through
certification?" Behler: "When I was handling these
machines, they were coming straight from a factory in North
Carolina. That's where the actual touch screen was
manufactured. Booths came out of California. We assembled
the booth with the machine. That's all I
know." Harris: "What do you know about the ROM
chip, or whatever?" Behler: "There's the eprom, or
the flash as they call it. A lot of the fixes they did they
could do in the flash memory. "If they said they tested
it I'm going to tell you right now the software that I
installed on the machine myself, they found out that that
was NEVER tested. Okay, I don't want to get other people
involved, but you should talk to Rellinger. "Anyway, that
they had never tested it, that made complete sense to me,
watching what was going on. "This is an example we did: We
would plug it in, boot it 3 times, unplug it, boot it three
more times. I wrote a sheet on this. This guy came in from
McKinney, he was about the second in command. He's a good
friend of Bob Urosevich. About second to Bob, at least now,
he got a promotion. Greg? Something like that. He flew in
and I went to Dekalb and I tested and together we went
through, and we wrote down every single error, and he booted
them himself, and was looking at the results and seeing how
sporadic they were. and we found out of the machines we
tested, about 75% of the machines had different sporadic
things. He was working with me and we were writing them
down, we literally wrote everything down." Harris:
"Do you have a copy of that?" Behler: "I don't
think I have it. I have some email. I'd have to look. I know
we came back and he copied it and he -- Greg Lowe
(spelling?) is his name. I drove him out there. Brit was
there, KSU was doing their testing. They were bombing these
machines out left and right." "I'm telling him, 'They're
all like this.' At this time I was working 150 hours in 2
weeks I was there all the time with these machines, that's
the reality of it. The techs were working overtime trying to
fix them. We couldn't get enough from the factory because so
many were bad. You'd get a shipment of 300, but 75 were bad,
they couldn't put them out fast enough to replace all the
defects. "It was the software, not the hardware, that's
where the problem was. "If they're telling you they
tested that, well they did NOT test the fixes that they did
to the windows CE software. Harris: "Do you know
who was writing the fixes?" Behler: "He had a
weird name. He came out of Canada." Harris: "Guy
Lancaster? Josh …Talbot Iredale?" Behler: "That's
it! Talbot Iredale would actually fix it and say, 'Oh,
here's the problem,' and stick it on the FTP site we'd grab
it stick it on the card and make a bunch of copies and use
it." (NOTE: You'll see the initials "tri" in the source code
files. Talbot R. Iredale is one of the main programmers, and
has been a stockholder.) Harris: "So you took the
patches right off the FTP site and installed them on the
machines?" Behler: "That's what we did, he'd FTP
it, and tell us to grab it, we'd put it on a laptop, copy
it and when you boot the machine -- it's just like a
computer that looks at the "A" drive -- these machines look
at the card and then erase the flash, reprogram with
whatever they said needed to be fixed -- I say, erase it and
reprogram it with crap -- and then the whole thing would
start all over again. "My understanding was that
they figured out what was conflicting and James told me that
Tab, well the team that came out after I left, they figured
out what was going on, they figured out that when they fixed
the real time clock problem they had never tested their
fix. "The only people that that cost was Diebold, who had
to pay all kinds of extra expenses. The
rumor around the office was that Diebold lost maybe $10
million on the Georgia thing. I mean, they only sold the
machines for what, $2,000, or $2,500, and then you have to
build them and then you're paying people $30 an hour and you
are out touching 22,000 machines FOUR TIMES -- there's no
way they didn't lose money on this deal. Behler: "You know one of the main
things that really just made me so upset, they were just
like, 'This Brit guy, don't even speak to him, it's a
political game, you've gotta play the politics.' Well, he
walks in and says 'What are you guys doing?' I said,
'We're putting in an update.' He said, 'Will it change what
it does?' He tells
someone at the office and they freaked out. They were like,
'What the heck are you doing???' "I wasn't supposed to
talk to him at all, I guess. The guy had a flannel shirt on,
he was kicking it and he was very genuine and open and there
we are in the same room together, but because I actually
spoke to him I got reprimanded. They said, 'If they ask you
any question, you gotta say 'Talk to Norma, to one of
us.'' "And then you know, ironically, later on right
before I exited, they were scrambling for a date, they were
trying to get us, the teams, into Fulton County to do Fulton
County's 1,900 machines. "They were in the most horrific
spot. The place they warehoused them was like 1900 machines
in a little office space, there was no way we could get at
them. The machines are like 58 pounds, and they had to bring
them in unstack them off the pallet, restack on the pallet,
talk about labor, talk about wasted money! It's like a
warehouse and offices off 75, in Atlanta, I'm talking to
this guy he's a great guy, he's from Fulton County. Him and
I were scheduling this, figuring it out how to get to these
machines and do the update before KSU has to test them. We
cannot be doing this at same time as KSU because there was
NO ROOM for that. Brit had been down there, he knew this.
I'm talking to the Fulton County guy. He opens this one last
door and here's this huge giant empty warehouse. Why didn't
they put the machines out here? He says, 'Well you see
over there's these boxes of county material, you can't be
out here because there may be some sensitive stuff in these
files. They don't want anybody near 'em. His name was
Barney, the only Barney I've met who's black. He said,
"Yeah, they were talking about putting a fence out here."
"We could just get all the testing done at once, I
thought. Whatever. Maybe someone could just get a security
guard to watch us and make sure we don't get into the boxes.
I go back to the office. Brit was there, and he says 'What's
it look like for Fulton?' I said 'There's no way were
going to able to get to Fulton County by Thursday.' I said
we could probably be out there by Friday or Saturday. He
said 'There's no way we can do it at the same time, you know
that.' Behler: "I think a lot of the problems
they had ---- I've worked in billing software, and it's
common to have this little thing wrong -- a simple little
hardware change, you have to put some little line of code in
Windows CE to make it work better. But the thing that blew
me away was when I'm told me they'd NEVER TESTED THE FIX.
"They produced it and got it to us in 24-48 hours. If I'd
known they hadn't tested it I simply wouldn't have installed
it! My background tells me that's a no-no. "I went
into this Diebold thing with no real knowledge of the voting
industry. When I left, I not only had a complete grasp, but
I had a complete disrespect for these machines. "And with
the folks in the office who were so -- you know, 'I'm the
political person, you have to know how the system works' --
they were so much more concerned about their own self
importance, they were losing track of DO THE MACHINES COUNT
THE VOTE PROPERLY! "Because that's what the people in
Georgia need. And I'm one of them!" Harris: "Who
are some of the names working in that
office?" Behler: "Norma Lyons and Wes Craven --
they're from Diebold, and Keith Long. Norma and Wes live in
George, Keith was in Maryland before, then here, I think.
"They sat in the weekly meetings on Monday. Norma had
been a county worker doing voting for 10 years. She knew all
these people in several counties. She was the liason between
Diebold and the counties. They [Diebold] would tell you
something important, and she may or may not tell you because
she wouldn't know how important it was. "Wes was the kind
of guy who needs to work for Sprint or a big
company..." Harris: "How
secure were the machines, from what you
saw?" Behler: "I'll tell you something else -- we
didn't have badges -- people could just walk right in and
get to the machines." Harris: "And that FTP site,
anybody could walk right into it also. Even Diebold's
competitors." Behler: "Anybody who's in voting,
you leave one company you go over there. Ooh yeah, we'll
take you on. Someone comes in and says, 'By the way, I
uploaded the source code, want to grab
it?'" Harris: "Were there any protections to keep
you from duplicating memory cards, or to have them serial
numbered or whatever?" Behler: "The memory cards,
you can just duplicate them. You have to have the proper
info on the card, for the machine to boot up, but you can
just make copies of the cards." Harris: "Were there
any passwords on those FTP files?" Behler:
"No." Harris: "Any passwords on the files
themselves? Or the site?" Behler: "What we got
never had passwords. You just pick it up and use
it." Harris: "Do you still have any
records?" Behler: "Emails. And James downloaded to
his personal laptop, it's probably still on his. And
probably still on mine too. Diebold didn't provide us with
anything with a PCMCIA slot so we had to use our own laptops
to transfer the files when they told us to. Harris:
"When I asked Diebold if there was anyone named Rob in
Georgia, they said no. Did they know about you?" Behler: "They knew me and they knew me
well. I met Bob Urosevich a couple different times, and Ian,
and then Greg Lowe, he got promoted to like almost the DFO,
he was basically Bob's right hand man." "If you would have
realized the scolding I got for actually speaking to Brit.
The whole quality control issue, I kept having to remind
them, I'm the one that pointed this out -- we want this to
be right -- my goal is to just get it fixed and move
on. ... Behler: "Well, when we did the quality
control check we'd open it up, they have a little box for
the printer. We would find the key still in the printer.
Someone could literally take that. We found cards left in
the machine. I wondered what would happen if the wrong
person got it." Harris: "I understand they did a
big demonstration during the summer, with the
machines." Behler: "I was there when they told me
I needed 1100 machines for a demo. I thought, 'The trick is
coming up with 1100 machines that actually work.
Harris: "So the
touchscreens came and had to be assembled?"
We said, 'Just do your normal test, we're
supposed to get the machines ready for you.'
Harris: "Do you think anybody
could have tampered with a machine, if they wanted
to?"
** The email version of this report was distributed on Scoop's Sludge Report list.