US Election Integrity IV - Alastair Thompson (2)
US Election Integrity IV with Scoop's Alastair Thompson - Part 2
By Joan Brunwasser
Election Integrity Ed., OpEdNews
First Published at OpEdNews - July 9, 2009
At the end of part one of our interview, you left off with Bev Harris's breakthrough discovery about Diebold. Please don't leave us hanging, Alastair!
In June 2003,
(after the war started) Bev contacted me by phone. She had
been trying valiantly to get computer scientists to look at
the source code she had uncovered with no success. She was
also becoming a little concerned for her own safety. Her own
inquiries into the source code had confirmed that the
machines and tabulators were foolishly hackable but getting
someone official on the record to say so was proving
impossible. Most scientists were afraid that if they broke
the easily cracked zip passwords on some of the files they
would be opening themselves up to felony prosecution under
the DMCA [the Digital Millennium Copyright
Act].
We decided to proceed to publish
Bev's findings as they stood.
On July 8
2003 we did so in a one-two punch. First up was my
commentary on Bev's findings "Bigger Than Watergate" and then, seven
minutes later, Bev's expose report "Inside a US Election Vote Counting
Program" which explained in detail just how easy it is
to hack a US election without being detected, if you have
access to the tabulation computer.
In
the first story, a link was also published to a copy of the
cache of Diebold source files
data.
Over the next few days, the story
went ballistic. It was linked off of Slashdot.org and copies
of both stories were posted on hundreds of websites across
the US and the world - including Buzzflash.com and
Whatreallyhappened.org. It was even translated into German and Robert
Cringely of PBS picked it
up.
Meanwhile, the cache of data files
was downloaded hundreds of times - often by military
computers - but most importantly by a group of scientists at
Johns Hopkins University. And on July 25, they published
their report, "Analysis of an Electronic Voting
System."The source of the files they used is
acknowledged in the footnotes.
The
academic paper which examined the vulnerabilities of
Diebold's touchscreen software was reported in the New York
Times, "Computer Voting is Open to Easy Fraud,
Experts Say" and suddenly it was game on . [You can see
just how widely the NYT story was picked up here.]
I then
introduced myself to the election reform crew at the Democratic Underground which was then
the clubhouse for the team researching this stuff, and we
prepared to do battle to get something done about this
mess.
Well, having worked the election integrity beat since 2005, I'm not so confident that we've actually made much progress over the years. Media exposure is an important first step. But we're still working toward getting widespread recognition of the dangers of computerized voting to democratic values. What progress can you point to?
Precisely.
Actually,
knowledge is only a small part of the solution, and, since
2002, we have seen three sets of compromised
elections.
And probably most sad of all
- nothing concrete is being done even now - and given the
track record of the election fraudsters, I would fully
expect the 2010 midterms to be
compromised.
And when you realise that
the corrupt election system is also being used to run
primary races, you may quickly figure out why even with
control of the House and the Senate, Obama is finding it
tough going getting his agenda in
place.
In the aftermath of the original
revelations of 2003, I expected there to be significant and
rapid moves to fix the problems. But precisely the opposite
happened - election officials dug in and defended their
machines - they called the election integrity movement names
and attempted to sideline
us.
Meanwhile, the media were little
better, and even after the 2004 election, they were poking
the borax - though at least then they did in fact report the
idea of stolen elections on the front
pages.
Unfortunately, politicians and
naysayers have persistently maintained the view that unless
there is a smoking gun they will not believe what they want
not to believe.
The tragedy is that
there is a smoking gun - one that emerged in the aftermath
of the events described above.
After
the source code leak, two more sets of leaks followed in the
summer of 2003. First, the Diebold memos (made famous by the
Swarthmore College civil disobedience action). These memos
contained some interesting additional information about the
Volusia County incident in the 2000
election.
In October 2003, I published
my version of this story "Diebold Memos Disclose Florida 2000
E-Voting Fraud" based on information provided by Bev
Harris. Bev's version of the same story can be found in her
book on the
subject.
This story proves election
fraud has happened.
The timing, scale
and nature of the discrepancy is such that it unquestionably
played a part in the premature award of the 2000 election to
George Bush by network news anchors on election night. It
cannot be explained by any other credible explanation except
computer hacking. It is the smoking gun.
Thank you, Alastair. We'll pause here with the smoking gun. When we come back, we'll talk about the 2004 presidential election, online independents, Scoop's mission statement, and the stable of Americans that write for Scoop. I hope you'll join us.
**** Correction to part one (already amended online), as pointed out by Bev Harris: "Each instance of Talion.com in part one should be replaced with Bev Harris - I owned Talion.com, but it was a publicity site that had nothing to do with the voting issue." Thank you, Bev.
***
Link to part one of Interview with Alastair Thompson
Author's Bio: Joan Brunwasser is a co-founder of Citizens for Election Reform (CER) which exists for the sole purpose of raising the public awareness of the critical need for election reform. We aim to restore fair, accurate, transparent, secure elections where votes are cast in private and counted in public. Electronic (computerized) voting systems are simply antithetical to democratic principles.
CER set up a lending library to
achieve the widespread distribution of the DVD Invisible
Ballots: A temptation for electronic vote fraud. Within
eighteen months, the project had distributed over 3200
copies across the country and beyond. CER now concentrates
on group showings, OpEd pieces, articles, reviews,
interviews, discussion sessions, networking, conferences,
anything that promotes awareness of this critical problem.
Joan has been Election Integrity Editor for OpEdNews since
December, 2005. Her articles also appear at RepublicMedia.TV
and Scoop.co.nz.