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Over the e-transom! Diebold extortion followed by ES&S retribution?

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galloglas Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-13-06 08:41 PM
Original message
Over the e-transom! Diebold extortion followed by ES&S retribution?
Permission to reprint with link to http://www.blackboxvoting.org


ES&S reneges on Leon County deal 2 days before HAVA deadline


After pursuing Leon County for a full year, sending a contract, and
as the final test conducting a Leon County election on its equipment,
two ES&S executives shook hands on a $1.8 million deal with Leon
County Election Supervisor Ion Sancho. Right before the HAVA deadine
though, Election Systems & Software (ES&S) CEO Aldo Tesi abruptly
aborted the Leon County contract.

Leon County's Ion Sancho shook up the voting industry in December
when he authorized a security test which proved the Diebold system
can be hacked. In short order, Volusia County (FL) dumped Diebold,
hastily signing an agreement to purchase ES&S; St. Louis County (MO)
dropped its Diebold contract, the state of California refused to certify
Diebold (sending its machines back to federal testing labs) and the
state of Pennsylvania decertified the Diebold optical scan system.
California and Pennsylvania acted on the advice of their own
independent voting system examiners, who confirmed problems with
the code exploited by Finnish computer expert Harri Hursti to hack the
system in Leon County.

PRIVATIZATION & HAVA PUT ELECTIONS OFFICIAL'S HEADS IN A VISE

Privatization of the voting industry puts election officials in a tough spot.
Florida has authorized only three vendors to sell voting equipment (ES&S,
Sequoia and Diebold). However, because the vendors are private
corporations, they can choose to sell to whomever they want, refusing
customers at will.

Sequoia Voting Systems decided not to sell to customers in Ohio, saying
the number of sales available was not enough to make a profit. Hart Intercivic
chose not to sell to customers in North Carolina, forcing elections officials
there to buy only from ES&S.

ES&S decided to sell its machines to Volusia County, a new customer
about the same size as Leon County, while denying its machines to Leon
County. Nothing prevents a vendor from refusing to sell to counties deemed
too small to turn a profit, or to jurisdictions they simply don't like.

The federal Help America Vote Act (HAVA) denies funds to counties that
don't purchase voting machines, states dictate which vendors are approved,
and vendors dictate to whom they will sell.

WHO'S FIGHTING FOR THE BEST INTERESTS OF THE CITIZENS?

"It looks like I've got two bad actors to deal with , and
neither one of them is acting responsibly in my opinion. What do I do to serve
the best interests of the citizens of Leon County?" says Sancho. "HAVA has
forced us to purchase systems that in my opinion are not appropriate for citizens
to be voting on, but as Dickens says, 'The law is an ass.'"

BREACH OF CONTRACT OR EXTORTION?

Sancho's problems with Diebold accelerated after he allowed security tests,
revealing a problem with the GEMS central tabulator and the optical scan
memory card design. Dr. Herbert Thompson demonstrated on Feb. 14 and
May 2 last year that he was able to gain control of the "mother ship" – the
central tabulator that counts votes from all the precinct machines. Finnish
expert Harri Hursti demonstrated on May 26 that he was able to alter results
tapes using a rigged memory card, and on Dec. 13, rigged an entire mock
election from start to finish using a memory card.

ES&S had solicited Mr. Sancho in December 2004, but Sancho did not offer
an affirmative response. However, with HAVA deadlines looming, Diebold
was hitching their wagon solely to touch-screen voting, and in Florida, touch-
screens do not provide a paper trail. Sancho favored the AutoMark, a disability-
approved technology distributed by ES&S which does produce a paper ballot.

In June 2005, shortly after the May security tests by Thompson and Hursti,
Sancho approached ES&S to inquire about purchasing the AutoMark.

"I called ES&S and said, 'Can I get deep discounts over the price if I go with
AutoMark?' They crowed about it . They said
'Absolutely, both on our M100s and on the AutoMark.'"

Sancho began thinking even more seriously about dumping Diebold when, on
July 13 at 11:09 a.m. he received a letter warning him that Diebold would not
support his system if he purchased Automark for the disabled. In the state of
Illinois, Diebold apparently has not made the same threat, and on Jan. 9 this
year Illinois certified the AutoMark for use with Diebold optical scanners.

Matters got worse. Leon County was paying $6,000 a year for an active contract
with Diebold to provide software upgrades. The state of Florida had certified a
central tabulator upgrade, GEMS 1.18.19, in March 2005.

In August, Sancho was notifed that the city of Tallahassee was going to conduct
a referendum.

"I contacted Diebold and asked, 'Why haven't we receved 18.19?" Sancho says.
"I was placed on hold and then shifted to Michael Lindroos Diebold, Inc. board of directors].

"I asked Mr. Lindroos, I said 'We have a contract with you for the software, there
seems to be some stalling for the receipt of this software.' He directly told me
we would not receive the new software unless we signed a new contract.

"Now, I have a signed check here, Diebold cashed the check. They’re in breach
of their contract."

ES&S WAITS TILL THE LAST MINUTE TO DITCH

ES&S and Leon County proceeded ahead for the transition from Diebold to ES&S.

As the last step for the sale, Sancho told ES&S, "We’re going to require one test.
We'll use your equipment on November 17, and if it performs satisfactorily we'll
proceed. It performed well, and we received the contract. I spoke with Al Benek
(VP Operations) and Dick Fox (VP Accounting). ES&S invited our staff to join the
ES&S users group. We were treated as if we were already a member of the ES&S
community."

"Everything seemed copacetic. I told them we had their estimate and would they
cut off $50,000 off their estimate. Mr Fox said not a problem, Mr. Benek said not a
problem. We shook hands on the deal. They sent the contract back to ES&S for
the adjustment, and I waited to get it so I could cut the check.

Near the end of December, Sancho received a call from the Florida representative
for ES&S, telling him there was a problem.

"He said, 'You need to talk to the president,'" Sancho says. "I said certainly, I
volunteered to fly to Nebraska to directly talk to him face to face."

They ended up setting up a conference call. And on Dec. 29, just two days
before the HAVA deadline, Sancho got the final decision by way of a message
left on his voicemail.

Gary Crump, from ES&S, said in the recorded message that ES&S had made a
decision not to sell to Leon County, claiming that the resources of ES&S were
stretched to the limit and therefore they had decided only to sell to existing
customers, and customers they had been pursuing and involved with for a
long time.

Whatever. That doesn't explain why they just sold a system to Volusia County,
when it dumped Diebold on Dec. 17, nor why ES&S sold their system to a
number of other jurisdictions in the U.S.

"They praised Leon County as recognized as an industry leader but said 'We
just can't provide you the equipment,'" said Sancho. "Coming as it did at the
eleventh hour of the eleventh day, we are now subject to losing almost
$600,000 of HAVA monies, and ES&S chose not to fulfill approximately 1.8
million in sales."

This includes a decision to decline to sell the AutoMark, which may violate ES&S's
agreement with the makers of AutoMark.

EVIL FLOURISHES WHERE GOOD PEOPLE DO NOTHING

What's next? Sancho admits he's been on the front lines, and that it's no fun to
take bullets from the voting industry while he stands his ground on behalf of the
voters of Leon County. He's playing his cards close to the vest.

"We have made preliminary contacts with legal representatives of Diebold
pursuant to a number of issues," he says.

Ion Sancho is to be credited not only with taking a stand on behalf of his voters.
He has forced the voting machine vendors to show their true colors, and honest
elections officials throughout the country are struggling with untenable options.

America, if ever there was a time to stand shoulder to shoulder, and show
support of an American hero, this is the time.

The time has come for a congressional investigation with subpeona power and
testimony under penalty of perjury. This can be state or federal. Whoever gets
Diebold and ES&S and key figures in the certification process under oath first
will join Sancho in the history books.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * *
* * * * * *
* * * * * *
* * * * * *

TRIPLE PROTECTION FOR ELECTION 2006 - STARTING NOW:
(1) All American Paper Chase
(2) Waste Archeology Watchdogs
(3) Candid America Project
HOW TO DO IT:
http://www.bbvforums.org/forums/messages/6/6.html

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FogerRox Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-13-06 08:53 PM
Response to Original message
1. Seems like Avante or Accupol should look at LEON ctny.
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ShockediSay Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-13-06 08:57 PM
Response to Original message
2. So, the voting machine business turns out to be corrupt
Shocked!
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Peace Patriot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Jan-13-06 09:04 PM
Response to Original message
3. Several Calif counties, facing a similar problem, are requesting ...
...emergency legislation (state) to do all mail-in votes this June, in an effort led by State Senator Debra Bowen (who is running for Sec of State--see www.debrabowen.com). They cannot use their uncertified new Diebold systems. Bowen seems very savvy on this whole issue.

See
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=203x408918

Mail-in voting is ONE solution. I don't think it's the best--paper ballots hand counted at the precinct level, with results POSTED at the precinct, is the most reliable voting system--but mail-in beats Diebold DREs! Oregon does all mail-in all the time. Anybody have feedback on Oregon's successes/glitches with all mail-in?

Ion Sancho and Leon County are well rid of ES&S. Go to mail-in, Ion! And count your blessings! And sue the bastards!
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