DEMOCRAT PARTY
CORRUPTION
"This is how they
will destroy America from within. The leftist billionaires who
orchestrate these plans are wealthy. Those tasked with representing us in
Congress will never be exposed to the cost of the invasion of millions of
migrants. They have nothing but contempt for those of us who must
endure the consequences of our communities being intruded upon by gang members,
drug dealers and human traffickers. These people have no intention
of becoming Americans; like the Democrats who welcome them, they have contempt
for us." PATRICIA McCARTHY
THE
INVASION SPONSORED BY THE DEMOCRAT PARTY
Congressional
Democrats are apparently fine with catch-and-release policies because they see
the likely electoral benefits. According to Customs and Border Protection
(CPB), of the 94,285 Central American family units apprehended last year, 99
percent of them remain in the country today. CPB also reports that 98 percent
of the 31,754 unaccompanied minors from the Northern Triangle of Central
America remain in the country. CAL THOMAS
MARCO RUBIO BOMBSHELL: Democrats Planned Voter Fraud Day After Midterm Election — And There’s Proof
Marco Rubio has been leading the charge against Democrat Party voter manufacturing and voter fraud in the state of Florida.
Rubio called out Broward County two days after the election after the corrupt Democrat elections officials manufactured over 80,000 new ballots after Election Day.
On Thursday night Marco Rubio reported on the planned Democrat voter fraud after Election Day.
Democrat leaders in Florida directed staffers and volunteers to shear altered election forms to fix improper absentee ballots AFTER THE DEADLINE.
The plan was to have Florida voters fix and submit as many absentee votes as possible in hopes of including them in the vote totals.
The email was sent out to Democrat activists BEFORE Nelson and his party allies filed a series of lawsuits challenging some voting rules that applied during the election, claiming they disenfranchised voters.
A federal judge then ruled in Democrat’s favor to count these votes.
Naples Daily News reported:
A day after Florida’s election left top state races too close to call, a Democratic party leader directed staffers and volunteers to share altered election forms with voters to fix signature problems on absentee ballots after the state’s deadline.The altered forms surfaced in Broward, Santa Rosa, Citrus and Okaloosa counties and were reported to federal prosecutors to review for possible election fraud as Florida counties completed a required recount in three top races.But an email obtained by the USA TODAY NETWORK – Florida shows that Florida Democrats were organizing a broader statewide effort beyond those counties to give voters the altered forms to fix improper absentee ballots after the Nov. 5 deadline. Democratic party leaders provided staffers with copies of a form, known as a “cure affidavit,” that had been modified to include an inaccurate Nov. 8 deadline.
The Naples Daily News posted a copy of the Democrat instruction form to voters.
It Sure Looks Like Democrats in
Florida Altered Ballots
https://townhall.com/tipsheet/katiepavlich/2018/11/15/democrats-in-florida-tried-to-alter-ballots-n2535927
It's been more than one week since polls closed on Election
Night in Florida, with tight national races and recount efforts again
spotlighting the Sunshine State.
In Broward and Palm Beach Counties, there have been a slew of
ballot issues. Election officials in both counties have a history of
incompetence and corruption.
Broward County Election Supervisor Brenda Snipes was convicted
for illegally destroying ballots in 2016 and has a long record of questionable
practices.
Elections staff load ballots into machines as recounting begins
at the Broward County Supervisor of Elections Office on November 11, 2018 in
Lauderhill, Florida. (Joe Skipper/Getty Images)
Evidence Suggests
Ballots Mishandled on Larger Scale in Broward County, Florida
https://www.theepochtimes.com/evidence-suggests-mishandling-ballots-on-larger-scale-in-broward-county-florida_2715705.html?utm_source=Epoch+Times+Newsletters&utm_campaign=b
BY PETR SVAB
Two pieces of evidence have emerged that solidify allegations of ballot mishandling
in Florida’s Broward County after the midterm election.
The evidence lends credence to officials and concerned citizens who have
cried foul over some apparent irregularities.
Florida’s secretary of state ordered recounts of six tight races on Nov.
10, including races for senator, governor, and agriculture commissioner. Gov.
Rick Scott, who ran for the Senate against incumbent Bill Nelson, called for an
investigation on Nov. 8 after Broward and Palm Beach counties kept adding early
voting and absentee ballots two days after the deadline stipulated by law.
Given Broward County’s record of irregularities, the election was under
close scrutiny and, again, allegations of mishandling emerged.
Ballots in Cars
One allegation that took off on social media traces back to JoAnn Knox,
a supporter of the independent congressional candidate in Florida’s 23rd
district, Tim Canova.
Canova has been raising alarms about election inconsistencies in the
state for years. In 2016, he ran as a Democrat with the endorsement of Bernie
Sanders and lost in the primary against incumbent Rep. Debbie Wasserman
Schultz. Canova suspected election tampering and sued for the Broward County
ballots. But before the case was decided, the ballots were destroyed by Broward
County Supervisor of Elections Brenda Snipes—by mistake, she said.
Concerned about the election’s integrity, on Nov. 6, Knox went to
observe the closing and tabulation of the vote at the Volunteer Park polling
site in Plantation, part of the Miami metro area in Broward County.
The poll workers let her in around 7:25 p.m., after the last voter had
left.
“What I witnessed for the next hour was a
room full of people, operating 3 different precincts in the same room,
frantically packing everything up and running around looking for things,” she wrote in a detailed Facebook
post.
The workers packed everything in bags and boxes and used specially
numbered zip ties of different colors to seal the containers.
“It didn’t seem to matter what color went on what and I did not see
anyone logging what number zip tie sealed any given thing,” she wrote.
The ties were also used to seal large blue bags that stored the
completed ballots.
“One thing that really stuck with me was the fact that Ziplock bags of
these ties were just laying around on the tables for anyone to take,” she
wrote. “I kept thinking that there really was nothing guaranteeing that those
ballot bags couldn’t be opened and resealed (with no way of anyone knowing).”
As Knox headed back to her car, she saw two women carrying a box labeled
“provisional ballots.”
“One lady told me ‘the truck left these out there,’” Knox wrote.
She took a picture of the women and continued to her car. Then, at the
far end of the parking lot, she saw cars lined up to an Enterprise rental box
truck. One after another, the cars unloaded bags and boxes, which were then
loaded onto the truck. Among the cargo were the blue bags used to store
completed ballots. Knox took a video, noting some of the cars only had one
person inside, which raised the possibility that somebody could tamper with the
ballots with nobody around to see.
In a bizarre scene, the video shows a sports car pulling up to the
truck. A person in an orange reflective vest opens the door, pulls out two of
the blue bags, and drags them to the truck.
“Officer, are these people coming from other precincts,” Knox is heard
asking one man on the scene, possibly a Broward County Sheriff deputy. His
response appears to be “yes,” though it can’t be heard clearly.
Eugene Pettis, Snipes’s lawyer, told reporters that the boxes labeled
“provisional ballots” have “double purpose.” The ballots are shipped in them to
the precincts, but then taken out. The boxes are then filled with leftover
election supplies and the Supervisor’s office was collecting them after the
elections using trucks.
Pettis’ explanation raised the possibility that the blue bags weren’t
filled with ballots, as Knox wrote, but contained other, less sensitive items.
But that explanation has been undermined by another video released on
Nov. 11 by Progressive Alliance, a group that, among other initiatives,
supports Canova.
The video, purportedly shot on election day at the Rick Case Honda polling site
in Davie, Broward County, shows poll workers taking ballots out of voting
machines and putting them inside the blue bags. One of the poll workers,
apparently displeased with being filmed, then moves large equipment to block
the view of the observers. Election officials are required to allow up to three
people to observe the closing of the vote under Florida law. Interfering with
observers is a misdemeanor offense.
Provisional Ballots Found
Pettis’s explanation for the absentee ballot boxes appears to have been
inaccurate.
On Nov. 11, an Avis car rental employee at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood
International Airport found two boxes in a returned Dodge Caravan. One of the
boxes, labeled “provisional ballots,” not only contained election supplies, but
also blank provisional ballots, according to a Broward County Sheriff’s Office
incident report obtained by The Epoch Times.
A similar box was also found in an elementary school in
Miramar on Nov. 8, and another one at a
community center in Tamarac on Nov. 10.
The Avis employee found the box around 2 p.m., although the car was
returned at noon the day before, according to the rental record attached to the
incident report.
The employee informed Broward County Sheriff’s deputies at the airport,
according to Florida GOP Committeeman Richard DeNapoli. The deputies “seemed
uninterested” and so the employee called DeNapoli, who relayed the information
to independent journalist Laura Loomer.
“He looked [my number] up on the [Republican]
party website after he said he couldn’t get attention from sheriff’s personnel
at the airport,” DeNapoli told The Epoch Times via
Twitter.
About the same time the box was found,
customers started to complain online that the departure area of the airport was
blocked. At around 8 p.m., the airport announced on Twitter that inbound roads to the airport have been cut off “due to police
activity.” Some 20 minutes later, the sheriff’s office stated on Twitter that the airport had been put on lockdown because of a “suspicious
package” near Terminal 4.
At around 9:30, several deputies arrived and collected the ballot box and other items
found in the car, which was near Terminal 1 and ignored by local media that
instead covered the bomb scare at Terminal 4. At about the same time, the sheriff’s office stated on Twitter that the package has been determined “safe” and an “all-clear” was
issued.
Joy Oglesby, the sheriff’s public information officer, said the box was
a separate incident from the suspicious package, which was determined to be
“two pieces of luggage and a purse.”
Oglesby told The Epoch Times via email that
the office was alerted to the suspicious package at 6:30 p.m. As to why
the first sign something was being done about the package came more than an hour
later, she said that “investigating a suspicious package takes considerable
time and resources such as our specialized bomb squad.”
The Avis car was rented by Noah Holliman
under the Broward County Election Supervisor, the rental record
shows. There appears to be an online footprint of only one such man living
in the general area, a union employee whose wife, Tiffany, works at the Broward
County Water and Wastewater Services. On his Facebook page, Noah Holliman is posing with Andrew
Gillum, a progressive Democratic mayor of
Tallahassee, Florida, and gubernatorial candidate in the election. Gillum
trails his Republican opponent, Ron DeSantis, by fewer than 34,000 votes, with
recount results pending.
Snipes to Retire
Snipes has recently told media she doesn’t intend to run for reelection
in 2020. She’s been reported to have run afoul of election laws at least a
dozen times over her 15 years in office.
On Nov. 11, Scott filed a lawsuit, alleging that Snipes failed to report
all early voting and vote-by-mail results within 30 minutes after the polls
closed. The lawsuit further alleged Snipes didn’t follow the law to update
election results every 45 minutes and also failed to give Scott’s campaign
consistent counts of ballots received and the number of ballots remaining to be
counted. In addition, Snipes mixed 183 valid provisional ballots with 22
invalid ones, submitting all of them as valid.
The suit demanded law enforcement impound election devices and ballots
“until such time as any recounts, election contests, or litigation … are
complete.”
Scott dropped the demand on Nov. 12 in lieu of an agreement that three
Broward County sheriff deputies who don’t answer to Snipes will monitor cameras
in the elections office and the storage of USB drives with the election
results.
Snipes’s office and Noah Holliman didn’t respond to requests for
comment.
Update: The report was updated with
information from a Broward County Sheriff’s Office incident report and
information about Noah and Tiffany Holliman.
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