TBR NEWS: Voter Fraud In Texas is already happening, we heard from a former co-worker today that his wife was going to vote this morning but she was told she had already voted absentee by mail. The fact that it's a crime doesn't bother the DNC and the stupid people they pay to commit these crimes. 

 

When you find out your vote has been stolen by some DNC scumbag it's up to you to take action. #1.Get really pissed then take action and fast. Voter fraud in the past goes un-prosecuted and elections are rarely overturned when stolen (Al Franken Minnesota did just that). #2. Raise hell on sight let them know your vote was stolen. #3. Get whatever information required to make your vote count there on sight.

 

Remember there is a massive voter fraud investigations going on here in Texas and Tarrant County, early voting admin # 817-831-6161 Donna McClung

 

Here's what we've been told to do in Texas:

 

Contact your "County Elections Administration Early Voting" 

 

 File A Complaint File an Election Complaint Form (Make Copies)? CLICK HERE

 

Texas State Attorney Generals Office 

 

(512) 463-2100

 

 

Texas Secretary of State


Toll free: 800.252.VOTE(8683)
Local: 512.463.5650
Fax: 512.475.2811

 

TEXAS VOTER FRAUD

Time To Send People To Jail

 

As more and more Texans turn to mail-in ballots to cast their votes in presidential elections, concerns continue to grow over how secure the process is.


The ballots — geared to make it possible for overseas residents, people in the military and senior citizens to make their vote count — are now at the heart of a growing controversy about voter fraud, even prompting an “integrity tip hotline 817-893-8502,” because they allow people to vote from their homes without any ID or verification of identity. Stupid! 


State officials have been in Tarrant County investigating an issue with mail-in ballots from this year’s primary election, but some say the problem with these ballots goes deeper than that. At issue are concerns about “vote harvesting,” in which people fill out and return other people’s ballots.

“Vote harvesting, a form of voting which is largely unwatched, … growing in the last few cycles,” said Aaron Harris, a Republican political consultant from North Richland Hills who filed at least one complaint with the state citing election concerns in Tarrant County. “We are getting defeat handed to us in mail-in ballots and we aren’t even paying attention to that.”

Some say the ongoing investigation, and Harris’s separate complaints, are politically motivated; others say it’s addressing a practice that has been a problem for years.

Either way, Harris is promoting an “Election Integrity Tip Hotline” — 817-893-8502 — through which he’s offering up to a $5,000 reward for any election fraud-related tip that leads to a felony conviction, prompting concern among some Democrats who say such tips should instead go to election officials. Bullshit don't trust them. 

This is “a systematic and deliberate attempt to suppress votes in the Latino community, specifically attacking the elderly,” said state Rep. Ramon Romero, D-Fort Worth.

Mail-in ballots make up just a fraction of the ballots cast in recent presidential elections in Texas. But they are enough to throw a close down ballot election. 

EARLY VOTING RUNS FROM OCT. 24-NOV. 4. ELECTION DAY IS NOV. 8.

“This is not a Republican or Democratic issue,” said Steve Maxwell, a former Tarrant County Democratic Party chairman. “Every single one of us has a duty to make sure voter fraud isn’t taking place.

“There’s a real question of whether fraud is going on,” he said. “If there is, I’m going to be the first to help weed it out.”

Early voting runs Oct. 24 to Nov. 4. Election Day is Nov. 8.

In Tarrant County, 17,835 ballots were returned by mail in November 2004. By November 2012, that number had grown to 33,631, local election records show.

Already, more than 34,000 mail-in ballots have been requested in Tarrant County this election, and there’s still more than a week to go until the Oct. 28 deadline to request such a ballot, records show.

Some fear local complaints about mail-in ballots come at a time where they might intimidate some voters from casting ballots in this year’s presidential election — or just in time to lay the groundwork for the Legislature to enact more voting restrictions next year.

But voter fraud has become a common theme echoed even by Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump, who even tweeted this week that there is “large scale voter fraud happening on and before election day.”

Follow
Donald J. Trump ✔ @realDonaldTrump
Of course there is large scale voter fraud happening on and before election day. Why do Republican leaders deny what is going on? So naive! 7:33 AM - 17 Oct 2016
  14,210 14,210 Retweets   37,026 37,026 likes


“They even want to try to rig the election at the polling booths and believe me there’s a lot going on,” he said during a recent Wisconsin rally. “Do you ever hear these people? They say ‘there’s nothing going on.’ People that have died 10 years ago are still voting, illegal immigrants are voting — I mean, where are the street smarts of some of these politicians?”

Mail-in ballots

A 1917 Texas law allowed absentee voting, listing ways voters could qualify to vote other than on Election Day. Voting by mail came later, and demand for these ballots has grown through the years.

Many candidates legally reach out to these voters, often sending campaign fliers attached to mail-in ballot request forms that are already filled out. Voters can sign and mail these forms to have ballots sent directly to their home.

Harris, who worked with Dallas businessman Monty Bennett to campaign against directors on the Tarrant Regional Water District board, said he and his team sifted through thousands of mail-in ballots.

He claims they found cases where voter signatures on envelopes that contain ballots didn’t match the signatures on requests for mail-in ballots. He referred to some campaign workers who allegedly removed ballots from voters’ mailboxes and filled out the forms themselves.

And he referred to a Jan. 22, 2016, letter posted online in which the Texas Secretary of State’s office referred his “allegations of criminal activity in Tarrant County” to the Texas Attorney General’s Office.

“This is a well run machine, a well organized machine,” Harris told a standing-room only crowd at a 912 Fort Worth meeting this week.

Among the “potential crimes” the SOS letter said might have been committed locally: failure to comply as a witness, improperly serving as a witness for multiple voters, forgery and tampering with a governmental record, unlawful possession of a carrier envelope and improper assistance, according to the letter.

Harris and others say the goal is not to eliminate mail-in ballots.

“But there are ways the system can be improved,” Maxwell said. “We’ve got to tighten up the laws. Apparently it’s very easy to get away with this.

“We need to put some tough criminal sanctions in the election code,” he said. “The mail-in ballot program is extremely well intentioned and there is a real need for it. Surely we can find ways to build safeguards into the system so you’re not having massive fraud committed.”

Ongoing investigation

County officials have said investigators with the Texas Attorney General’s office have been in Tarrant County looking into an issue with mail-in ballots from the primary election earlier this year.

At issue is how often people may assist others — or physically help by witnessing — with the filling out of applications for mail-in ballots or the actual ballots themselves. Texans may assist as many people as they’d like in requesting mail-in ballots. But each person is only allowed to witness one request for a mail-in ballot per year, unless it’s for more than one immediate family member.

In the primary, there were about 20,000 applications for mail in ballots received at the Tarrant County Elections office, officials have said.

Of those, 131 had witnesses involved. Of those 131, there were five who witnessed more than one mail in ballot. Four of those five people witnessed requests from multiple family members, which is allowed. One apparently witnessed five applications from the same address, a nursing home or retirement center. That case was turned over to state investigators.

The Tarrant County District Attorney’s Office is not involved in this investigation. The Tarrant County Elections Administration has declined to comment on the issue.

The attorney general’s office declined to “confirm or deny investigations” or comment on the situation. When asked for the complaints that started the local investigation, attorney general’s workers declined to release them, expressing concern that doing so might hamper a criminal investigation.

“Absentee ballot fraud has been and remains the weakest link in Texas’s efforts to safeguard its electoral system against election fraud,” said Mark P. Jones, a political science professor at Rice University in Houston.

 

Excerpts from Star Telegram