Would these 13 be some of those campaign workers Biden was proud of? In fairness, the McCain campaign was warned too, but I have not seen details about numbers of them withdrawing their ballots. (My emphasis throughout.)
BAM Staffers pull their bogus Ohio ballots Oct. 25, 2008
Thirteen campaign workers for Barack Obama
yesterday yanked their voter registrations and ballots in Ohio after
being warned by a prosecutor that temporary residents can't vote in the
battleground state.
A dozen staffers - including Obama Ohio spokeswoman Olivia Alair
and James Cadogan, who recently joined Team Obama - signed a form
letter asking the Franklin County elections board to pull their names
from the rolls.
The letter - a copy of which was obtained by palestra.net, a Fox
News affiliate - came a day after prosecutor Ron O'Brien publicly urged
out-of-state campaign workers for both Obama and John McCain to
"examine your conscience" before the elections board beings begins
opening absentee ballots today.
Earlier in the week, O'Brien spoke with lawyers for both camps and
urged them to make sure their staffs met permanent-residency rules, or
face possible felony charges.
...
On Thursday, O'Brien cut a deal with 13 out-of-staters, including
four from New York, who tossed out their already-cast ballots and
admitted they didn't meet residency requirements.
In an earlier article, Both Sides Warned on Ohio Ballots Oct. 22, 2008, other illegal voters are being investigated besides the official campaign workers.
O'Brien said he is "hoping to work out a fair agreement" with both
camps - as well as other out-of-staters unassociated with the campaigns
who also registered in Ohio.
Among the scenarios: tossing out the already-cast ballots of
non-permanent residents and denying the absentee ballot requests of
others. Early voting in Ohio began Sept. 30.
Also yesterday, O'Brien said he and elections officials are looking
into people from other states who appear to have parachuted into Ohio
to vote.
They include several members of Manhattan-based pro-Obama group
Vote Today Ohio. Its founder, New York resident Tate Hausman,
registered and voted in Columbus, records show, and is among those
under scrutiny.
Workers might have been in the state early enough to have registered 30 days in
advance, but according to O'Brien, they failed to meet the other criteria of "you have to have
a bona-fide intention of staying permanently."
Why does this permanency matter? If the worker doesn't vote at home, he is just casting one vote, right?
The reason it matters is because a campaign could flood a swing state with campaign workers, cast their votes there, thus tipping the outcome of a tight election. (If the workers came from solid red or blue states, their home state would never miss their votes.)
There are so many opportunities for voter fraud with early voting. Absentee ballots were originally created as a courtesy to those who are infirmed or who knew they would be out of town on election day. Now they are an avenue to stealing elections.
People: Don't you just love them!
Please, comment content should relate to the subject of the post. Although I try to respond to many, do not interpret my lack of a response as agreement.
Links:
Brookfield7, Fairly Conservative, Betterbrookfield, Jay Weber, Mark Levin, Vicki Mckenna