Wednesday, April 2, 2014

NC and Double Voting


North Carolina’s Board of Elections found that tens of thousands of registered voters from the state have personal information matching that of registered voters in other states, and appear to have voted in states other than North Carolina in 2012.  In some cases, votes were cast under names of individuals who had passed away before Election Day.

The review searched databases in 27 other states and 101 million voter records for information such as matching names, dates of birth, and Social Security numbers.

The review found that 35,570 North Carolina voters from 2012 shared the same first names, last names, and dates of birth with individuals who voted in other states.

Another 765 residents who voted in 2012 had the the same names, birthdays, and final four digits of a Social Security number as voters elsewhere.

Meanwhile, the election board’s executive director, Kim Westbrook, told lawmakers that 81 deceased North Carolinians apparently voted in 2012 as well.  While some appear to have submitted absentee ballots prior to their death, she said “there are between 40 and 50 who had died at a time that voting was not possible.”

Westbrook offered a series of proposals for the state to consider to better secure its voting practices and reduce fraud, including on-site digital face-recognition or electronic-signature technology.










NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote!

Michael H. Drucker
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2 comments:

richardwinger said...

Just because someone voted in two different states in the same year doesn't mean any law was broken. Maybe the voter moved that year.

mhdrucker said...

If it was during the same primary or general it would be a crime. That is what happened in VA and D.C.

Some government workers voted in VA after breakfast and then voted in D.C. after lunch in the 2012 election.