419,349 @ 2:43 pm
This writer believes the Medford Election of 2015 was not honest.
What is being presented here are stories about election fraud. They may not necessarily apply to Medford, however - if true - they are indicative of a trend that needs to be stopped.
The public must get angry enough to start working as hard as I am working to investigate how McGlynn gets people into his clutches while the general public is flabbergasted, sickened and can't understand how a lame candidate like Burke got herself "elected." It never happened, this is the regime of McGlynn, so tightly aligned with the crooked sheriff Jimmy DiPaola. It is ugly, people, and few have the courage to fight the gangsters.
I do not believe this article pertains to the Medford problems - it is published here just to open the eyes of the public that this funny business goes on around our great country.
...if you believe the article. I make no
judgment on the article, for or against.
The only judgment I am making is that
the Medford Election was ripped from your hands, residents, by a Mayor, McGlynn, who could not afford an audit and scrutiny.
http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2008/09/absentee-ballot-fraud-a-stolen-election-in-greene-county-alabama
The 1994 Greene County, Alabama, election fraud case shows how
easily crooked politicians can abuse absentee ballots to
disenfranchise voters. Because the risk of fraud is so high,
absentee ballots should be available only to those who truly need
them. Additional common-sense steps like signature matching and ID
requirements also reduce the risk of stolen elections.
easily crooked politicians can abuse absentee ballots to
disenfranchise voters. Because the risk of fraud is so high,
absentee ballots should be available only to those who truly need
them. Additional common-sense steps like signature matching and ID
requirements also reduce the risk of stolen elections.
Absentee Ballot Fraud: A Stolen Election in Greene County, Alabama
Voter fraud is about keeping poor people poor. It does not give them the opportunity to get an education, to get a job, to have a place to raise your family.
-Mississippi Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann[1]
In the 1990s in Greene County, Alabama, citizens, local political candidates, federal and state prosecutors, and a local newspaper joined together to fight absentee ballot fraud in the county, one of the poorest in Alabama.