[StBernard] voter fraud already started

Westley Annis Westley at da-parish.com
Wed Oct 22 20:11:24 EDT 2008


I promise you there will be convictions on this criminal fraud, if for no
other purpose but to set an example. Also, those who are professionals,
like the CPA, are going to have their professionals licenses revoked.

JS


-----Original Message-----
http://tinyurl.com/67sy6t

GOTHAM-TO-OHIO VOTE SCAM EYED
By JEANE MacINTOSH


October 20, 2008 --
Four well-heeled New York Democrats are under investigation by an Ohio
prosecutor for setting up a temporary home in the swing state - where two
have already cast their ballots - just so that their votes will be counted
there, The Post has learned.

The targets of the probe - including the daughter and son-in-law of a New
York City real-estate titan, a former New York Sun reporter and a Bank of
New York Mellon executive - are connected to Vote From Home, a
Manhattan-based political action committee set up to get voters to the polls
in Ohio, where residents are allowed to cast ballots 29 days before Election
Day, investigators said.

The New Yorkers and nine other members from across the country are accused
of packing themselves into a modest three-bedroom house in Columbus, waiting
30 days - and then registering, even though the Buckeye State is not their
permanent residence.

Under Ohio law, a person who comes to the state for "temporary purposes
only," without the intention of making it the "permanent place of abode" is
not considered a resident. New permanent residents must live in Ohio 30 days
before registering.

Four group members, including two of the New Yorkers, have already cast
ballots, and six others requested absentee ballots from the county elections
board.

Franklin County, Ohio, prosecutor Ron O'Brien launched the investigation
after student reporters at palestra.net, a Fox News affiliate, discovered
the mass registration effort at the home in a working-class neighborhood on
Brownlee Avenue.

"Our board of elections referred 13 suspicious registrations to us, all from
people with out-of-state addresses, all of whom claim to be living in a
three-bedroom house in Columbus," O'Brien said Friday.

Vote From Home is registered to the East 82nd Street brownstone of Heather
Halstead, daughter of Halstead Properties founder Clark Halstead Jr. She and
her husband, NYU grad Marc Gustafson, are among those under scrutiny.

A subsequent Post review of election-board and other records found the New
Yorkers involved are:

* Joel Speyer, 39, a New York CPA who lives in Brooklyn and works for Mellon
bank here. He owns the Brownlee Avenue house and rented it to Vote From Home
in June for an undisclosed period for $2,500, Federal Election Commission
papers show. Speyer is a registered New York voter and cast a ballot in
February's primary. He re-registered in Ohio Sept. 1, and last week voted
absentee.

* Halstead, 34, and Gustafson, 31, both longtime New York voters. Halstead
last cast a ballot in the state's February primary. Gustafson voted in
Manhattan in 2007. Both requested Ohio absentee ballots.

* Daniel Hemel, 23, a Harvard grad and former Sun reporter from Scarsdale,
Westchester County. He registered to vote in Ohio Oct. 1, casting a ballot
the same day. Hemel later returned to Oxford University in England, where he
and other Vote From Home workers attend as Marshall Scholars.

* Also under investigation are three daughters - Jennifer, 20, Tania, 21,
and Michael Anne, 24 - of Brooklyn resident David R. Kyle. He is CEO of a
firm that raises money for schools in India and is one of two major
financial backers of the PAC. The three women, whom records show most
recently lived in the Washington, DC, area and Connecticut, have requested
absentee ballots.

The Brownlee 13 also includes a Cornell University grad from Los Angeles and
a Marshall Scholar from Arizona who have both cast their ballots.

"We've done nothing wrong," Halstead told The Post Friday when contacted at
her New York apartment. "It's a nonissue. It's all been settled."

Not according to O'Brien. While he is "willing to give them the benefit of
the doubt," he said he is still probing the group's "intent surrounding the
registrations."

"I think they mistakenly believed that by residing here 30 days, they met
the residency requirement for voting - and perhaps they felt that casting a
vote in a battleground state would be more effective than wherever they came
from," O'Brien said.

He said the investigation will look at "surrounding facts" - including
whether the new voters have applied for Ohio licenses, changed their car
registrations, or signed leases.

Adele Shank, a lawyer who represents all in the group except Hemel, said she
has "no reason to believe" that her clients registered in Ohio in order to
vote in a swing state.

Halstead, Shank said, is in New York only "for a short trip" and "plans to
return to Ohio."

Shank said her clients "thought they had met the residency requirement.

"They did not have the [election] code in front of them when they
registered, and there was no disclosure of it on the application," she said.


On its Web site, the PAC - which includes many Ivy Leaguers and Rhodes,
Truman and Fulbright scholars - boasts of its "extensive experience with
political organizing, election administration and Democratic politics."

Hemel did not respond to a request for comment.

Voter fraud is a felony in Ohio, punishable by up to a year in jail. The
Vote From Home members have previously registered as Democrats. In Ohio,
they registered as "unaffiliated."





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