Showing posts with label Janice Winfrey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Janice Winfrey. Show all posts

Friday, September 11, 2020

Prelude To Detroit: Have No Fear! Jocelyn Benson Will Be Working With Janice Winfrey To Thwart Another Great Detroit Election Facepalm - 2016 Revisited

Yup....

Jocelyn Benson is going to be working with Janice Winfrey to thwart another Great Detroit Election Facepalm.
Yippers...

Benson: 500,000 could be removed from Michigan's voting rolls, but not before Nov. 3

Roughly 500,000 absentee ballot applications were returned between May and August for reasons that included the individuals had since died or moved, but any outdated names can't be removed from voter rolls until after the Nov. 3 election, according to Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson's office. 

In a Thursday letter to Sen. Ruth Johnson, R-Holly, Benson said the Michigan Bureau of Elections will sort through the returned applications and distribute them to local clerks for voter list maintenance. 

Benson has been criticized for the May mailing to 7.7 million qualified voters in Michigan because some applications went to people who had long since moved or died. But the Detroit Democrat has maintained in the months after the mailing that the returned applications would help to guide efforts to clean up the state's voter rolls of transient or deceased individuals still on the state lists. 

"We expect the majority of maintenance will take place after the Nov. 3 election, when federal law no longer limits such action," she said, referring to federal election law preventing list maintenance 90 days before an election.

Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson plans to mail postcards over the next week to 4.4 million registered active voters who have not yet requested an absentee ballot to remind them they have the opportunity to do so.

The applications were returned for "any reason postal mail is returned to sender," including the individual is dead or moved, said Tracy Wimmer, a spokeswoman for Benson's office.

Former Secretary of State Johnson on Wednesday estimated there likely were another 300,000 absentee ballot applications sent to people who are dead or moved that were not returned to the Bureau of Elections. 

Johnson has argued Benson should not have sent applications to people on the "inactive" or "countdown" list — a list of people believed to have moved but required by federal law to stay on the Qualified Voter File for at least two federal election cycles to verify their departure from the state. At the least, the Republican lawmaker said, those individuals should have been sent postcards instead of the actual ballot application.

"It’s always been a weakness in the system, but I’m afraid that the weakness has gone from something minor to people feeling encouraged to vote from other states," Johnson said.

On Aug. 17, Johnson requested Benson conduct an audit of the primary election to determine how many people listed as having moved in the "countdown" file had successfully voted from another state.

Benson's legislative policy director Adam Reames responded via email shortly after 7 p.m. Friday and argued people on the countdown list remain eligible to vote. He said signatures on the absentee ballot envelopes already had been verified by local clerks. 

"We are not clear what type of audit the Senator is suggesting," Reames wrote. 

Johnson argued Wednesday that the integrity of the November election would be best served by an audit of the August primary. 

"She’s opening a Pandora’s box for whatever side loses to go to court," the former secretary of state said of the November election.

"Ultimately, the people of Michigan are going to be disenfranchised. We’re going to end up in court and there’s just no reason for it."

Benson's office on Wednesday maintained it was her mailing and other education efforts that ensured record turnout in August and what is expected to be another high turnout in November.

"If state Sen. Johnson was truly concerned about disenfranchising voters, instead of squabbling over the court-approved application mailing to voters, she would be actively working to prevent the disenfranchisement of the thousands of Michigan citizens who will suffer that fate in November because, unlike in other states, our Legislature does not allow ballots postmarked by Election Day but arriving after to be counted," said Jake Rollow, a spokesman for Benson.

The first-term secretary of state plans to mail postcards over the next week to 4.4 million registered active voters who have not yet requested an absentee ballot to remind them they have the opportunity to do so. Benson will also mail letters to 700,000 people who have a state driver's license or state ID but haven't registered to vote in Michigan and encourage them to register, the secretary said Wednesday.

Roughly 130,000 of those people will be automatically registered to vote unless they opt out within 30 days of receiving a postcard, Benson said in a statement. The individuals visited the Secretary of State's office for a driver's license or state ID transaction between December 2018 and September 2019, between the passage of automatic voter registration under Proposal 3 and its actual implementation. 

In her letter to Johnson and the Senate Elections Committee, Benson urged lawmakers to allow clerks to begin processing ballots early ahead of Nov. 3. She noted the decrease in election workers and increase in absentee ballots could mean worker fatigue and real delays in delivering election results. 

Benson also asked the committee to consider legislation that would require clerks to call the voter if there were problems with an absentee ballot signature and accept ballots received after Election Day. 

In the Aug. 4 primary, 2,225 absentee ballots were rejected because of missing or mismatched signatures and 6,405 ballots were rejected because they arrived after Election Day. The Aug. 4 primary included a record 2.5 million votes, 1.6 million of which were cast via absentee ballot.

Additionally, about 1,111 were rejected because the voter moved between when they filled out the ballot and Election Day; and 846 were not accepted because the voter died between filling out the ballot and Election Day, according to data from Benson's office. 

"My office looks forward to supporting the committee with any data needed to advance the legislation outlined above," Benson wrote.

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Thursday, September 3, 2020

Prelude To Detroit: Hillary Clinton Speaks Upon Detroit 2020 Primary Election

This happens every election cycle.

Someone files a complaint about the election.

The complaint is ignored.

The election is certified.

#maytheheavensfall

'This can't go on': Detroit primary ballots went unchecked, GOP poll challengers say

Election workers in Detroit's primary improperly altered some votes and counted thousands of absentee ballots without checks against voter lists, say GOP poll challengers who contend Michigan's largest city isn't ready for November's election.

An affidavit signed by Bob Cushman describes what he saw while serving as a poll challenger at Detroit's primary election at the TCF Center on Aug. 4, 2020.Detroit, where problems counting ballots have been in the spotlight for at least 15 years, is quickly becoming a key front in the political fight over election integrity. Republicans are signing affidavits about problems they saw in the Aug. 4 primary, while Democratic state officials are taking steps they hope will improve ballot handling in the general election.

About 25 Michigan Republicans monitored the counting of absentee ballots in the basement of the TCF Center in Detroit for the Aug. 4 primary. They reported a variety of missteps that — if accurate — would violate policies in state manuals, ranging from cellphones being used by workers to votes being counted without lists of voters on hand to check the ballots against, according to interviews with eight poll challengers and signed affidavits from five.

A handful of the GOP poll challengers contended that they saw election workers make digital changes to disregard lone Republican votes on ballots featuring mostly Democratic votes in a bid to make the ballots legally countable in the partisan primary, where voters are not allowed to cross over.

Their accounts come after Wayne County election officials revealed that 72% of Detroit's 503 absentee voting precincts reported ballot totals that didn't match the totals of voters tracked in poll books, the official lists of voters participating in the election. The out-of-balance totals, which could have resulted from not checking ballots against the voter lists, would mean that the precincts couldn't be recounted in a close race under state law.

GOP poll challenger Cliff Frost, 73, of Warren said he was "incredulous" to see ballots sent to tabulators without first being checked against poll books as election workers are supposed to do in accordance with state manuals.

Frost said election workers told him: "We’re saving the envelopes, and we’re going to check them later." But he questioned what would happen if the workers found a problem after the votes had already been counted.

A portion of an affidavit by Janice Brines describes what she saw at the TCF Center where absentee ballots were counted for Detroit's primary on Aug. 4, 2020.


With a surge of absentee voting expected this fall, the Nov. 3 election is going to be "a mess" in Detroit, predicted Matt Harris, 41, of Commerce Township, another Republican poll watcher.

"They have September and October, two months," Harris said of the time remaining before the election. "How can they turn it around that fast?”

Election officials in Michigan have emphasized the problems in Detroit's primary election weren't examples of fraud and don't call into question the integrity of the results.

Detroit Clerk Janice Winfrey, whose office didn't respond to multiple requests for comment, has tied the problems to increases in absentee voting, veteran election workers not showing up during the COVID-19 pandemic and other workers being on the job for more than 20 hours.

There are security precautions for absentee ballots, such as checking signatures on them, that can be done before Election Day, said Aghogho Edevbie, Michigan director for the voting rights group All Voting Is Local. While Edevbie said he's concerned about the processes used in Detroit's primary, he said he doesn't think something nefarious went on.

"The essential integrity of the process was not breached," he said.

The GOP allegations come as the eyes of the nation could be on Detroit this fall amid record absentee voting and criticism from President Donald Trump about mail-in voting. Trump won Michigan by 10,704 votes in 2016, his closest margin of victory nationally.

Hillary Clinton, the 2016 Democratic presidential candidate, referenced the Republican poll challengers during an interview with TV show "The Circus" last month in which she advised Joe Biden, the 2020 Democratic candidate, not to concede the election. She described the GOP challengers as "lawyers" and said a local reporter was told their presence was a "dry run" for November.

"Joe Biden should not concede under any circumstances because I think this is going to drag out and, eventually, I do believe he will win if we don’t give an inch and if we are as focused and relentless as the other side is," Clinton said.

Skipping ballot books
In a basement room beneath the TCF convention center, hundreds of election workers met in the morning hours of the Aug. 4 primary to begin counting Detroit's absentee ballots.

Tables were set up in squares for each of the more than 130 county boards that would handle the city's 503 absentee voting precincts. Robert Brines, 69, of White Lake, one of the GOP poll challengers, described it as a "monster operation."

The election workers were on the job until about 5 a.m. Aug. 5, the day after the primary. Of the eight Republicans who monitored the work and were interviewed by The Detroit News, none stayed at TCF Center longer than Bob Cushman, a 70-year-old General Motors retiree from South Lyon.

An affidavit signed by Bob Cushman describes what he saw while serving as a poll challenger at Detroit's primary election at the TCF Center on Aug. 4, 2020.

Cushman arrived at the TCF Center at 6:50 a.m. Aug. 4 and didn't leave until 5:10 a.m. Aug. 5, according to an affidavit he signed later. While at the facility, he took five pages of notes, which documented election workers not checking absentee ballots against poll books, a practice that is meant to help keep ballot and voter totals in balance.

An affidavit describes what William Lethemon says he saw while working as a poll challenger for Detroit's primary election on Aug. 4, 2020.

At about 2 a.m. on Aug 5, a "soft male voice" came over the microphone system in the center and "instructed everyone to stop what they are doing, open every envelope, separate the ballots and place them in the trays to go to the tabulators," according to Cushman's affidavit. Another announcement repeated the instruction a few moments later, he said.

"About 20 minutes after the announcements, I walked around the TCF Center and noted that there were no more comparisons being made to the poll books at any of the tables that I observed," Cushman said in his affidavit. "I continued to make rounds of the floor with the same observations."

The retiree estimates thousands of absentee ballots were sent to tabulators without being checked against voter lists after the 2 a.m. announcement in an effort to get results more quickly.

"This was just a primary," he said. "There’s going to be a lot more votes, many, many more votes in the general election."

Most other GOP poll challengers said they saw absentee ballots being sent to tabulators without poll book checks earlier on Aug. 4 when counting boards didn't yet have their poll books on site.

Some of the counting boards, which can handle counts for multiple precincts, didn't have poll books until 3 p.m., according to the GOP poll challengers.

"The supervisors were called and seemed shocked, but the workers already admitted that they were told to process the ballots, even without a poll book," said an affidavit from GOP poll challenger Janice Brines of Oxford.

The first steps for counting absentee ballots should involve checking the voter's name in the poll book or qualified absentee voter list, according to Michigan's official manual for absentee voter counting boards. It's an accounting measure that is supposed to help election workers track who's voted and ensure that the number of ballots counted in a specific precinct matches the number of voters.

"You need your poll book. That’s how you begin," said Chris Thomas, who served as Michigan's election director for more than 30 years and is advising Detroit elections operations this fall. "That tells you how many ballots are supposed to be there."

But Detroit was short dozens of election workers for the primary, according to a variety of sources, including Evelyn Archer of Oxford, another Republican poll challenger. Some workers didn't show up. Others left early.

"This can’t go on,” Archer said of the primary problems. “This is not representing the true vote.”

Chris Thomas
'Far cry' from disaster?
On Wednesday, Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, the state's top election official, and Detroit Clerk Winfrey said they would partner to administer the election in Detroit this fall.

The effort will include recruiting and training at least 6,000 election workers and revising protocols for ballot counting and sorting to "reduce the potential for error," according to a press release.

New technology played a role in the problems in Detroit's primary, said Thomas, now a special adviser on Detroit's upcoming election. But under his analysis of precinct results, in which some precincts were allocated more votes than expected and others were allocated fewer, the citywide totals left only about 21 votes unaccounted for, he said earlier this week in an interview. More than 121,200 ballots were cast.

"That’s a far cry from major disaster," Thomas said.

Asked how concerned voters should be about Detroit's situation this fall, he answered clerks across Michigan are making adjustments to deal with record absentee ballots.

Detroit's previous high for absentee votes in an election was about 57,000, Thomas said. In the Aug. 4 primary, the city had about 80,000 absentee ballots cast, he said. It reflects about a 40% jump.

More will be cast in the upcoming general election during a pandemic and after voters approved a constitutional amendment allowing no-reason absentee voting in 2018.

“Every clerk is dealing with a pandemic situation," Thomas said. "There’s concern across the board in terms of them having the people and resources they need to get the job done. Detroit is no different."

Current Michigan elections director Jonathan Brater told the Michigan Board of State Canvassers on Wednesday that efforts in Detroit will focus on improving record-keeping and the accuracy of poll books.

"Because of the issues with recording ballots in the poll books along with the fact that ballots were in some cases put in the wrong containers, that made it very difficult for the city and the county to balance things out in the time they had available," Brater said.

Recount impact looms
More than a quarter of Detroit's absentee voting precincts, or 131 of 503 precincts, were off by plus or minus one ballot without an explanation for Aug. 4 primary when comparing poll books to ballot totals, according to information presented to the Wayne County Board of Canvassers.

Another 85 absentee precincts were off by two ballots without an explanation, 48 were off by three ballots, 26 off by four ballots and 73 off by five ballots. In Michigan, precincts with tallies that are off without explanations can't be recounted.

When totals are out of balance and votes can't be recounted, people will question what actually happened, said state Sen. Ruth Johnson, R-Holly, a former secretary of state.

"Something has to be done. It’s not just one city. This happens in a number of places," Johnson said.

Ruth Johnson
But the problems aren't new in Detroit. In 2016, election officials there couldn’t reconcile vote totals for 59% of precincts — combined Election Day and absentee precincts. For the Aug. 4 primary 46% of the total precincts couldn't be reconciled.

The poll book checks weren't the only problems, according to Republican challengers.

Multiple poll observers said they saw Detroit election workers digitally clear improper cross-over votes in the Democratic primary that should have made partisan portions of the ballots invalid. "Three or four times" Robert Brines said he saw election workers remove Democratic primary voters' choice of Republican U.S. Senate candidate John James.

"Some of the operators and observers were correcting an overvote when the ballot should be voided by the system software," an affidavit signed by Robert Brines said.

An affidavit describes what William Lethemon says he saw while working as a poll challenger for Detroit's primary election on Aug. 4, 2020.
Watching the counters
Michigan Republicans plan to closely monitor Detroit's vote-counting in November as President Donald Trump seeks reelection in a state he won by 10,704 votes in 2016.

Trump has argued, without evidence, that the efforts to expand absentee voting during the COVID-19 pandemic "will be the most rigged election in our nation's history." In July, he refused to commit to accepting the results of the election in advance of Nov. 3 — similar to what he did in 2016.

Detroit is Michigan's largest city in the state's largest county, a traditional Democratic stronghold that this fall will likely produce the most Democratic votes among all Michigan counties. In 2016, Detroit supplied 10% of Clinton's statewide vote total, while Wayne County provided about 23%.

Many of the 25 Republican volunteer primary poll challengers at the TCF Center said they plan to be back Nov. 3.

"The integrity of the vote is at stake in my opinion," said Frost, the 73-year-old from Warren.

Like other Republicans, Frost said he wants to see more poll challengers in Detroit — GOP and Democrats. The Democrats had two lawyers at the TCF Center for the primary, according to the Republicans.

"I’m here to watch you," Cushman said one of the Democratic lawyers told him.

Rosanne Ponkowski, 63, of West Bloomfield said she hopes more Democratic poll challengers are active in November, adding election integrity is the No. 1 priority.

"It’s in their interest to make sure the ballots are handled correctly. Period," Ponkowski said.

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Sunday, August 30, 2020

The Tale Of Jocelyn Benson: DHS Co-conspiracy Testimony On Voting Rights

The last time I checked, the 2018 Special Election has yet to be certified.

Then, there is that situation with the 2016 General Election certification.

So......

Riddle me this:

If 72% of the election cycle vote count cannot be replicated in a recount, something Jill Stein experienced in Michigan, then, what was the vote tally?

See, the tally and the vote are two, separate and exclusive datasets.

Then, we are dealing with Janice Winfrey.

So, how can one certify the 2020 Primary Election, when no one knows how many people voted?

But, then again, Jocelyn Benson likes to make up stuff all the time.

For some strange reason, I could not find the video.

Perhaps, it was sealed.


First, this happened...

Michigan board requires Benson to oversee Detroit's fall election

Lansing — The Michigan Board of State Canvassers is requiring Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson to exercise her oversight powers this November in Detroit after widespread problems counting ballots in the city's primary and ahead of a pivotal presidential election.

But Benson, a Democrat from Detroit, said in a Monday interview that her efforts wouldn't focus on just the state's largest city. The Secretary of State's office is going to do a "deep dive" in the coming days to identify additional ways to support multiple cities across Michigan as they prepare for a surge of absentee voting this fall, she said.

"I am confident that we’re going to have record turnout this fall and the results of our elections are going to be accurate,” Benson said.

Maurice Brown, 54, of Detroit, votes in precinct \232 at Greater Emmanuel Institutional church this morning during primary voting in Detroit, Tuesday, August 4, 2020.

About 72% of the absentee voting precincts in Detroit's primary election had ballot totals that didn't match the number of ballots reported in poll books. This situation would likely mean  — under state law — those precincts couldn't be recounted in a close race, which is driving concerns among officials for the general election when the eyes of the nation could be on Michigan.

President Donald Trump won the state by 10,704 votes in 2016, his smallest margin of victory nationwide. Former First Lady Michelle Obama said at last week's Democratic convention that it averaged to two votes per precinct in Michigan.

"I don’t really care what the issue is," said Julie Matuzak, a Democratic member of the Board of State Canvassers. "I care that this not happen in November.”

On Monday morning, the board of two Democrats and two Republicans unanimously certified statewide election results for the Aug. 4 primary but included language in the certification that seeks to ensure that Benson gets further involved in supervising what happens with the general election in the state's largest city.

The board approved a requirement that Benson exercise "supervisory control" over the November election in Detroit. State law already provides the secretary of state supervisory control over local election officials, and it's unclear what specific changes in the administration of the election will occur.

"I don't think we're in the position to add the detail right now," said Norm Shinkle, a Republican member of the Board of State Canvassers.

Matuzak, who previously called the situation in the primary "appalling," said she wanted regular reports on what's happening in Detroit ahead of the general election. And Shinkle said he wanted to see a list of requirements from the Secretary of State's Office for the state, Detroit Clerk Janice Winfrey and election workers in the city to meet "if Detroit's going to run their own election."

"Otherwise, the secretary of state walks in and runs it," Shinkle said.

Winfrey has connected problems in the primary to election workers who were on the job for more than 20 hours and to a record surge of absentee ballots that they couldn't begin counting until Election Day.

In the Monday interview, Benson reiterated her calls for the Republican-controlled state Legislature to allow election workers to begin processing absentee ballots — getting them ready to be counted — before Election Day to help deal with an onslaught of mail-in voting amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

While it's not the entire issue in Detroit, it's a "significant piece of the challenge that occurred," she said.

"This is in many ways a reflection of the potential for human error that overworked and stressed election workers can succumb to when you have the time crunch we've been warning about for nearly a year and a half," Benson said.

Some Republican lawmakers have opposed the proposed change because of concerns that it could lead to ballots being counted before voting is over, potentially giving one side an advantage.

Jonathan Brater, the state's elections director, said it isn't logistically possible for the state to run the election in Detroit but added that there are things that need to be done "much better" in the city.

For the primary, poll books weren't updated as absentee ballots came in, some absentee ballots were allocated to the wrong precincts and ballots were placed in incorrect containers, Brater said.

"We are going to be taking a more active role, both in the recruitment and the training of election inspectors," he added.

About 72% of the 503 absentee voting precincts in Detroit's primary elections had absentee ballot totals that didn't match the number of ballots reported in poll books.

Overall — for absentee voting and Election Day precincts — 46% of Detroit's precincts had ballot totals that were out of balance for the Aug. 4 primary without provided explanations from election workers, meaning they likely couldn't be recounted under state law. The problems spurred frustration and questions from election officials at both the county and state level.

Asked if it would be a failure if Detroit repeated the 46% mismatch rate in November, Benson said her goal is to ensure there is "complete security of the process."

"I am focused on having successful elections in November," she added. "And to me, success would be defined by an accurate count of all of the ballots that are cast."

The Wayne County Board of Canvassers approved a resolution last week, asking the Secretary of State's Office to investigate the "training and processes" used in Detroit's primary election. The resolution asked the office to provide a monitor to "supervise the training and administration" of absentee voter counting boards in Detroit for the general election.

The Wayne County Board of Canvassers approved this resolution asking the Michigan Secretary of State's office to investigate "the training and processes" used by Detroit for the 2020 primary election.
During the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, a record 1.6 million people in Michigan voted by mail for the Aug. 4 primary, which itself set a new record for overall turnout of 2.5 million voters.

Winfrey noted the vast majority of the absentee voting precincts in the city with totals that didn't balance were less than three ballots off, plus or minus.

Detroit had problems with precinct count mismatches in the November 2016 election. Election officials couldn’t reconcile vote totals for 59% of precincts in the city during a countywide canvass of vote results with most of the issues involving too many votes.

Monday morning's meeting of the Board of State Canvassers was a continuation of a meeting that happened on Friday, when technological problems interrupted and forced officials to schedule a new meeting.

During the Friday meeting, all four members of the board voiced frustration with the results of Detroit's primary. Republican state board member Aaron Van Langevelde said the situation was "very troubling" and "unacceptable."

"A repeat performance is going to seriously undermine the public's confidence in the general election," he said.

Then, this happened....


#maytheheavensfall

Secretary of State Benson testifies to protect democracy ahead of election

Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson testified before the U.S. House Committee on Homeland Security on Aug. 28.

Her testimony focused on how to protect America’s democracy and ensure that every vote counts this November, according to Benson.

During the testimony, Benson discussed the statewide primary on Aug. 4 that shattered the previous record for total absentee ballots cast.

“Between a global pandemic and what seems near constant and escalating rhetoric and misinformation, 2020 has brought historic pressures on our elections systems,” said Secretary Benson. “In Michigan our statewide primary has served as a blueprint for running safe, secure, accessible elections during the COVID-19 pandemic, while also highlighting critical needs that, if addressed, can put every state on a path towards successful November elections.”

Benson also spoke for the need for partnership and additional support from state and federal officials to replicate what she says was a successful August election in November.

She also called on the federal government to fully fund the postal service and provide another round of funding to states to shore up election preparations.

“Democracy is a team sport, and if we work together we can succeed in holding elections this fall that are secure, on schedule, and an accurate reflection of the will of the people.” said Secretary Benson. “It’s possible, it’s doable, and our voters should demand no less from their government.”

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Thursday, August 20, 2020

Detroit Has An Absentee Ballot Count Issue - Again - 2020 Primary

No description available.
Waiting to see the tally.
Riddle me this:

However shall the vote be certified?

Let us watch the process in real time, then, compare this same process with the 2018, 2016, 2014 & 2012, possibly even 2010 and 2008, but, hey, what do I know?

Wayne County, Michigan Board of Canvassers


Each of the 83 Boards of County Canvassers in the State of Michigan is currently composed of two Republican members and two Democratic members, appointed by the County Board of Commissioners to four year terms. The Board members are responsible for canvassing the votes cast within the county they serve. The Board members certify elections for all local, countywide and district offices which are contained entirely within the county they serve. The Board members are responsible for inspecting the county's ballot containers every four years. The County Canvass Board also conducts recounts for all units of government within the county they serve.
The current members of the Wayne County Board of Canvassers are:
  • CHAIRPERSON - Monica Palmer, Republican
  • VICE-CHAIRPERSON - Jonathan C. Kinloch, Democrat
  • MEMBER - Mayra Rodriguez, Republican
  • MEMBER - Allen Wilson, Democrat

Canvassers demand answers after 72% of Detroit's absentee ballot counts were off

The board charged with certifying election results in Michigan's largest county is asking Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson's office to investigate after problems with tracking ballots in Detroit's primary, which one official described as a "perfect storm."

Counts for ballots in about 72% of Detroit's absentee voting precincts for the Aug. 4 primary election were out of balance without an explanation, according to information presented Tuesday to the Wayne County Board of Canvassers. The number of ballots tracked in precinct poll books did not match the number of ballots counted. 

The election results weren't incorrect, said Jonathan Kinloch, a Democrat and one of the canvassing board's four members. But, he said, something had gone wrong in the process of tracking ballots precinct by precinct.

The Wayne County Board of Canvassers approved this resolution asking the Michigan Secretary of State's office to investigate "the training and processes" used by Detroit for the 2020 primary election.
Having balanced precincts is particularly important in Michigan because precincts whose poll books don’t match with ballots can’t be recounted, according to state law. Instead, the original election results would stand.

"It was a perfect storm," Kinloch said.

The "storm" involved a record number of absentee ballots being cast in Michigan's primary and seasoned election workers not feeling it was safe to help with administering the election because of COVID-19, he added.

The Wayne County board is asking Benson, a Detroit resident, to investigate "the training and processes used by the City of Detroit" in the primary election. The board also requested that the first-term Democrat appoint a state monitor to oversee the counting of absentee ballots in the general election.

The Board of State Canvassers is set to meet at 2 p.m. Friday to certify election results from around Michigan.

You cannot certify a state election if there are valid challenges formally grieved. That is called due process. Egads! Whatever shall they do?

The developments in Wayne County come as national attention has focused on voting by mail, which President Donald Trump has repeatedly criticized in recent weeks, and as Michigan experiences its first statewide elections with no-reason absentee voting after voter approval of a 2018 constitutional amendment.

Detroit had problems with precinct count mismatches in the November 2016 election. Election officials couldn’t reconcile vote totals for 59% of precincts in the city during a countywide canvass of vote results.

Those votes couldn't be recounted when Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein demanded a statewide recount following Donald Trump's initial 13,000-vote victory over Democrat Hillary Clinton. A recount was started but stopped by the courts when Stein was ruled ineligible for a recount request because she had no chance at victory.


Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Thursday, July 30, 2020

Will Trump Delay The 2020 General Election Due To Gerrymandering In The 2020 Primary Election?


But what about that Parental Right of a legal guardian?

Or guardian, because the Detroit Absentee Ballots did not make that designation of a legal or a non-legal, whatever that means, guardian.

What about gerrymandering?


What about the Detroit Land Bank Authority properties, many being lots, which lodged absentee ballots which were tallied and certified by the City of Detroit Election Commission?

FUN FACT! BRENDA JONES CERTIFIED HER OWN ELECTION FOR CONGRESS


What if the 2020 General Election is put on hold due to absentee ballot fraud in the 2020 Primary Election?

Is that why the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, with jurisdiction over U.S. Elections, has an ominous presence in Detroit and other cities who got hit with SIGTARP?

What about the absentee ballot tallying issues in Detroit?

What about the water shutoff issues of having a vote disqualified due to condemnation codes in Detroit?

How about this one - What about all the expired Michigan State IDs due to the Cooties?

Michigan Gov. Whitmer again extends expiration of licenses, ID cards, vehicle registrations due to COVID-19No penalties until July 31

Will this mean absentee ballots submitted before July 31, 2020 will be tallied and counted, even if one does not have a valid State ID at the time of signing the absentee ballot application and submission?

Where are my Michigan Republicans on this one?

Probably too busy masking up.

EO 2020-78 Emerg Order - Dr... by Amber Ainsworth on Scribd

So many questions, so little time before the August 4, 2020 Primary Election, where, in Detroit, whoever wins the Primary, automatically wins the General!

Gov. Whitmer blasts President Trump over suggestion to delay election

President Donald Trump escalated his ongoing attacks on the mail-in voting process Thursday morning, suggesting in a tweet that the November election should be delayed. 

The statement — coming five days before a primary election in Michigan, which will be marked by a huge number of absentee ballots due to fears of spreading coronavirus at polling places — garnered a massive and immediate backlash from Republicans and Democrats, including Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. 

"It’s clear that the president is more focused on his chances in the 2020 election than on protecting families from a virus that has killed more than 150,000 Americans," Whitmer said in an emailed statement. 

"The truth is that mail-in absentee voting is safe, simple, and patriotic — so much so that the president and more than a dozen of his closest advisors have done it." 

Trump's tweet came moments after the Commerce Department announced historically abysmal financial numbers for the second quarter of the year and amid continued evidence that he is well behind the presumptive Democratic nominee, former Vice President Joe Biden, in national polls and in battleground states like Michigan.

In recent weeks, Trump has shaken up his campaign team, trumpeted infrastructure projects in key states and suggested he will take action to keep impoverished Americans from living in suburban neighborhoods, all as he has continued to rail against what he calls mail-in voting, despite there being no difference between that and absentee voting, and the fact that Trump himself has voted by mail several times.

Over Wednesday and Thursday he posted several comments, including one on Thursday morning saying, "With Universal Mail-In Voting (not Absentee Voting, which is good), 2020 will be the most INACCURATE & FRAUDULENT Election in history."

"It will be a great embarrassment to the USA. Delay the Election until people can properly, securely and safely vote???" 

The president's rhetoric appears to be an attempt to sow doubt in the eventual outcome of the presidential vote and echoes other unfounded attacks on mail-in voting. Posting such comments days before Tuesday's primary in Michigan, meanwhile, could further undermine confidence in results, which Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson says could take days to finalize.

"A sitting president is peddling lies and suggesting delaying the election to keep himself in power," U.S. Rep. Dan Kildee, D-Flint Township, posted on Twitter shortly after Trump's tweet. "Don’t let it happen."

U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Detroit, said on Twitter, "The general election will take place on November 3rd. Period."

"We aren't going to delay an election just because this impeached president's poll numbers are falling," she added.

The president does not have the power to delay any federal election. This power is reserved to the states or Congress, according to the National Constitution Center. 

“Unlike the practice of some states that allow the governor to postpone an election during emergencies, neither the Constitution nor Congress provides any similar power to the president or other federal officials to change this date outside of Congress’s regular legislative process,” wrote the center, citing a recent opinion from the Congressional Research Service. 

There is no indication that either chamber — especially with Democrats in control of the U.S. House — would entertain changing the date of the election. Even if somehow there were no election, Trump's first term in office will end, by law, on noon on Jan. 20, 2021.

Absentee voting expected to be big part of primary
Nearly 2 million Michigan voters have requested absentee ballots for the primary election. The presidential election and ongoing pandemic fears will drive that number up in November, Benson recently said. 

Benson has repeatedly said mail-in voting is safe and secure. Whitmer echoed those comments Thursday while noting monumental events in U.S. history have not delayed other elections. 

"If we could hold an election in 1864 in the midst of a Civil War threatening to tear our country apart, we can and will hold one in 2020. It’s time for the president to get his priorities straight and work with Congress on a bipartisan recovery package that protects our families, frontline workers, and small business owners.” 

Trump has repeatedly attacked mail-in voting, implying Democrats have created a system that exacerbates fraud without providing any evidence. Chris Gustafson, a Trump campaign spokesman in Michigan, recently echoed those claims while saying Republicans have always favored absentee voting. 

Voter fraud is very rare, noted University of Michigan professor Edie Goldenberg in a in a recent column for academic outlet The Conversation.  

"The evidence we reviewed finds that voting by mail is rarely subject to fraud, does not give an advantage to one political party over another and can in fact inspire public confidence in the voting process, if done properly," Goldenberg stated. 

Citing a database of voter fraud allegations maintained by the conservative Heritage Foundation, Goldenberg noted 143 convictions for voter fraud involving mail-in ballots in the entire U.S. since 2000. That's only a fraction of the more than 250 million ballots cast during that time, she reported. 

Republicans have been attacking absentee voting
In May, Benson mailed absentee ballot applications to all 7.7 million registered voters in the state. While she says the high participating rate is evidence that this was a successful efforts, Republicans in the state have attacked the effort. 

Trump initially criticized the effort and threatened to withhold state funding. On Wednesday, Senate Elections Committee Chairwoman Ruth Johnson, R-Holly, questioned why Benson would use the state's qualified voter file as a mailing list. Johnson, who previously served as secretary of state, said she's heard from many concerned Michiganders who received ballot applications for family or friends who are dead or who moved out of state. 

Both Johnson and Benson acknowledged the voter file is difficult to maintain and contains the names of people who are no longer eligible to vote. But Benson said a "secondary goal" of the May mailing was to help kick-start the process of cleaning up the file. 

Voters may still request absentee ballots in person from local clerks until 4 p.m. Monday. A ballot must be received by a clerk by 8 p.m. Tuesday, when polls close, in order to be valid. Polls for Michigan's primaries open at 7 a.m. Tuesday.

Congressional Democrats criticize Trump's misinformation campaign
Democrats in Michigan's congressional delegation, meanwhile, were quick to denounce the president's suggestion and continued to say he was spreading false rumors about the security of absentee voting.


Just a day earlier, on Wednesday, U.S. Rep. Brenda Lawrence, D-Southfield, led a letter signed by several Democratic members of Congress to Trump complaining that the president had been using his position to "spread misinformation about vote-by-mail" that wasn't supported by his own administration's findings.

"Your continued insistence on spewing misinformation and hoaxes does nothing more than create confusion," the letter said. "Your rhetoric is manipulating people into believing the upcoming November elections are 'rigged' without any evidence — a mistaken belief that threatens the integrity of our democracy moving forward. 

U.S. Rep.  Elissa Slotkin, D-Holly, said Thursday that by "laying out the path to discredit the results of the election," Trump is bolstering a theory that some of his critics have been talking about for months: The  possibility that he might move to disrupt the election or the transition of presidential power in some way.

"It sent a shiver down my spine, as I hope it does all of my colleagues on both sides of the aisle," said Slotkin, a former acting assistant U.S. Department of Defense secretary.

U.S. Rep. Andy Levin, D-Bloomfield Township, said he expects more to come. "We are in the midst of a dystopian nightmare caused by the greatest failure of executive leadership in the modern history of the presidency. Given Trump’s poll numbers, I’m afraid we can expect a lot more efforts to sow fear, confusion and conspiracy theories."

U.S. Rep. Debbie Dingell, D-Dearborn, who was attending the late U.S. Rep. John Lewis' funeral in Georgia, said, "Voting and regular elections are a fundamental pillar of our democracy. John Lewis said in his final words to America: ‘Democracy is not a state. It is an act…’ John Lewis fought with his soul to protect voting rights. We must each do our part to strengthen voting rights. We can and must have elections on Nov. 3."

Republicans in the delegation were less quick to respond to a question from the Free Press, though a spokesman for U.S. Rep. Fred Upton, R-St. Joseph, said Upton "does not believe the November election needs to be delayed." 

Some other Republicans from outside Michigan knocked down the idea as well. Speaking on Fox News, Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyoming, said, “We will not delay the election.” U.S. Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., said in a tweet, "Election dates are set by Congress. And I will oppose any attempts to delay the #2020Election."

City of Detroit Absentee Ba... by Beverly Tran on Scribd

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Tuesday, May 26, 2020

Tales Of The New Crown: Trump Said Yes But Barr Said No To Kwame

But, Trump told Karen Whitsett that Kwame was going to be released.

State Rep. Karen Whitsett said Pres. Trump told her Kwame Kilpatrick would soon be released

I believe we have ourselves a Trump v. Barr show about to commence.

Boo Boo Barr has been very naughty, you know.

It seems no one want Kwame to tell his tale.

I wonder if Sherry "The Sleuth" Gay Dagnogo will weigh in, again.

I still have popcorn.

Kwame Kilpatrick early release denied by Federal Bureau of Prisons


FOX 2 - The Federal Bureau of Prisons has denied the early release of former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick.

In a release, the Federal Bureau of Prisons announced Tuesday that it reviewed and denied Kilpatrick, 49, for home confinement.

"Mr Kilpatrick remains incarcerated at the Federal Correctional Institution-I in Oakdale, Louisiana," the release states.

According to a state representative and advocacy group The Ebony Foundation, Kilpatrick was in line for a compassionate release due to the coronavirus in the prison system.

US Attorney General William Barr previously had announced about 3,000 federal inmates were to be released early due to concerns of COVID-19 spreading in the jails.

The Oakdale Federal Prison near New Orleans has hadabout 42 cases of the coronavirus and two deaths as of last week.

Kilpatrick has served seven years of his 28-year sentence for corruption and raketeering in office. He served as mayor of Detroit from 2001 to 2008. He was sentenced in 2013 and has since lost his appeals.

State Rep. Karen Whitsett said Friday she had spoken to President Donald Trump in Ypsilanti Thursday night and was told by him that Kilpatrick would be released.

Stay with FOX 2 for more on this developing story.

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Friday, May 22, 2020

Tales Of The New Crown: Countdown To Kwame Kilpatrick - June 10, 2020

In 21 days, the world shall experience Kwame and the tales of what really happened in Detroit politics, elections, Bankruptcy, Grand Bargain, Detroit Land Bank Authority, City Council, Detroit Economic Club, Emergency Manager.

Cocktails & Popcorn: Kwame Kilpatrick & Trump - A Match Made To Bring Down The Heavens

Someone get this man #MAGA - #KAG2020 gear.

State Rep. Karen Whitsett said Pres. Trump told her Kwame Kilpatrick would soon be released

https://beverlytran.blogspot.com/search?q=kwame+kilpatrick

Everything we’ve heard about possible early prison release for Kwame Kilpatrick



DETROIT – Former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick looks likely to receive an early compassionate release from prison because of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, but so far, no definitive decision has been reached by the Department of Justice.

Kilpatrick’s family had lobbied President Donald Trump for a commutation of his sentence, but now they are attempting a compassionate release because of COVID-19.

Other federal prisoners, such as Paul Manafort, have been released from their sentences because of the pandemic.



Federal officials are considering letting Kilpatrick out, and he has been moved into the pipeline that would allow that to happen.

Reports started surfacing Thursday night that a Kilpatrick release from federal prison was imminent, not the original commutation of the sentence from Trump.

Multiple sources close to the Kilpatrick family have confirmed that the Department of Justice was on board with considering a compassionate release.

Sources said Kilpatrick had been placed in a 21-day quarantine in preparation for release, and the family was hopeful that he would get out June 10.

On Friday morning, an email was sent out from the Ebony Foundation, congratulating Kilpatrick on his release from federal prison. It doesn’t mention how the foundation knows that the release has been granted.

To be clear, there is no indication from the Department of Justice that it has signed off on Kilpatrick’s release, nor that all the details have been worked out.

But the process for a compassionate release is in the works and appears probable.

There are various standards Kilpatrick has to meet in order to be let go, and one is whether he has served at least a quarter of his total sentence. Kilpatrick meets that standard.

If Kilpatrick is given a compassionate release, he would go through a period of home confinement, and then supervised release.

In order to be granted a compassionate release, there’s usually an underlying medical issue that would make the prisoner more susceptible to the coronavirus. The argument for Kilpatrick is that he’s asthmatic and pre-diabetic, and that he’s been in close contact with prisoners who have died from COVID-19.

Kilpatrick’s conviction
Currently, Kilpatrick is an inmate at the Oakdale FCI low-security prison in Louisiana. His sentence is scheduled to end Jan. 18, 2037.

Kilpatrick served as mayor of Detroit from 2002 to 2008. He resigned in 2008 following a corruption scandal.

Kilpatrick was convicted in 2013 on 24 federal felony counts, including mail fraud, wire fraud, and racketeering. He was sentenced to 28 years in federal prison.

7 years ago: Kwame Kilpatrick convicted on 24 federal felony counts
Kilpatrick was ordered on Dec. 17, 2013 to pay $4,584,423 in restitution. That number was later lowered to $1,520,653.50 but eventually set at $1,637,087. In 2018, Kilpatrick told the court that he didn’t believe that he should have to pay the restitution because it’s impossible to calculate the amount of money he took from taxpayers.

Asking for freedom
In 2018, Kilpatrick wrote a letter to President Donald Trump, asking for his sentence to be commuted.

“I pray that I will receive the opportunity for pardon/clemency from the President of the United States as well,” Kilpatrick wrote.

At the time of his blog post, Kilpatrick had just been moved to a prison in Philadelphia. He wrote that he had been “punished severely."

"I have been chained like a wild animal, shackled around my ankles, waist and wrist.”

Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick appears before Judge Thomas Jackson for an Aug. 8, 2008, emergency appeal hearing in Wayne County Circuit Court. (Bill Pugliano/Getty Images)
Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick appears before Judge Thomas Jackson for an Aug. 8, 2008, emergency appeal hearing in Wayne County Circuit Court. (Bill Pugliano/Getty Images) (2008 Getty Images)
READ: What’s the difference between a pardon and clemency?

He said he was mentally, emotionally and spiritually ready to go home.

"My family has forgiven me," Kilpatrick wrote. "I have asked the people of the city of Detroit for forgiveness many times, and most Detroiters have forgiven me, as well."

He was eventually moved to a low-security federal prison in New Jersey, and then again to Oakdale FCI.

In February 2020, Detroit State Rep. Sherry Gay-Dagnogo attended the national African American History celebration at the White House after discussions with President Trump’s team on the Kilpatrick issue. Gay-Dagnogo brought a letter signed by politicians and pastors across the state requesting commutation of sentence.

“None of us are arguing he’s innocent,” Gay-Dagnogo said. “If that was the case we’d be asking for a pardon, we’re not, we realize during his leadership he did some things that were wrong and impacted the city negatively and pretty much scarred us for a very long time. But we also realize this is an act of mercy and a second chance.”

More controversy
Before the federal corruption charges and trial ever started, Kilpatrick quit office in 2008 because of a different scandal involving sexually explicit text messages and an extramarital affair. He ended up pleading guilty to perjury.

Kilpatrick was forced out of office while the auto industry was nearing collapse and Detroit’s unstable finances were deteriorating even more.

The city was then run by a state-appointed emergency manager, Kevyn Orr, who took Detroit into Chapter 9 bankruptcy as a last-ditch effort to fix billions of dollars of debt. The city emerged from bankruptcy in 2014.

“Kilpatrick is not the main culprit of the city’s historic bankruptcy, which is the result of larger social and economic forces at work for decades," federal prosecutors said. “But his corrupt administration exacerbated the crisis.”

His defense team asked the court to give some credit to Kilpatrick for the 2006 Super Bowl and 2005 MLB All-Star Game in Detroit, as well as 75 new Downtown Detroit businesses.

Agents who pored over bank accounts and credit cards said Kilpatrick spent $840,000 beyond his salary during his time as mayor. His trial attorney, James Thomas, tried to portray the money as generous gifts from political supporters who opened their wallets for birthdays or holidays.

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Wednesday, May 20, 2020

Michigan Secretary Of State Jocelyn Benson Rewrites Voting Rights Law All By Herself, Again

This is not going to end very well for Jocelyn Benson because she no longer has Fat Ass to guide her through successfully executing the absentee ballot victory process he had mastered.

Trump blasts mass absentee ballot efforts in Michigan, Nevada

"This was done illegally and without authorization by a rogue Secretary of State," Trump wrote of the Michigan effort.

Actually, this is not going to end well for anyone who was mean to my Sweetie.


#maytheheavensfall

Secretary of State mailing every Michigan voter absentee ballot application for 2020 elections

LANSING, MI. - Every registered voter in Michigan will receive an application to vote by mail for August and November elections.

Coming off an encouraging May election cycle that saw "record-breaking" voter turnout despite the COVID-19 pandemic, Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson wants to follow-up those results with an even greater effort.

Absentee ballot applications to be mailed out across Michigan for 2020 election
Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson has a goal to mail to every resident an application to vote absentee due to social distance concerns for the 2020 election.

In a press release issued Tuesday, the department head promised applications for every one of the 7.7 million registered voters in Michigan. About 1.3 million residents can already vote absentee.

“We appreciate that some clerks are proactively protecting public health by mailing applications to all their registered voters, and we are fulfilling our responsibility to provide all voters equal access,” said Benson. “We know from the elections that took place this month that during the pandemic Michiganders want to safely vote.”

The elections that voters can participate in 2020 include the primary elections held in August and the presidential election in November.

Over the last decade, average voter turnout in local elections in May has been an abysmal 12%. Last May 5, around 50 elections were held across 33 counties and witness almost 25% turnout. The remarkably high numbers serve as indicators for what's to come for Michigan's election systems later in the year.

Among that high turnout came an even more remarkable figure: 99% of ballots cast were by mail. Part of that reason can be attributed to the emergency order signed in March about two weeks after the virus was first confirmed. In the order, the governor expanded absentee voting access by allowing the secretary of state to issue absentee ballot applications to every registered voter and to provide absentee ballots directly to new registrants.

Michigan's election systems have waded into new territory since the state's electorate approved a proposition via a ballot measure that would allow any voter to cast their ballot remotely, regardless of the reason. Benson said this factor was a driving force behind the surge in turnout during the Democratic Primary election held March 10.

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Monday, May 18, 2020

All Ratlines Lead To Detroit - Let The Networks Be Elucidated

The feds are going to allow Gabe Leland a plea deal after all that drama Bob Carmack has gone through?

Well, this should be fun because the feds are passing the task of due process off to Macomb County Prosecutor's Office?

I thought there were child welfare issues over there in the Macomb County Prosecutor's Office?

I believe there are election issues over there in the Macomb County Prosecutor's Office.

I bet the referral case will be dropped, triggering another federal action, because you know we are dealing with "Legal Geniuses" (trademark pending).

How come no one will discuss the role of the Detroit Land Bank Authority in this case?

I wanted to see the process of impeaching testimony, but I believe there is more entertainment afoot.

Of course, more than 90% of cases end in plea deals, because 90% of defendants have no money for justice and prosecutors love those notches on their belts, as opposed to the execution of justice.

All ratlines lead to Detroit, let the networks be elucidated because they are dark and very deep.

Bribery case against Detroit councilman could end in plea deal 3 years after he took money

Bob Carmack talks extortion and Gabe Leland Detroit Free Press

Three years after Gabe Leland allegedly shook down a businessman, the Detroit city councilman’s bribery case could end with a plea deal — or a new felony charge in state court.

Leland was indicted on three counts of bribery on Oct. 4, 2018, after a federal grand jury determined he demanded $15,000 in May 2017 from a businessman in a land dispute with the city. Leland, who represents District 7 on the city’s west side, continues to serve on the City Council without any restrictions.

Steve Fishman, Leland’s attorney, had vowed to take the case to trial — where he planned to attack the credibility of the government’s key witness. But recent court records signed by prosecutors and Fishman say “the parties have discussed a resolution of the matter and need additional time to determine whether a resolution is possible.”

The matter could even be resolved in state court, after the federal government asked a Michigan prosecutor to take the case. Monroe County Michael Roehrig is reviewing the feds' evidence and considering whether to charge Leland.

For now, Leland's immediate concern is the federal case. The request made last month to reschedule Leland’s trial in U.S. District Court on public corruption charges was at least the fifth time prosecutors and Fishman asked for more time. It’s not unusual for both sides to seek a delay in the start of a trial, but it wasn't until Feb. 14 that they mentioned a possible resolution. They cited a possible deal again on April 17, the most recent filing in the case.

Fishman declined to comment beyond saying: "That is boiler-plate language that appears in any number of stipulated orders adjourning trials in federal court.”

Leland did not return messages. U.S. Attorney Matthew Schneider declined comment.

Former federal prosecutors, who asked not to be named because they worked with the prosecutors handling the Leland case, say assistant U.S. attorneys in this jurisdiction would not make up a reason to push back a trial date. One reason is concern that a judge could later ask them to provide evidence to support their claim.

Larry Dubin, emeritus professor of law at the University of Detroit-Mercy, said: “It’s very common for plea negotiations to take place the closer you get to trial.”

He added that a defense attorney might not want to acknowledge plea negotiations because he “would not want prospective jurors to know a defendant is contemplating a plea, which could reflect on guilt.”

Dubin estimated that at least 90% of prosecutions in federal court end with a plea. Fishman said the percentage is even higher.

"Most cases over here — 95% — result in a guilty plea," Fishman said outside U.S. District Court after Leland was arraigned on Oct. 15, 2018. "This one won't."

Cash for the councilman
Leland’s troubles date back to May 12, 2017, when prosecutors say Leland spoke to Detroit businessman Bob Carmack about land on Michigan Avenue that Carmack and the city each claimed. Leland, who was chairman of the City Council’s Planning and Economic Development Committee, stopped the city from selling the land.

Bob Carmack in the front office of his body shop on Michigan Avenue in Detroit on Tuesday, October 23, 2018.

Bob Carmack in the front office of his body shop on Michigan Avenue in Detroit on Tuesday, October 23, 2018.  (Photo: Eric Seals, Detroit Free Press)

“I held it up again,” Leland allegedly told Carmack during a phone call. “Yeah, yeah, it stayed, stayed right, right in committee, brother.”

Later in the call, federal prosecutors say Leland told Carmack: “You didn’t show up to my fundraiser.”

Four days later, the feds say, Leland met Carmack and offered to hold up or prevent the city from selling the land in return for $15,000.

“I should ask for 30, but I’m nice to you,” Leland said, according to the indictment.

On June 8, Leland was the only member of the Planning and Economic Development Committee to vote against putting the sale of the property on the City Council’s agenda.


When the sale went before the entire council on June 13, Leland was the only member to vote against selling it.

On Aug. 2, the feds say, Leland and a part-time campaign worker, Elisa Grubbs, met with Carmack at his collision shop on Michigan Avenue.

What Leland and Grubbs didn’t know was that Carmack was recording their encounters.

Carmack later told a reporter he was upset with Leland because the councilman hit him up for cash at the same time Carmack was caring for his dying father.

So Carmack went to the FBI.

“I put a wire on. I wore it, had a meeting with Mr. Leland, and Mr. Leland asked me would I raise some money for his campaign, and he asked me would I give him $15,000 if he didn’t sell that lot,” Carmack told the reporter.

Fishman told the reporter Carmack's allegation was "a blatant lie" with "absolutely no basis for it in fact."

On Aug. 4, prosecutors say, Leland told Carmack to give Grubbs the money. Carmack said he gave Grubbs $7,500 he got from the feds.

“I asked her, I said: ‘This is for Gabe Leland?’ ” Carmack later told a reporter. “She goes, ‘Yes, it’s for Gabe Leland. It definitely ain’t for me.’ ”

The feds say Grubbs gave the money to Leland later that day.

Five days later, according to the indictment, Leland met Carmack downtown at the Caucus Club restaurant and said he got the $7,500, but not the second half of the deal. Carmack said he told Leland he didn’t know Grubbs.

“No, but you can f***in’ trust me,” Leland replied, according to the indictment. “That’s all that matters.”

In June 2018 — nearly a year after Leland allegedly accepted the marked money from Carmack, but months before he would be indicted — Leland was questioned under oath during a deposition stemming from a lawsuit Carmack filed.

From left, Detroit City Councilman Gabe Leland leaves the U.S. District Court with lawyer Steve Fishman after being arraigned on bribery charges, entering a plea of not guilty in Detroit, Mich., Monday, Oct 15, 2018.


From left, Detroit City Councilman Gabe Leland leaves the U.S. District Court with lawyer Steve Fishman after being arraigned on bribery charges, entering a plea of not guilty in Detroit, Mich., Monday, Oct 15, 2018.  (Photo: Kathleen Galligan, Detroit Free Press)

Fishman represented Leland at the deposition, interrupting the questioning to tell Carmack’s attorney: “I’m advising Mr. Leland to assert his Fifth Amendment privilege for any questions having to do with Robert Carmack.”

Nevertheless, Carmack’s attorney asked Leland: “At any time in 2017 did you extort up to $15,000 from Mr. Robert Carmack?”

Leland replied: “I refuse to answer the question based on my Fifth Amendment rights.”


The Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution says a person cannot be compelled to testify against their interest or provide information that may incriminate them.

Leland declined to answer any questions about whether he was being investigated by the feds.

On Oct. 3, 2018, the feds charged Grubbs with conspiracy to help “City Official X” solicit a bribe.

Any question about the identity of “City Official X” was dispelled the next day, when Leland was indicted on bribery and conspiracy charges.

"A sitting member of the Detroit City Council engaging in bribery is an extreme breach of the trust of the people of Detroit that badly undermines their faith in local government," Schneider, the U.S. attorney, said in a statement released that day. "As was starkly demonstrated by the prosecution of former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick and several corrupt members of his administration, federal law enforcement is dedicated to rooting out and severely punishing corruption at every level of city governance.”

At the time, Mayor Mike Duggan called the allegations "deeply upsetting and disappointing."

"This is a very unfortunate development for our city at a time when so many things have been going right," Duggan said in a statement. "For now, we just have to let our justice system do its work."

The City Council released a joint statement the day after Leland was indicted, saying it will not affect its work and that the body "will continue to do our jobs, as elected by the citizens of this city."

On Oct. 9, after the first full council meeting since his indictment, Leland met with reporters outside the council chambers on the 13th floor of City Hall.


“I’m innocent until proven guilty and that’s my statement until further comment,” he said.

Six days later, Leland was arraigned in the federal courthouse, one block away from the Caucus Club where the feds say he met with Carmack. As he walked away from the courthouse, Leland said: “I’m innocent, and I’m looking forward to trial.”

Odd twist
While it would not be uncommon for a public corruption case to end with a plea deal, there is one aspect of the Leland case that experts said is highly unusual.

In late January — a few weeks before prosecutors and Fishman submitted the paperwork saying they were exploring a deal and asking for another delay in the start of the trial — Schneider asked Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy to take the case.

Worthy passed. Her spokeswoman, Maria Miller, said Carmack’s role as a “significant witness” for the federal prosecution posed a problem for her office.

“WCPO has a conflict of interest in other cases involving Mr. Carmack and as a result she declined to prosecute this case,” Miller said.

Worthy first claimed a conflict in 2018, when Detroit Police sought fraud charges against Carmack for selling land once owned by the city. At the time, Carmack was suing the county treasurer, which Worthy said created a conflict because the treasurer is involved in funding her office. The Michigan Attorney General's Office assigned the matter to the Genesee County prosecutor, who charged Carmack with fraud. The case is scheduled for trial later this year.

Dubin, Wayne State University Law professor Peter Henning and former federal prosecutors said the U.S. Attorney's Office sometimes refers cases to a state prosecutor, but it’s rare to do so after a defendant has been indicted and a trial date is set.


They speculated that it could be a sign prosecutors are concerned about some aspect of their case.

One of the former prosecutors added, however, that federal prosecutors would be reluctant to unload a weak case on a state prosecutor because it could damage their working relationship in the future.

The Michigan Attorney General’s Office sent the case to Monroe County. Roehrig, the prosecutor, said: “We are reviewing the case and, when we’ve reached a decision, we will issue charges.”

Roehrig said the case landed on his desk in early March and that, because of the coronavirus crisis, it may be awhile before his office makes a ruling. He would not say whether he would prosecute beyond noting that his office would only bring felony charges.

Roehrig says it’s possible his office could decide not to charge Leland. It’s not clear how federal prosecutors would react to that. Their case is scheduled for trial in federal court later this summer, but it is unlikely to go forward if Leland is charged in state court.

The stakes for Leland are high, with his reputation, job and freedom on the line. If convicted of bribery in U.S. District Court, he faces up to 10 years in prison.

Under the Detroit City Charter, an elected official who “engages in official misconduct,” “corrupt conduct in office” or pleads to “or is convicted of a felony while holding office” forfeits their office.

Neither the City Council nor the city’s Board of Ethics has taken any action to remove Leland or limit his authority.

Council relations
On Oct. 9, 2018 — his first council session since his indictment — Leland said he was “innocent until proven guilty” and “it's business as usual for me. I will be out in the community, responding to community concerns.”

Council President Brenda Jones, who did not respond to a request for comment after Leland was indicted, also did not respond to a recent request for comment on the possible resolution of Leland’s case, which has left the councilman operating under a cloud for more than 1½ years.

It’s unclear whether the indictment has affected Leland’s effectiveness on City Council. He is no longer chairman of the Planning and Economic Development Committee. But with nine council members and only four committees, chairmanships change regularly.

One council member, who did not want to be identified to avoid creating friction on council, professed to avoiding Leland because of the indictment.

City Council, unlike the Legislature or Congress, is less likely to move issues forward by coming together to co-sponsor ordinances or other measures. Some members focus mainly on constituent concerns and issues in their districts.

Councilwoman Janeé Ayers, who, along with Jones, represents all Detroiters as one of the council’s two at-large members, praised Leland’s focus.

“Gabe has not allowed this to stop him from doing his job,” she said. “I admire his tenacity to continue to push forward.”

Echoing at least one of her colleagues, Ayers said: “He’s still the same person that I met over seven years ago.”

Duggan declined comment.

The Carmack conundrum
Carmack — and his recordings — are the linchpins in the case against Leland.

Over the last two years, Carmack went from politically connected but little-known collision shop owner to flamboyant gadfly.

He made headlines in November 2018 by renting a mobile billboard and parking it in front of City Hall during rush hour to broadcast video his private investigators shot of Duggan making evening visits to the suburban home of a woman who was not his wife. The woman was a Wayne State University doctor who helped run a nonprofit program created to reduce infant mortality. Duggan supported the program. Duggan declined to comment on the nature of their relationship, and asked Michigan State Police to investigate whether Carmack tried to extort him. Months after Duggan's visits to the doctor's home were revealed, the mayor and his wife divorced. State police declined to charge Carmack with a crime. On several occasions, he paid to have banners questioning Duggan’s relationship flown over sporting events.

In December 2018, as Carmack and the city waged multiple lawsuits against each other over his land deals, prosecutors charged Carmack with fraud. They alleged that he sold city-owned land for $1 million. Carmack countered that the city gave him the land to make up for another failed city land deal. The case is scheduled to go to trial in Wayne County Circuit Court later this year.

In December 2019, Carmack was charged with drunken driving, third offense.

Brownstown Township police said that around 2:30 a.m. on Oct. 27, 2019, they saw Carmack stumbling after leaving Champions Sports Grill. They said he had bloodshot eyes, slurred speech, and told them “I'm drunk" multiple times before walking back into the bar.

About two minutes later, according to a police report, Carmack came back out and started his red Corvette before police stopped him in the parking lot.

Police say Carmack refused a field sobriety test and a blood test. After obtaining a warrant to draw his blood, police said the result came back at .257 — more than three times above the legal limit of .08.

At his arraignment, Carmack pleaded not guilty.

Henning, the Wayne State professor, is also a former federal prosecutor. He said the U.S. Attorney's office may have misgivings about Carmack.

“Do you really want to put Bob Carmack on the witness stand?” Henning said. “He’s not going to be the best witness on earth.”

Fishman said after Leland was arraigned in October 2018 that he would pummel Carmack on the witness stand. Referring to an interview Carmack gave several months earlier, Fishman said: “Let’s go to court and we’ll have a trial with a judge and a jury and the same witness who sat for the softball interview will get cross examined.

“And I guarantee you, there won’t be softball questions on cross-examination.”

Henning said Carmack’s character would not be as important as the recordings he made for the FBI.

“When they have electronic surveillance, they’re going to play those,” he said of prosecutors. “And that’s going to kill Leland.”

Fishman, who has heard the recordings, disagreed.

Speaking after Leland's arraignment, Fishman said: “It doesn’t sound like what they think it sounds like, as far as I’m concerned.”

It’s unclear what role Grubbs will play in the prosecution. Prosecutors initially thought they had worked out a plea deal with Grubbs. But she failed to show up for court, got a new lawyer, and is planning to fight the charges.

Grubbs and Leland — at least for now — are scheduled to go to trial in federal court on Aug. 17.

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Thursday, February 27, 2020

Michigan Private Redistricting Teleconference Featuring Detroit Land Bank Authority Legal Genius Michael Brady - 2-27-2020

Oh, lookie!

Michael Brady is on the redistricting team.

Michael has alot of experience in gerrymandering through fake ass private organizations.

Jocelyn Benson has alot of experience when it comes to making up her own rules, with advice and consent of fake ass private organizations, too.

I would go, but I am not credentialed media, which is a good thing because I would just publish their own words coming from their mouths, including the audience comments, and use it against them.

I bet they are going to produce a fancy video with cute memes and hashtags about all their redistricting efforts, but will forget the history, because they are bleachbitting legacy, which is why I do what I do.

Secretary Benson banner
MEDIA ADVISORY
Note: This event is for credentialed media only
Feb. 26, 2020
Contact: Mike Doyle

Press teleconference with updates on
Michigan's Independent Citizens Redistricting Commission

State officials will announce Michigan has already processed more than
3,000 applications, far more than minimum required by constitution

WHEN:
Thursday, Feb. 27, 2 p.m. [Opening remarks 2-2:15 p.m.; Media Q&A to follow until or before 2:45 p.m. as necessary]

WHO:            
  • Michigan Assistant Secretary of State Heaster Wheeler
  • Sally Marsh, director of special projects for the Michigan Department of State and Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson
  • Michael J. Brady, chief legal director for the Michigan Department of State and Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson
  • Jake Rollowdirector of communications & external affairs for the Michigan Department of State and Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson

LOCATION:
Via conference call – Please RSVP to Mike Doyle of the Michigan Department of State at DoyleM@Michigan.gov or 517-335-3264 to receive the conference call number.

WHAT:
Press teleconference to discuss applicant demographics and selection methodology for Michigan’s Independent Citizens Redistricting Commission.

More than 3,000 applications – nearly half of the more than 6,000 received to date – for the Independent Citizens Redistricting Commission have been processed. This total, as measured through Feb. 26, means Michigan has already received far more applications than the minimum required by the constitution. A profile of Michigan’s pool of applicants whose applications have already been processed will be available at RedistrictingMichigan.org. The data will be updated regularly as more applications are processed.

In addition, the public comment period is open through March 27 for the weighted selection methodology proposed to identify the 200 semifinalists from whom the commission’s 13 members will ultimately be randomly selected – four affiliated with the Republican Party, four affiliated with the Democratic Party and five who do not affiliate with either major party.

During the teleconference, state officials will discuss how the random selection process for the 200 semifinalist applicants will “mirror, as closely as possible, the geographic and demographic makeup of the state” as required by the Michigan Constitution. Officials will emphasize that Michigan voters can continue to apply through the June 1, 2020, deadline.

Michigan voters amended the state constitution in 2018 to give the responsibility for drawing state and congressional electoral districts to a randomly selected, independent commission of citizens. The Michigan Department of State launched the application process for the commission in October 2019. It will conclude on June 1. The constitution designates the secretary of state as administrator of the application and selection process for the commission, as well as “secretary without a vote” providing administrative support to the commission once formed.

More information on the Michigan Independent Citizens Redistricting Commission is available at RedistrictingMichigan.org.

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©