Election Review - CCCXVI

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Robert B. Sklaroff, M.D., F.A.C.P.

Medical Oncology/Hematology  Telephone: (215) 333-4900


Smylie Times Building - Suite #500-C  Facsimile: (215) 333-2023
8001 Roosevelt Boulevard  [email protected]
Philadelphia, PA 19152-3041 February 19, 2022 pm – Ford Rescinded
Japanese Internment Executive Order

To: Distribution [Politicians, Media, Potentially-Interested Persons]


Re: PA “Forensic Audit” of 2020 POTUS Election [PART CCCXV] – A.V.A. Update
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This just arrived and is conveyed intact, albeit reformatted to maximize readability:

Detroit 2020 Report. The wonderful 70-page report by Michigan Citizens for Election
Integrity [appended] details the timeline of events at Detroit's central count during the
election. I have never before or since seen such lawlessness under color of law.

Virginia State House Bills. Virginia Election Integrity Network passed along the election
integrity bills that have passed the State House in Richmond.
• HB 1090 restores Virginia’s voter ID law, bringing back photo ID along with
providing safeguards for those who may have difficulty obtaining a photo ID.
A photo ID requirement is always a good idea. However, the Senate photo ID requirement
bill (that failed in Committee) only required photo ID for in-person voters, and not for
absentee voters. I cannot tell if this hole has been patched up. Certainly, we don't want
to require more of our in-person voters than our mail-in voters.
• HB 34 ends the use of unattended drop-boxes for ballots that opened the door to
ballot harvesting.
Great idea!
• HB 39 tightens Virginia’s early voting period while expanding the hours during
which voters can cast their ballots.
This moves Virginia from 45 days of early voting to 14 days of early voting. While most
reasonable people would agree that 45 days of early voting is too long, it is hard not to
notice that 45 days of early voting in Virginia's 2021 governor's race expanded early
ballots to 880k+, and shrunk the number of mail-in ballots to 300k+. Certainly, early
ballots are preferable to mail-in ballots.
• HB 927 will end late night ‘vote dumps’ by counting absentee ballots in the
precinct where they would otherwise be cast.
This seems like a very good idea. We want absentee ballots to return to the local precinct
to be pre-processed and counted. The bill language did confuse me a little as it seems to
keep the idea of a central count alive. Either I didn't read the bill language correctly, or
Legislative Services doesn't have a solid grip on how the process works.
• HB 1140 gives voters more notice in more places if their registration is about to
be canceled for some reason.
I personally don't care for HB1140. The reason we notify a voter that his/her registration
could be moved to inactive status AT HIS/HER HOME ADDRESS, is because we have reason
to think the voter has moved. Emailing a double-registered voter who is trying to cheat,
is a bad idea. This could serve as a notice and opportunity to stay double-registered for a
nefarious actor.

DoJ Dropbox Guidance. The guidelines [appended] purport to bring dropboxes in line
with the American Disability Act. Is DOJ attempting to better enable the disabled to vote
by dropbox, or recommending that drop boxes be placed in areas harder to surveil by
camera in the wake of recent dropbox footage that seemingly shows ballot trafficking.

Iowa Private Funding Bill. HSB 719 is an omnibus bill that incorporates the following:
• Prohibits private funding of election administration - “No Zuck bucks”
• Requires absentee ballots to include the voter's signature and their voter ID
number – thus closing the loop between the absentee ballot request and the
voted absentee ballot. This is a form of voter ID for absentee ballots.
• Makes election recount procedure more uniform
• Public notifications of elections must include when and where the post-election
audit will be held.
The state commissioner or a county commissioner or political subdivision of the state shall
only accept funding from the following sources for the purposes of conducting an election:
a. Lawful appropriations of public funds from the government of the United States.
b. Lawful appropriations of public funds from the state of Iowa.
c. Lawful appropriations of public funds from a political subdivision of the state for the
conduct of an election in the political subdivision.
The state commissioner, a county commissioner, or a political subdivision of the state shall
not accept or expend a grant, gift, or other source of funding from a source other than
those listed in subsection, including from a private person, corporation, partnership,
political party, nonparty political organization, committee, or other organization for the
purpose of conducting an election.
This section does not prohibit the state commissioner or a county commissioner or political
subdivision from issuing and collecting fees as otherwise provided by law.
This section does not apply to the contribution of a building for use as a polling place.

Wisconsin Findings. Gateway Pundit has revealed major findings in registration rolls.
• Individuals voted twice using unique voter ID numbers for each;
• Massive number of voters were registered without either a first or last name, or
sometimes an address; a last name, even no address;
• One address has not existed for 10 years, but 359 voters still registered to it;
• Addresses with no occupants cast 113 ballots. They have the names & ID’s;
• 625,000 dead voters on the rolls;
• 4,300 voters with a “99999” zip code;
• 3,400 FIDO keys to access the database distributed throughout Wisconsin;
• The City of Hudson grew by 10%, but registrations grew 128%;
• Most illegally cast ballots originated from MyVote;
• 26 voters registered at a two-bedroom apart;
• 290 voters registered at a 16-apartment building in La Crosse;
• 19 registered at a newer single-family home in Outagamie County;
• Registrations have different ID’s, but only one letter is made different in the name;
• WEC recently entered into an agreement with DMV to not receive signatures; and
• eBook creates multiple registrations (25+) for one person, all with unique voter
ID’s;

South Dakota. A bill that would allow a "forensic audit" in presidential elections pends.

Colorado. A county clerk, Tina Peters (harassed after the 2020 election) is running for
Secretary of State.

Montana. The legacy media found an associate college PolySci professor, to tell us that
evidence of voter fraud is not evidence of widespread voter fraud.

North Carolina Voter Fraud. Eight suspects were charged with voter fraud.

What steps should be taken to maintain voter registration lists? American Voter's
Alliance is considering more steps that should be taken to clean voter rolls. Many states
and private organizations have different ideas on how to perform proper roll
maintenance. Christian Adams of PILF has spoken extensively about this. Here are a few
concepts for your consideration as to what states can do:

1.) Withdrawing from ERIC, and finding/creating an alternative substitute.


2.) Cleaning interstate double-registrants;
3.) Cleaning InTRAstate double-registrants;
4.) Using the Social Security Death Index & publishing plan & names removed monthly;
5.) Removing "USPS undeliverable" registered voters from the rolls;
6.) Using the federal "Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements" or SAVE database to
remove illegals;
7.) Checking DOB's & verifying against state records to ensure legal age to vote;
8.) Publish monthly plan to remove felons;
9.) Collect jury refusal data;
10.) Report the number of registered voters 120 days before an election in a locality, that
way we can determine if it exceeds 100%.
11.) Require localities to create access for one appointed custodian of the voter rolls to
add/subtract voters. For larger jurisdictions, we may want to allow an additional
custodian for every 100,000 voters. This person would be in charge of list maintenance
for the locality and it would create better accountability as we would know who was
failing to do his or her job.
--
Timothy P. Griffin, Esq., Associate, Amistad Project, Thomas More Society, (434) 660-6198

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