*Pollwatchers and Ballot Hand-counts Required*

Joined
Nov 26, 2007
Messages
408
Action Live Free or Die:

RP Pollwatchers are needed at every polling location, and ballot hand-counts are going to be essential in this critical election.

*Optical scanning cannot, I repeat, cannot be relied upon in NH. Hand-counts of OCR ballots are the only way we can ensure a clean election with the Diebold machines.*
 
Yes make sure there is nothing funny going on.. unfortunately we can't trust it will be done if not.
 
These are the times that try men's souls...

Do you trust this man with your ballot?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PiiaBqwqkXs

Watch those ballots with an eagle eye!

Better than waving signs in front, stay inside at the poll after you vote if you can (our founding forefathers died for this right) and be a pollwatcher, then demand a hand count!
 
Call to Action - Demand Hand Counts

http://doj.nh.gov/publications/nreleases/010408primary.html

RELEASED BY: Kelly A. Ayotte, Attorney General
Roger A. Sevigny, Insurance Commissioner
SUBJECT: New Hampshire Primary, January 8, 2008
DATE: January 4, 2008
RELEASE TIME: Friday, January 4, 2008
CONTACT: Assistant Attorney General James Kennedy
New Hampshire Attorney General’s Office, 1-866-868-3703 or (603) 271-3650
Assistant United States Attorney Mark S. Zuckerman, (603) 225-1552

ATTORNEY GENERAL AND UNITED STATES ATTORNEY TO STAFF ELECTION INQUIRY AND COMPLAINT LINES FOR NEW HAMPSHIRE PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY

New Hampshire Attorney General Kelly Ayotte and United States Attorney Tom Colantuono announced today that both the New Hampshire Attorney General’s Office and the United States Attorney’s Office will staff election inquiry and complaint lines at their respective offices throughout the day and evening during the New Hampshire Presidential Primary Election on January 8, 2008.

The New Hampshire Attorney General’s toll free election line phone number is:
1-866-868-3703
(1-866-VOTER03)
1-603-271-3650 (out-of-state)

This phone line will be staffed from 7 am to 9 pm on Primary Day. Inquiries and complaints may also be submitted via e-mail at [email protected] or by visiting the New Hampshire Attorney General’s Office website at and clicking on “election law“ at the bottom of the list of quick links.

The United States Attorney’s election line phone number is:
(603) 545-2562

This phone line will also be staffed from 7 am to 9 pm on Primary Day. Inquiries and complaints may also be submitted through the United States Attorney’s website at www.usdoj.gov/usao/nh clicking on the “email us” link.

The state and federal election lines are available to all individuals who may have questions regarding their voting rights and/or who may want to file complaints with the New Hampshire Attorney General or the United States Attorney regarding their right to vote or any other election law violation.
 
Great another voter fraud thread. Can you just bump the other one(s)
 
Attorneys & Hand-Counts Needed in these Municipalities

http://www.sos.nh.gov/voting machines2006.htm

New Hampshire Municipalities which use the ACCUVOTE Voting Machine
(as of November 26, 2007)

On the Accuvote ballot, the voter fills in an oval which is placed next to a candidate's name.
After voting, the voter places the ballot in an optical scanning machine which will read all votes
cast on that ballot.
Allenstown Alton Amherst Ashland Atkinson Auburn
Barnstead Barrington Bedford Belmont Berlin (4) Bow
Brentwood Brookline Canaan Candia Canterbury Chester
Claremont (3) Concord (10) Conway Danville Deerfield Derry
Dover (6) Durham Enfield Epping Epsom Exeter
Farmington Franklin (3) Fitzwilliam Fremont Gilford Gilmanton
Goffstown Gorham Grafton Grantham Greenland Hampstead
Hampton Hampton Falls Hanover Henniker Hillsborough Hollis
Hooksett Hopkinton Hudson Jaffrey Keene (5) Kingston
Laconia (6) Lebanon (3) Lee Litchfield Littleton Londonderry
Loudon Madison Manchester (12) Meredith Merrimack Milan
Milford Milton Moultonborough Nashua (9) New Boston New Durham
New Hampton New Ipswich New London Newmarket
Newfields Newbury Newton North Hampton Northwood Nottingham
Ossipee Pelham Pembroke Peterborough Pittsfield Plaistow
Portsmouth (5) Raymond Rindge Rochester (6) Rye Salem
Sanbornton Sandown Seabrook Somersworth (5) Stratham Sunapee
Swanzey Tamworth Tilton Wakefield Weare Winchester
Windham Wolfeboro Campton East Kingston Plymouth

All other municipalities in New Hampshire use paper ballots, where the voter marks an X in a box printed next to a candidate's name. Votes are counted by hand.

To view the names of the City or Town Clerks for each municipality clerk here.
 
Enforce New NH Legislation By Counting Paper Ballots

2006 Legislative Update

May, 2006

Below you will find a summary of the bills pertaining to disability that were followed by the Commission during the current session of the NH State Legislature. For more information on any of these bills, including bill and amendment text, you can access the NH Legislature website at www.gencourt.state.nh.us/ie/, click on “Quick Search” and enter the bill number or title. You can also call the Commission at 1-800-852-3405.

ACTIVE BILLS: The following bills have passed in the House and/or Senate, or have been signed by the Governor.

HB1118
Requiring paper ballots at all elections
Chapter 23
 
http://www.watchthevote2008.com/

Using the Voter Verification Affidavit when your ballot is being processed by
ANY VOTING MACHINE, COMPUTER OR SCANNING DEVICE.

New Hampshire Affidavit (There are 302 polling places in New Hampshire. 137 use paper ballots and are counted in the open before all witnesses. These 137, such as Richmond, New Hampshire, are conducting an open, verifiable, constitutional election. 175 polling places are using computers to optical scan paper ballots. The ballots then disappear into the computer. In New Hampshire, the law allows each polling place to take the ballots out of the computer at the close of the polls (about 7 PM EST in most places in NH), and count the paper ballots in front of all witnesses. IF any local polling place will not remove the paper ballots from the computer and count they in the open, then these polling places are running an unconstitutional election, and every voter at such polling places must use a Voter Verification Affidavit to make sure his or her vote counts. In other words, if we get 80 affidavits for candidate X, and the computer count only shows 40 votes for candidate X, we have proof of a fraudulent computer count.) Click here for the New Hampshire Affidavit.
 
bump. it's suspicious how nothing is being reported and all "live feed" is still in the "test phase." leave nothing to chance. unfortunately, we've seen shenanigans in IA and TN.
 
Demand Hand Counts

From NH Secretary of State Election Procedure Manual:
http://www.sos.nh.gov/electionsnew.html

WHAT CONSTITUTES A LEGAL
VOTE
The overriding consideration of how to count a
ballot is the voter's intention. Determining the
intention of a voter ultimately requires a common
sense judgment by the election officials.
Remember: the whole thrust of our election laws
and their application is to enfranchise as many
citizens as possible and to count their votes
whenever possible. RSA 659:64.
GUIDELINES IN DETERMINING
LEGAL BALLOTS
If there is a question concerning the vote on a
ballot for a particular office, only the vote for that
office shall be affected, and the rest of the ballot
should be counted.
 
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