will25u said:BREAKING In 13-page letter, Maricopa County Board calls on Senate President Karen Fann to end the audit: ‘It is time to end this for the good of the country.’ pic.twitter.com/HP6I0hgqn7
— Brahm Resnik (@brahmresnik) May 17, 2021
will25u said:BREAKING In 13-page letter, Maricopa County Board calls on Senate President Karen Fann to end the audit: ‘It is time to end this for the good of the country.’ pic.twitter.com/HP6I0hgqn7
— Brahm Resnik (@brahmresnik) May 17, 2021
Just wondering.: Did the BOS give a copy of the letter to the media? They haven’t sent it to the Senate so maybe you can share your copy ? https://t.co/FpR8WV4qrM
— Karen Fann (@FannKfann) May 17, 2021
Soo the toady Dem reporter received a copy before the person it was addressed to received it?will25u said:Just wondering.: Did the BOS give a copy of the letter to the media? They haven’t sent it to the Senate so maybe you can share your copy ? https://t.co/FpR8WV4qrM
— Karen Fann (@FannKfann) May 17, 2021
Actually, yes. In another more frightening thought, so can the feds and have done so in the past.txags92 said:
Here is a question. If the state legislature oversees all elections in the states, can the legislature take away the operation of an election from a county if they refuse to answer to the legislature about the conduct of their election management?
Read the letter. We didn’t delete a database. Their auditors just can’t find it. All of the ballots are there. They just don’t know how our elections work. https://t.co/ADLiEM7K9w
— Bill Gates (@billgatesaz) May 17, 2021
will25u said:
Bill Gates weighs in...Read the letter. We didn’t delete a database. Their auditors just can’t find it. All of the ballots are there. They just don’t know how our elections work. https://t.co/ADLiEM7K9w
— Bill Gates (@billgatesaz) May 17, 2021
Oh trust me, Cyber Ninjas knows exactly how their "elections work." This isn't rocket science. Ballots are in batches, with numbers on them. There is a tally sheet attached to each batch that shows how many ballots are supposed to be in that batch. If subsequently for some other reason, a ballot gets pulled from that batch, the tally sheet is updated reflecting the change in numbers, reason and who did it.will25u said:
Bill Gates weighs in...Read the letter. We didn’t delete a database. Their auditors just can’t find it. All of the ballots are there. They just don’t know how our elections work. https://t.co/ADLiEM7K9w
— Bill Gates (@billgatesaz) May 17, 2021
Okay, how about before that?Quote:
At no point was any data deleted when shutting down the server and packing up the equipment.
Different Bill Gates.chjoak said:
Since when is Bill Gates an AZ resident?
Why I think the Arizona Senate’s audit is eating at the foundation of our democracy. See my interview with @jennymedina https://t.co/O0xwYpjYw6
— Bill Gates (@billgatesaz) May 12, 2021
chjoak said:
Since when is Bill Gates an AZ resident?
LinkQuote:
Yet farmland assets aren't the sole component of the Gateses' landholdings. In 2017, Cascade Investment bought a "significant stake" in 24,800 acres of transitional land on the western edge of Phoenix, the most populous city in Arizona and the 10th largest metropolitan area in the country. The acreage sits off Interstate 10, and it is poised to be accessible by Interstate 11, a proposed highway that would traverse 5 miles of the 40-square-mile holding. At buildout, the Belmont development will create a brand-new metropolis, one similar in size to the Phoenix suburb of Tempe, home to Arizona State University and almost 200,000 residents. According to The Arizona Republic, Belmont is projected to include up to 80,000 homes; 3,800 acres of industrial, office, and retail space; 3,400 acres of open space; and 470 acres for public schools.
Yes. They know that but when they refused the court ordered access to them in their own location, they deliberately manufactured a reason to object later on.American Hardwood said:
The response for the second question seems to be a misdirection. Was not the request for chain-of-custody regarding handling of ballots prior to the beginning of the audit? The response only address the chain-of-custody in regards to the audit. I would want to know who handled or possessed the ballots from the moment they left the possession of the voter all the way to the delivery for the audit.
Covering his rearend !TRM said:Different Bill Gates.chjoak said:
Since when is Bill Gates an AZ resident?
ETA:Why I think the Arizona Senate’s audit is eating at the foundation of our democracy. See my interview with @jennymedina https://t.co/O0xwYpjYw6
— Bill Gates (@billgatesaz) May 12, 2021
Exactly. This is taking "we defied the subpoena and refused to give you all of the files that were requested" and glossing over it with "you said we deleted it...we didn't delete it". Doesn't matter. It wasn't there, which means you defied the subpoena. Go get the files and give them to the audit team or go straight to jail without passing go.American Hardwood said:
So item one in the letter is the "deleted" database issue. After you get past all the inflammatory name calling, the defense seems to be that there is a difference between "can't find" and "deleted". That's it. So where is the data? Let's just take your word for it that the tech is a complete idiot. Produce the data then. That is what is subpoenaed.
It is also noteworthy how the letter qualifies very precisely the comment referring to deleting files:Okay, how about before that?Quote:
At no point was any data deleted when shutting down the server and packing up the equipment.
Good question. MCBOS won't answer that either.chjoak said:
Also, why would the db be so hard to find? And if so, why dont they just tell them where it is.
From the letter:will25u said:BREAKING In 13-page letter, Maricopa County Board calls on Senate President Karen Fann to end the audit: ‘It is time to end this for the good of the country.’ pic.twitter.com/HP6I0hgqn7
— Brahm Resnik (@brahmresnik) May 17, 2021Sellers says he won’t answer the lawful subpoena from the AZ State Senate. This is willful #contempt of a subpoena. What will the Senate do to ensure accountability? Which group will be next to ignore legislative authority? Is this a #LawAndOrder state or is this anarchy? 🤔
— Dr. Kelli Ward 🇺🇸 (@kelliwardaz) May 17, 2021
will25u said:Just wondering.: Did the BOS give a copy of the letter to the media? They haven’t sent it to the Senate so maybe you can share your copy ? https://t.co/FpR8WV4qrM
— Karen Fann (@FannKfann) May 17, 2021
American Hardwood said:will25u said:Just wondering.: Did the BOS give a copy of the letter to the media? They haven’t sent it to the Senate so maybe you can share your copy ? https://t.co/FpR8WV4qrM
— Karen Fann (@FannKfann) May 17, 2021
That reeks of desperation and desperation is a stinky cologne.
Just in: Senate President Karen Fann tells me via text that she will respond Maricopa County’s call for ending the audit tomorrow at a 1pm during meeting that will be live streamed. Her full response below #azfamily pic.twitter.com/hMP475s2VT
— Dennis Welch (@dennis_welch) May 18, 2021
First major hearing to discuss Arizona election audit later today. Maricopa County officials take preemptive strike against Senate contractors | Just The News https://t.co/gzwtTwmWd6
— Jenna Ellis (@JennaEllisEsq) May 18, 2021
Say what again? "Passwords are not needed to run any operations, including elections?" I can only assume that statement includes ballot adjudication? Anyone could adjudicate ballots without password protected authority???Quote:
The board said the accusations were "false, defamatory, and beneath the dignity of the Senate." Members said they had provided proper chain-of-custody documentation to the state Senate's liaison, former Republican Secretary of State Ken Bennett. They also said that each box was sealed with tamper evident tape or "standard clear sturdy packing tape" and that the supposed batch discrepancies stemmed from a misunderstanding of how election tabulation works.
Board members challenged the claim of database deletion, charging that no data was deleted on April 12.
In the letter, they reiterated that they could not produce passwords to access administrative functions of Dominion Voting Systems machines because Dominion does not give them such passwords. Dominion said last week it would not give auditors the passwords. Dominion did give the passwords to two firms that conducted an audit for the county earlier this year because both are accredited by the U.S. Elections Assistance Commission, the county said.
County Recorder Stephen Richer, a Republican, told members in a meeting on Monday that he witnessed the transference of all election databases to the Senate and that the Dominion passwords are not needed to run any operations, including elections.
"This is like how you can run Microsoft Windows on your computer without having access to Microsoft Windows source code," he said.
This is the 81 million vote question. The path to proving that the election was totally clean is to provide everything to the auditors and full cooperation. If there are innocent mistakes made by either election officials or the auditors, provide the explanations and the corrections in an open and cooperative manner. Then all of this would go away.Bondag said:
If none of the results of the audit have been released yet, why are they trying to stop an audit that would just prove everything was on the up and up?
More misdirection. This doesn't have anything to do with running operations. They want to look at the source code to see if it had been modified in any way to perform cheating. These responses are getting increasingly dodgy.aggiehawg said:Say what again? "Passwords are not needed to run any operations, including elections?" I can only assume that statement includes ballot adjudication? Anyone could adjudicate ballots without password protected authority???Quote:
The board said the accusations were "false, defamatory, and beneath the dignity of the Senate." Members said they had provided proper chain-of-custody documentation to the state Senate's liaison, former Republican Secretary of State Ken Bennett. They also said that each box was sealed with tamper evident tape or "standard clear sturdy packing tape" and that the supposed batch discrepancies stemmed from a misunderstanding of how election tabulation works.
Board members challenged the claim of database deletion, charging that no data was deleted on April 12.
In the letter, they reiterated that they could not produce passwords to access administrative functions of Dominion Voting Systems machines because Dominion does not give them such passwords. Dominion said last week it would not give auditors the passwords. Dominion did give the passwords to two firms that conducted an audit for the county earlier this year because both are accredited by the U.S. Elections Assistance Commission, the county said.
County Recorder Stephen Richer, a Republican, told members in a meeting on Monday that he witnessed the transference of all election databases to the Senate and that the Dominion passwords are not needed to run any operations, including elections.
"This is like how you can run Microsoft Windows on your computer without having access to Microsoft Windows source code," he said.
Link
And they end saying something very stupid, instead of a concise, targeted and clear refutation of the allegations.Quote:
This is the 81 million vote question. The path to proving that the election was totally clean is to provide everything to the auditors and full cooperation. If there are innocent mistakes made by either election officials or the auditors, provide the explanations and the corrections in an open and cooperative manner. Then all of this would go away.
But the reaction of election officials is exactly the opposite. They are acting and speaking very much like people with something to hide. The animosity they are showing towards a large percentage of the Arizona citizens who just want to have some confidence that the election was conducted properly is really quite shocking.
Additionally, they have entered the very predictable phase of attacking the credibility of the auditors. This is the kind of tactic you take when the facts are not going to line up in your favor.
My understanding is that root passwords are not the same as the source code for all of the software.Quote:
More misdirection. This doesn't have anything to do with running operations. They want to look at the source code to see if it had been modified in any way to perform cheating. These responses are getting increasingly dodgy.
Quote:
Question: The bags in which the ballots were stored are not sealed, although the audit team has found at the bottom of many boxes cut seals of the type that would have sealed a ballot bag. Why were these seals placed at the bottom of the boxes?
Here is another answer that doesn't answer the question followed by a bunch of extraneous BS to fluff up the word count and make it look like a detailed answer. You know, the kind of thing a kid in Jr. High kid might do when he can't or won't answer a question.Quote:
Answer: The bags in which Election Day ballots were stored were sealed, and the seals you found in the bottom of boxes containing Election Day ballots came off these bags. Pursuant to law (A.R.S 16-608 and Chapter 9 of Elections Procedures Manual), all Election Day ballots are transported by bi-partisan teams from vote centers to MCTEC in tamper evident sealed black canvas bags. After the Statewide Canvass and the subsequent five-day contest period concludes, teams of bi-partisan employees transfer the contents of the black canvas bags, along with the tamper evident seals that were affixed on the bag, to the long-term ballot storage boxes. Below are examples of the canvas bags and seals (they made be red, green or blue) used during transport and short-term storage.
Thank you for your insight. I agree. It is curious to me how tone deaf Dominion has been from an optics standpoint this whole time. MCBOS appear to only know what Dominion wants them to know and that's damn little.Quote:
If there are findings, help come up with solutions to fix them going forward, and say "thank you" for helping to bring some deficiencies to light and recommending the appropriate controls to prevent or detect them in the future. Afterall, isn't that what this is really about? If the process is broken, or had holes in it, the people should know about it and the state should fix it.
And that is far different from the "source code" correct?Quote:
however, the auditors, CyberNinja, want the root passwords so they can fully examine all the files and directories on these servers. ...and they are not being provided and the county says they don't have / don't know them and the auditors shouldn't need them and Dominion won't provide them. This is a red flag scope limitation preventing a full and proper audit. What are they afraid of?