WASHINGTON, DC – Sources confirmed today that hundreds of thousands
of military absentee ballots were delivered hours after the deadline for
them to be counted, with preliminary counts showing that they would
have overturned the vote in several states and brought a victory for
Governor Mitt Romney.
Officials say the ballots were delivered late due to problems within
the military mail system. Tracking invoices show the ballots sat in a
warehouse for a month, then they were accidentally labeled as ammunition
and shipped to Afghanistan. At Camp Dwyer, Marine Sergeant John Davis
signed for them and was surprised at the contents.
“I told Gunny we got a bunch of ballots instead of ammo,” Davis told
investigators earlier today. “He told me to file a report of improper
delivery and that the chain of command would take care of it. We didn’t
hear anything for three weeks. While we were waiting we came under
fire so we dumped a bunch of them in the Hescoes. We didn’t dig those
ones back out.”
After military officials realized the initial error, the ballots were
then sent back to the U.S. but suffered a series of setbacks.
Twelve boxes of ballots were dropped overboard during delivery to the USS Kearsarge (LHD-3) in the Persian Gulf, then while the ship sailed to Bahrain, postal clerks allegedly pocketed whatever ballots they wanted.
The remaining absentee ballots were loaded onto a C-130, but the
flight was delayed until November 1st so the crew could get tax free pay
for the month. Once the ballots arrived stateside they were promptly
mailed to each state’s counting facility, reaching their final
destination on November 7th.
“It’s a shame,” Rear Admiral John Dawes said when asked for comment.
“I expected a delay so I ordered that everyone cast their votes eight
months ago. It’s really unfortunate that our mail system failed us and
directly affected the course of history.”
Upon hearing the news, angry Republicans have begun a demand for a
recount, but most military absentee voters have shrugged off the news,
with many wondering whether the care packages their families sent six
months ago were ever going to show up.
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