RAW STORY
More evidence is emerging calling into question the officially
reported results of Tuesday’s marijuana legalization vote in Ohio, where
Issue 3 was defeated by a two-to-one margin.
On Friday, the Columbus Free Press published
a series of screenshots of live televised election returns from
Dayton’s WHIO-TV provided by Ohio’s Secretary of State. The sequence
showed hundreds of thousands of votes flipped within minutes from the
“yes” to “no” column of Issue 3. The controversial measure would have
established a state-licensed cartel of 10 licensed growers operating
regulated indoor grow sites of up to 300,000 square feet each. The
pro-marijuana activist community was divided on the measure.
The screenshots, posted below, show hundreds of thousands of votes
flipping from the “yes” to the “no” column in 11 minutes, even though
the number of precincts reporting only increased by 6 percent. In the
first screenshot, with 39 percent of precincts reporting, the pot
measure is winning 65-to-35 percent.
In the second screenshot those percentages are reversed, even though
the number of precincts reporting results has only increased by 6
percent. Look at the number of votes in each column and you will see
that hundreds of thousands have been jumped from supporting to opposing
the measure.
Late on Friday, Bob Fitrakis, Free Press editor and publisher,
received another set of screenshots taken by an Oberlin College faculty
member on her cell phone from another media outlet in another part of
the state. (Disclosure: Fitrakis, his colleague Harvey Wasserman and I
co-authored a 2006 book documenting
how Ohio Republicans rigged the rules and vote count in the 2004
presidential election that returned George W. Bush to the White House.)
The first of these newly obtained screenshots shows Issue 3 passing
statewide with 84 percent approval, based on 58 percent of precincts
reporting. More than 700,000 voters are supporting legalization.
The next screenshot, taken seven minutes later, shows a dramatic
reversal. Issue 3 now only has 35 percent voter approval, based on 67
percent of precincts reporting their tallies.
These screenshots raise substantial questions about the accuracy of
the officially reported vote count. In the second screenshot, more than
1.3 million No votes have been added to the official results, yet the
number of precincts reporting has only gone up by 8 percent. That does
not make sense, because in Ohio, like the rest of the country, precincts
are uniformly sized, even the largest ones. These results suggest there
were more voters in the latest 8 percent of precincts reporting than
the previous 58 percent.
Moreover, if the second screenshot is accurate, it would appear that
almost all precincts that were first to report were filled with pro-pot
voters, while almost all of the voters in this latest wave of precincts
were anti-legalization voters. Such a swing of the electoral pendulum
seems questionable.
Finally, it is odd that in both of these sets of screenshots the pro-pot vote settled at 35 percent.
While there may be a logical explanation for these anomalies, these
sets of screenshots, taken at different times in different parts of the
state, suggest something is not right with how the state’s top election
administrator—Secretary of State Jon Husted—managed the vote count.
As the Free Press’ Fitrakis and Wasserman reported,
Husted publicly opposed Issue 3 and one week before Tuesday’s vote
accused Issue 3’s promoters of fraud and has vowed to prosecute.
The promoters of Issue 3 should demand a recount, although that is
not likely to change the officially reported outcome. Ohio’s media
should also demand an explanation, as they were posting the official
results obtained from Husted’s office and as these screenshots show, the
results show something wasn’t right or credibly reported to the public.
Looking toward 2016, Ohio is once again considered a swing state,
meaning it will have an outsized role in electing the next president.
These anomalies in Tuesday’s election should merit a thorough
investigation of the state’s plans, especially when it comes to
transparency and accountability of the 2016 vote count.
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