"A wise and frugal government which shall restrain men
from injuring one another, which shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned. This is the sum of good government."
(Thomas Jefferson)


Sunday, July 11, 2010

Chris Baker Interview Former DOJ Attorney Adams on Minnesota Voter Fraud

This does not come as a shock. In fact this non-betting person would have put down money that Franken was given that Senate seat via voter fraud and he knew it as well. The Democrats set out in 2008 to gain a 60-seat majority to make it so Republicans could not stop bills. They needed one more so their also recruited Arlen Specter to switch parties. Will say one thing for Specter -- unlike Charlie Crist (No Party FL) he returned campaign contributions by Republicans when asked.

Didn't take a genius to figure out what was happening as votes were manufactured right before our eyes in Minnesota after the election. Now Minnesota is represented by a clown who sleeps through hearings. Not only was the Senate short changed but so are the people of Minnesota. Hope this woke voters up to what the Democrat Party is all about in Minnesota -- stealing elections.

On July 8, 2010, Chris Baker of KTLK-FM radio in Minneapolis interviewed former Department of Justice employee J. Christian Adams. Adams claims the the DOJ is failing to enforce election laws. Adams also cites the investigation done by Minnesota Majority that revealed non-eligible persons are appearing on Minnesota voter roles.





The details of this lack of action by DOJ on voter fraud by Minnesota Majority tells exactly what the Democrats are doing to steal seats like the Minneosota Senate seat:

On November 17th of 2008 (immediately following the 2008 General Election and while the Coleman-Franken recount battle was getting underway), Minnesota Majority president Jeff Davis sent a certified letter to then Voting Section chief of the Civil Rights Division at the DOJ, Christopher Coates, requesting an investigation into apparent failures to comply with HAVA by Secretary of State Mark Ritchie. No response was forthcoming.

Since the DOJ in Washington DC failed to follow up on Davis’ complaint, Minnesota Majority contacted the local FBI office and lodged the same complaint. Special Agent Brian Kinney responded and visited the Minnesota Majority office to examine Minnesota Majority’s findings. At that time, he said, “based on what I see here there is more than enough evidence to initiate an internal complaint.” He gave his assurances that he would bring the matter to the attention of his supervisors. There was no further follow-up.
By October of 2009, Minnesota Majority had compiled evidence of further violations of HAVA in Minnesota, including a finding that ineligible felons were not being detected and flagged for challenge or removal from the voter rolls. This resulted in hundreds of fraudulent votes by ineligible felons being counted in Minnesota’s 2008 election. Davis sent another certified letter to Voting Section Chief Christopher Coates. Like the first complaint from nearly a year prior, the second letter went unanswered.

Minnesota Majority’s experience supports J. Christopher Adams’ claims that the DOJ’s policy is not to pursue violations of HAVA’s anti-fraud provisions. The dismissal of the voter intimidation charges against members of the New Black Panther Party who brandished nightsticks outside a Philadelphia polling place during the 2008 General Election was the last straw for Adams, who resigned in protest. He claimed that his superiors also ordered himself and other attorneys not to comply with subpoenas issued by the US Civil Rights commission, placing them in what Adams called, “legal limbo.”

Voting Section Chief Christopher Coates, who worked with Adams on the New Black Panther Party voter intimidation case was demoted and transferred to a post in South Carolina earlier this year.

The Civil Rights Commission has subpoenaed Coates to testify on the matter but his DOJ employers are currently blocking his testimony.

We’ve witnessed reluctance on the part of Minnesota law enforcement agencies to investigate and prosecute election crimes and now there’s evidence that indicates the federal government is deliberately fostering an environment favorable to voter fraud, nationwide, by refusing to enforce the anti-fraud provisions of the Help America Vote Act. It's become apparent that Minnesota's 2008 election problems are not isolated.


Attorney General Eric Holder and all Obama political appointees need fired and then charged with covering up voter fraud.

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