States Throw Out Costly Electronic Voting Machines

In Stephen Spoonamore's seventh segment, he notes that Diebold's voting machine design is "brilliant" - for stealing elections. He goes on to describe a few ways the machines, and YOUR vote, are subject to being compromised by the machines.

States throw out costly electronic voting machines By DEBORAH HASTINGS

The demise of touch-screen voting has produced a graveyard of expensive corpses: Warehouses stacked with thousands of carefully wrapped voting machines that have been shelved because of doubts about vanishing votes and vulnerability to hackers.

What to do with this high-tech junkyard is a multimillion-dollar question. One manufacturer offered $1 a piece to take back its ATM-like machines. Some states are offering the devices for sale on eBay and craigslist. Others hope to sell their inventories to Third-World countries or salvage them for scrap.

A few more are holding out hope that the machines, some of which were purchased for as much as $5,000, could one day be resurrected.

"We store them very, very carefully in the hopes that someone, someday may decide that we can use them again," said San Diego County Registrar Deborah Seiler, whose jurisdiction spent $25 million on the devices.

It wasn't supposed to be this way. After the disputed 2000 presidential recount, Congress provided more than $3 billion to replace punch card and lever-operated machines. State officials across the country said the new systems would eliminate human error and political tampering.

But problems with the machines soon followed: vanishing votes, breakdowns, malfunctions and increasing evidence that the devices were vulnerable to hackers.

Beginning last year, states including California, Ohio and Florida abruptly ordered election officials to mothball their electronic machines. Over the last two years, the percentage of registered voters relying on touch-screen technology dropped from 44 percent to 36 percent.

In November, when the presidential race between Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John McCain ends, an estimated 57 percent of voters will rely on paper ballots.

But reverting to paper has caused its own problems. During this year's primary season, record numbers of voters showed up. That caused ballots to run out, which delayed the often-cumbersome task of feeding paper ballots into scanning machines.

Changing to paper also meant that local election districts had to spend extra money on printing costs.

November's general election could bring more of the same difficulties.

As of December, 30 states had spent more than $253 million on new voting systems, according to a report by the Election Assistance Commission, the federal agency that oversees spending of the $3 billion federal allotment.

But the agency does not know how many election districts have since abandoned those newly purchased systems.

"You'd have to talk to every one of the 10,072 election jurisdictions across the country," said Kimball Brace of Election Data Services, which tracks voting systems. "After 2000, everyone thought you could throw a bunch of money at the problem and make it go away right away. Elections ain't that kind of thing."

San Diego's Seiler said she was forced to shrink-wrap 10,200 machines after Secretary of State Debra Bowen banned the devices, saying they were susceptible to fraud.

Seiler disagreed. Like many local election officials, she likes the system just fine. She also is a former employee of the system's manufacturer.

"There has been no evidence of any tampering on these machines," she said. "It was all based on a probability."

Leading makers of voting machines have made similar statements and blame poorly trained poll workers and human error for most glitches.

Unlike most of her colleagues, Seiler does not have to spend any of her budget on printing paper ballots. The county's vendor — Premier Elections Solutions Inc., which changed its name from Diebold Election Systems following years of controversy over the reliability of its machines — bears those extra costs.

"I think we're the only county in the country that has that contract stipulation," Seiler said.

Kari Verjil, elections director for sprawling San Bernardino County, north of San Diego, is not so lucky.

"We're paying for the printed ballots," she said. "It's coming out of my budget."

In 2006, using electronic machines, the statewide primary cost her county $2.5 million. In 2008, using paper ballots cost $3.4 million.

"I have a huge inventory of machines that I am not able to use," she complained. "They are just sitting in our warehouse basically useless." Stacked to floor to ceiling are 4,000 machines purchased at $3,500 each. Total cost of that system: $16 million.

What will she do with them?

"It's a little difficult," she replied. "Who wants to buy a system that has been decertified? Especially when other states are following suit?"

Five months ago, Florida began unloading nearly 30,000 touch-screen machines to a recycling company, which will strip, crush or try to sell the devices to other countries and states. The recycling company earns part of all sales.

Ohio can't do anything about selling its $138 million system until lawsuits filed by the manufacturer and the secretary of state get sorted out.

The legal battle follows a string of problems dating to 2004, when malfunctioning machines led to hours-long lines at the polls. Days passed before votes were tallied.

Company management claims that election problems were caused by human error and complications from an antivirus software system.

And so in November, most of the state will still be using e-voting machines.

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It's The Software Stupid!

A computer, or in this case a voting machine is just a piece of metal and has nothing to do with cheating or rigging votes. It is the software stupid! Fix the software, don't throw out the machines. This is a typical government reaction to a problem and amounts to throwing out the baby with the bath water. Instead of fixing the problem they are throwing away millions of dollars worth of hardware when it is the software that is the problem. I guess these idiots that bought the voting machines in the first place do not know the difference between software and hardware.

I can not believe these idiots paid $3,500 dollqars for these machines, which are nothing more than special use computers. My last computer I bought last summer, was a high end Hewlet Packard which will do things a thousand times more complicated than adding up votes. Cost $1,300; and that included a whole bunch of state of the art pre loaded software?

It's Not the Software

The normal Non-IT end users, as 99% of this country is, do not see the software running the $3500.00 computer system. What they see is a machine that will take their vote and process it. When told that the machine is not reliable because it is subject to fraud, it is not the software that is being seen, it is the equipment.

- Don’t Cry Because You Lost Your Freedom, Cry Because You Gave It Away –
Patriot – One Who Stands Up For Our Constitution and Laws that Protects the Freedoms Our Founding Fathers Demanded. Traitor – One Who Stands Up For A Government That Destroys It. St 2/75th Ranger Retired/Disabled (Personally want a 'Paper Trail' for my Vote)

Aren't they just binary? 0, 1, 0, 1..

Why are they soo expensive?
Oh sh*t, Repub's revolting!!! C-span, We ARE HERE TO DEMAND Spkr. Pelosi get back here and hold hearings on DRILLLLLINGGGGG", they are seriously crazy!!! They act as if we are morally bankrupt for wanting a MURDERER Impeached and because they want to have a hissy fit for the simple Wal-Mart white people that they draw to them because Congress isn't in Session I suppose their ?constituent's? will say, "SEE Abner, this is why they're good, Christian folk." In between that little GOP REVOLT, my fav-O-right person, ISSA, hatred deeply for him. My daughter and aka husband are Muslim, not Arab although, Turkish, so when I heard Issa with the Terrorist JIHADIST ISLAMOFASCIST KILLS US, garbage, then "I'm an Arab American.", this spoke volumes. I knew he was either Armenian, so Catholic or from Lebanon ergo Christian. This was his using an ethnicity as a devious tool, because those that aren't familiar with al Islam think all are brown skinned, brown eyed, MOSLEMS, well my family are blonde, green eyed Muslims from Asia Minor, I never say anything about religion in that way, as a sly diversion, I love the Constitution and THE BILL OF RIGHTS. I really would have felt great if just ONE of the four that were allowed to run for President when quizzed and condescended to about their religious choices would have said, "Well, actually i really Love The Bill Of Rights and I swore to uphold my oath of the Constitution of the United States and I abide strictly by the First!", of course that person would have been Dennis if they didn't 'Disappear' him....But then those GOP people have that off shore drilling REVOLT......

We should demand our money back

Force the companies to take the units back as defective and eat the cost. These machines have no place where voting is concerned.

Think of EVMs as "slot machines"

EVM (Electronic Voting Machines) are nothing more than slot machines - the only difference is that the average voter doesnt know they are getting screwed with EVMs.

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