More Florida Voter Fraud? 3000 Registrations List UPS Stores as Residence

Another example of Trump fraud.
You wish
Of course this is Trump fraud.... Florida's Secretary of State and Attorney General are both Republicans.
That's a good thing, no?
If you're in favor of the voter fraud described in the OP, I can see where you would find that a good thing.
The good thing was to the highlighted part of your post...but it is OK....
 
So, homeless people (the poor), can't legally vote. Considering there are between 40,000-50,000 homeless veterans, it's a shame that those who served their country can't vote. These are the people who have no permanent home address, just P.O. or UPS boxes.
 
Just more of the Commie/DemocRATS trying to steal the election!

Allen B. West.com ^ | April 26, 2014 | Allen West

If there is one thing I learned in the 2012 election cycle, it was about voter fraud. My conservative warrior associate, Katherine Engelbrecht, and her organization, True the Vote, took up the mantle against the St. Lucie County Supervisor of Elections, Gertrude Walker, who admitted to sending ā€œquestionableā€ results to the Florida Secretary of State. It was somewhat disheartening that the Florida Secretary of State and Attorney General sat back, watched the news reports, and did nothing.

With that background, Iā€™d like to share a story written by Gregg Prentice: ā€œVoter Fraud? If theyā€™re not catching the easy stuff, what else are they missing?ā€

Prentice asks, are some of Floridaā€™s Supervisors of Elections skirting the law? Supervisors are tasked with maintaining an accurate voter roll. One of the requirements of the Supervisors is to ensure voters provide a legal residence address. Yet a December 2013 analysis shows more than 3,000 voter registrations statewide listing their residence address at a UPS store, potentially illegally.

Florida Law is clear and, with minor exception, requires that voter registrations listing other than an address of legal residence should not be accepted, because they are ā€œineligibleā€ (F.S. 98.045 (1)(h)). In fact, itā€™s actually a felony to willfully submit any false voter registration information (F.S.104.011(2)). Accordingly, if these ā€œineligibleā€ registrations are found to exist, Florida statutes also provide for their prompt correction or removal (F.S. 98.075(6) & (7)).

So there you go. Itā€™s a felony for this to have happened, but how can it be that a citizen watchdog had to uncover this Florida voter fraud while the people paid with our taxpayer dollars have not a clue? Is it not a mandated responsibility of the Florida State Supervisors of Elections to maintain these voter address rolls? Iā€™d say so.

A review of the state-mandated voter registration list reveals that of the 3,000 UPS store registrations:

ā€“ 1,200 match addresses already known as commercial that were ignored ā€“ 500 match addresses erroneously marked as residential ā€“ 1,100 have no match at all.

The question is, when stories like this surface, how can the voting electorate believe there is integrity in their electoral process? Weā€™ve reported here on the Hamilton County (Cincinnati) Ohio poll worker, Melowese Richardson, who voted nearly seven times. She was supposed to have a five-year sentence but thanks to Al Sharptonā€™s National Action Network, she served just about 18 months.

Oh and by the way, she wasnā€™t charged by the federal government with any type of voter fraud allegations ā€” so much for Eric Holderā€™s concern about voter suppression.

You see, the real voter suppression comes when fraud exists, as it negates an individualā€™s lawful and proper vote. The fraudulent shenanigans in the 2012 Congressional District 18 election in St. Lucie County ā€” and to some extent Palm Beach County ā€” amounted to voter suppression. But as we reported previously, itā€™s not voter suppression Democrats are worried about, itā€™s fraud suppression.

In the case of the UPS store registrations, itā€™s not a recent phenomenon. More than 2,300 of the more than 3,000 recently discovered UPS store registrations had the exact same UPS store listed as their residence at least 15 months prior. Approximately 800 of those 2,300 likely ā€œineligibleā€ registrations voted in Floridaā€™s during the 2012 General Election.

Worse however, since Federal Elections occur in even years, the Supervisors are required by law to perform their primary ā€œlist maintenanceā€ during the odd years. Yet these 3,000 UPS store registrations were identified in December of 2013 as the Supervisorsā€™ odd year voter roll efforts came to a close

Um......we need to make sure that those are not homeless people unless the name of the game is to continue to pretend they do not exist.
 
A lot of UPS mailbox users are regular middle class types. A lot of people have security issues with their home mailboxes, it's safer to rent a p.o. box.
 

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