 |
 |
 |
 |
| |
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
| |
 |
 |
| |
Front Page |
 |
| |
|
 |
| |

|
 |
 |
 |
 |
| |

Classifieds Find a home, car,
rental, job, pet,
merchandise, auction, boat,
plane or RV Place
an Ad
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| |

L.A. Times Subscription Services Subscribe, Change of Address,
Vacation Stops, Suspend Delivery, College Discount,
Gift Subscriptions, Mail Subscriptions, FAQ
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| |

Print Edition Advertisements See this week's ads
 |
 |
| |
OTHER EDITIONS
Print Edition, Orange County,
Valley, Ventura County,
National, Community Papers |
 |
| |

 |
 |
| |
 |
 |
| |
Ameritrade |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| |
|
 |
| |
  |
 |
| |
 |
 |
|
 |

Florida's Typical Election Day Is Often a Nightmare
Vote: For now, reports of abuse, irregularities from Pensacola to Plantation are mounting as fast as ever.
By MARK FINEMAN, LISA GETTER, Times Staff Writers
MIAMI--Beneath a 30-foot banner proclaiming "Election Day Irregularities,"
emotional if unverified charges poured forth from a community center
stage here Saturday like a sordid list of Third World abuses.
Just how bad was Florida's now infamous presidential election?
In Plantation, an elementary school polling place was demolished three
weeks before election day, but many voters weren't told of the new
polling site, angry witnesses claimed. In Orlando, students who
registered online found their names had not been entered on the rolls.
In Miami-Dade County, others complained, poll workers refused to let
them vote despite valid registration cards. Among them was a black
lawyer, who had brought her 5-year-old son to show how we elect our
presidents. The boy left in tears, she said.
Elsewhere, completed ballots were strewn on tables or handed out as
fresh to incoming voters, some claimed. And at least four ballot boxes
were forgotten overnight in Miami-Dade and Broward counties, the
witnesses said as a court reporter recorded their statements.
Enter Miami police Lt. Diego Ochoa, a 26-year veteran, who said his
officers had impounded and sealed as evidence a locked ballot box that
was mysteriously discovered at a Sheraton Hotel here Friday--three days
after one of the closest, most contested and weirdest elections in
American history.
From computer-disk glitches in Volusia County to allegations of forged
absentee ballots in the Florida Panhandle to missing ballot boxes in
Miami, it was, well, a fairly typical election day in the state that will
determine who will be the next U.S. president.
As scores of Democratic and Republican lawyers scoured the state to
take depositions and collect ammunition for what appears a historic legal
battle ahead, all that was missing in this state of confusion and chaos
was a dead voter. There hasn't been one of those here in nearly three
years.
So far, no one is alleging conspiracy or fraud, as had bedeviled the
state so often. Instead, Florida's election process appears a victim of
poor state oversight, antiquated technology, poor training and an
astonishing level of human bungling.
"Florida, unfortunately, once again finds itself on the national
stage," declared Barbara Arwine, the California native who heads the
Lawyers Committee on Civil Rights Under Law, from the stage of Saturday's
NAACP "Public Hearing" in Miami's Little Haiti.
"This is not new," she told an audience of several hundred people.
"Florida has had a rich history of voting rights abuses."
But, with the eyes of the world on it and so much at stake, especially
in South Florida, where the wounds of the Elian Gonzalez affair remain
raw, reports of abuses and irregularities from Pensacola to Plantation
are mounting far faster and more furiously than anyone can recall.
They're stacking up so fast, in fact, that an estimated 6,000 formal
complaints from angry voters who claim they were disenfranchised have
filled a box that Democratic Party lawyers had set up and were guarding
in Tallahassee.
"I was dumbfounded," said Mark Herron, the local attorney hired by the
Democratic National Committee to coordinate Florida's continuing
recounts. "I said, 'What's this huge box?' "
The box and the stage at the hearing chaired by Kweisi Mfume,
president of the National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored
People--who will report the findings to the Justice Department this
week--are defining images of a state long known for sordid politics,
scandalous elections and potentially volatile racial and ethnic tensions.
"We were providing transportation for elderly and other voters,"
Broward County resident Fumiko Robinson told the hearing. "People were
told they were not allowed to vote at the same place they had voted
before. A lot of them got very discouraged." Some longtime Florida
activists insist this year's abuses were as unprecedented in number as
the state's huge voter turnout.
"Many of these violations, although they have happened before, I never
recall them happening in this record number," said NAACP Florida
President Adora Obi Nweze, who testified Saturday that she too was nearly
disenfranchised last week because poll workers wrongly asserted that she
already had cast an absentee ballot.
Still, beyond the disputed Palm Beach County butterfly ballots, a
closer look at a few of the state's lesser- and better-known counties
indicates that last week's presidential vote was, for all its flaws,
pretty much business as usual for America's southeasternmost state.
In tiny Nassau County, north of Jacksonville, Elections Supervisor
Shirley King, who is retiring after 20 years, said she has made it a
point to recount every set of ballots by hand. Routinely, she said, some
voters mistakenly circle their choices rather than punch them; others
don't punch the holes clean through.
But King hasn't done her recount yet this year. She said she hasn't
been able to reach the other members of the canvassing board. "They won't
return my calls."
In Quincy, the Gadsden County seat, west of Tallahassee--where
suspended Police Chief Rodney Moore says, "When you step over the county
line, you drop back in time 40 years"--race and corruption have been
electoral hallmarks.
Gadsden, the only one of Florida's 67 counties with a black majority,
has a long history of vote fraud, which many residents say is grounded in
racism and carried out through intimidation.
"Dead men have been known to vote here, and people have been known to
vote twice here," said Moore, 35.
An African American, Moore lost his bid to unseat longtime Sheriff W.
A. Woodham, a white man, in September after Moore was indicted on bribery
and official misconduct charges that he calls bogus; his trial is
scheduled to begin Dec. 6.
But in a county where Vice President Al Gore's 66% of the vote was his
largest winning margin in the state, Democratic Executive Committee
Chairman Vivian D. Kelly contends the tally should have been higher
still.
"Although this is a Democratic county, race is still more important
than party," said Kelly, 80, a retired schoolteacher. "We still have
black folks here who are afraid to go to the polls. It's about control.
Whites are a minority here, but they have the power."
And in Volusia County, where a diseased computer disk and other
irregularities prompted a hand recount due to begin today, election
officials discovered the true diversity of their electorate.
While there was little shift in the presidential race, they found
write-in ballots for rocker Ted Nugent, Mickey Mouse, Jesse Ventura, the
Cable Guy and "True Follower of Christ."
Yet it is the most populous, southernmost region of the state that has
enshrined Florida's electoral image--a reputation hard earned through
voters like Manuel Yip, who died at 75 in 1993, was buried in a pauper's
grave that year and somehow voted in Miami's November 1997 mayoral
election.
Yip's vote and hundreds of other fraudulent ballots that a Miami-Dade
County circuit court judge later ruled amounted to "massive absentee
ballot fraud" led an appellate court to overturn the local vote, bringing
Miami's current Mayor Joe Carollo to power.
Such was the historical and geographical backdrop for the NAACP's
Saturday hearing in an impoverished section of northeast Miami, which
Mfume said was designed "to gather information for review by the legal
department of the NAACP . . . for formal presentation to the Department
of Justice by midweek."
Mfume insisted that the gathering, which included several national
civil- and voting-rights groups, was neither sponsored by nor represented
any political party or candidate. He ordered one member of the audience
to remove a Gore campaign sign.
Ralph Neas, a veteran civil-rights advocate and president of People
for the American Way, added from the stage: "Last week, thousands of
Floridians were denied equal justice. They were denied the fundamental
right to cast a vote that counts.
"We cannot just shrug our shoulders and say, 'Oh, that happens all the
time. . . . That's just the way it is.' That is absolutely unacceptable."
Added Arwine: "This is a tragedy. It is an American tragedy."
Florida's postelection chaos did bridge some ethnic divides. In Palm
Beach County, where a confusing ballot apparently led hundreds of elderly
Jewish Gore supporters to mistakenly vote for Reform candidate Pat
Buchanan, witnesses said Saturday that blacks were similarly
disenfranchised.
County election records show that the Buchanan vote was second-highest
in the county's black precincts of Riviera Beach and Lake Worth. And at a
rally outside the courthouse there Friday, the Rev. Jesse Jackson stood
shoulder to shoulder with outraged Jewish voters.
Nweze blamed most of the irregularities and violations on "the
election department not doing its job properly," especially in a year
when an NAACP campaign registered a record number of blacks in Florida
and nationwide.
"The state of Florida certainly has demonstrated that something is
very wrong with this election." Nweze paused, shook her head and added:
"I mean, look, I don't even know who we elected here."
* * * Times staff writers Mike Clary in Gadsden County and Scott Glover in
Volusia County contributed to this story.
Search the archives of the Los Angeles Times for similar stories about:
Albert Jr Gore,
George W Bush,
Democratic Party,
Republican Party,
Presidential Elections - 2000,
Presidential Candidates,
Election Recounts,
Florida - Elections,
Florida - Politics. You will not be charged to look for stories, only to retrieve one.
|