Vote Fraud: Some early West Virginia voters angry over switched votes!
Jackson County touch-screens switched votes, according to three residents.
JACKSON COUNTY, West Virginia - October 18, 2008 - At least three early voters in Jackson County
had a hard time voting for candidates they want to win.At least three early voters in
Jackson County had a hard time voting for candidates they want to win.
Virginia Matheney and Calvin Thomas
said touch-screen machines in the county clerk's office in Ripley kept
switching their votes from Democratic to Republican candidates.
"When I touched the screen for
Barack Obama, the check mark moved from his box to the box indicating a vote
for John McCain," said Matheney, who lives in Kenna.
When she reported the problem, she
said, the poll worker in charge "responded that everything was all right.
It was just that the screen was sensitive and I was touching the screen too
hard. She instructed me to use only my fingernail."
Even after she began using her
fingernail, Matheney said, the problem persisted.
When she tried to vote for
candidates running for two open seats on the Supreme Court, the electronic
machine canceled her second vote twice.
On her third try, Matheney managed
to cast votes for both Menis Ketchum and Margaret Workman, Democratic
candidates for the two open seats.
Calvin Thomas, 81, who retired from
Kaiser Aluminum in Ravenswood in 1983 and now lives in Ripley, experienced the
same problem.
"When I pushed Obama, it
jumped to McCain. When I went down to governor's office and punched [Gov. Joe]
Manchin, it went to the other dude. When I went to Karen Facemyer [the
incumbent Republican state senator], I pushed the Democrat, but it jumped
again.
"The rest of them were okay,
but the machine sent my votes for those top three offices from the Democrat to
the Republican," Thomas said.
"When I hollered about that,
the girl who worked there said, 'Push it again.' I pushed Obama again and it
stayed there. Then, the machine did the same thing for other candidates.
"Why didn't she [the polling clerk] tell me
before I even used the machine that might happen? And how many people,
especially my age, didn't notice that?”