Lesson I'd like you to hear: Wonderful laws, as you have been posting, are null and void when Democrats choose to break them. They never get punished, and they know it.
I found out yesterday that here, in my little town, they were registering votes for the same day. Note: That is ILLEGAL in Arizona! Yet they did it anyway and when not stopped by an observer, they are allowed to cast their illegal votes.
@Cyber Liberty@libertybele @roamer_1 Cyber, you witnessed election fraud:
You have power to stop election fraud. You, yes, you, have that power.To All, at the beginning I should have presented this particular law; I will have time today, like right after I post this, to look up this in Texas law; not sure I can find it today in Pennsylvania law as their system of finding certain laws, is different than Texas and I have other things I must do today. Here are regular words that describe this law:
If you have evidence someone, either a voter/voters, or an election official, broke the election law, take it to your District Attorney, and he is
required to investigate. Get that -
required to investigate. Maybe he says he is not going to do it; if he will not, contact your State Attorney General, and he is
definitely required to investigate.People, do not be "afraid" of job titles, people who hold those election/other offices are just like you. Your money pays for them to do their job.
I have used this example below before, but it shows what length a State Attorney General will go to in order to stop voter fraud (I hate this example and would likely be guilty of it myself in this situation):
A District Attorney in Texas would not investigate a possible election fraud a woman committed. The complaint then went to the Texas Attorney General, who was Greg Abbott, the now Governor. He took this case to court, won, and gave her a fine and community service.
This woman was taking care of her mother, who was very ill. The daughter requested a mail ballot in her mother's name to get her the ballot. The mail ballot was there at the house, but the mother died before filling it out. The daughter knew how her mother was voting, so she filled it out for the deceased mother and sent it in.
When a person dies in a county, a death certificate is sent to the county. While evaluating the mail ballot it was found the mother died before the ballot was sent back.
The ballot was rejected and the election official notified the District Attorney but he refused to act. The election official notified State Attorney General Abbott and he investigated as I said, went to court, gave the daughter a fine and community service.
See, you have power to do the same, take your evidence to your District Attorney and if he does not investigate, send it to your State Attorney General.
You can also start at the top, send your complaint directly to the State Attorney General - consider the rest in "quotes":
An individual may submit an election complaint to the Texas Secretary of State through the use of a form found online at:
http://www.sos.state.tx.us/elections/forms/complaintform-sos.pdf. The Secretary of State will refer these complaints to the Office of the Attorney General to investigate the allegations and prosecute election fraud. Chapter 273, Texas Election Code, gives the OAG authority to investigate and prosecute election code violations anywhere in Texas. Note, for a campaign-related complaint, please contact the Texas Ethics Commission.