Robert Knight has a piece at the Washington Times that runs rough over voter fraudsters.
“Richardson was previously convicted of threatening to kill a witness in a criminal case against her brother; of stealing; of drunken driving; and of beating someone in a bar fight,” The Cincinnati Enquirer reported. When sentenced for vote fraud, she was unbowed, claiming to be a victim of racism.
Assistant prosecutor Bill Anderson, however, saw it differently: “[She] is an ideologue who was hell-bent on stuffing the ballot box with as many Obama votes as possible.”
So, you have a problem with that? The Rev. Al Sharpton doesn’t. He and Ohio Democrats hailed Ms. Richardson at a March 20 rally in Cincinnati following her release after serving eight months of her five-year term for voter fraud.
“There is a growing toxic movement in some corners of the country that are perfectly willing to accept criminal acts in the election and furtherance of a broader progressive agenda,” former Justice Department Voting Section attorney J. Christian Adams said during a March 25 interview on “The Steve Malzberg Show” on Newsmax TV.
“There is this corrupt attitude that is beginning to gain total acceptance in some corners of government and academia, that accepts criminality in American elections in the name of payback time.”
Mr. Adams was among Justice Department staff during the Bush administration who investigated vote fraud and intimidation in Mississippi, where the white power structure oppressed black citizens for decades, followed by corrupt, racist black political machines.
In his book “Injustice: Exposing the Racial Agenda of the Obama Justice Department,” Mr. Adams recalls Democratic operatives in Noxubee County who “visited black voters who had requested absentee ballots on the day the ballot arrived in the mail. Sometimes the operatives snatched the ballot out of the mailbox before the voter knew it arrived. Other times, ballots were sent to black residents who hadn’t even requested them .” At the polls, “assistors” hounded people, telling them how to vote.
Last fall, Mr. Adams and his former Voting Section boss, Christopher Coates, won two consent decrees on behalf of the American Civil Rights Union from two Mississippi counties — Walthall and Jefferson Davis — in the first privately filed lawsuits under the National Voter Registration Act. The counties, which have more registered voters than eligible residents, agreed to clean up their rolls. The American Civil Rights Union has since filed similar suits in two Texas counties — Terrell and Zavala.
Read more: www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/mar/28/knight-vote-fraud-as-payback-time/#ixzz2xJiTRk3C
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