Bev Harris:
Secret Meeting - Democracy for Sale
Tuesday, 26 August 2003, 10:50 am
Article: Bev Harris
On Friday Aug. 22, a meeting was held. David Allen, publisher of Black
Box Voting (See his notes at... blackboxvoting.com or scoop.co.nz) attended
this meeting, which was a private teleconference among voting industry
insiders that was supposed to be secret. He obtained a transcript and
a document.
Participants were R. Doug Lewis, who heads The Election Center, Diebold
Election Systems, ES&S, Sequoia Voting Systems, Hart Intercivic,
a few more voting machine companies, and the ES division of ITAA.
READ CAREFULLY:
In this meeting --
1) The purpose of the meeting was to get the voting vendors to pony
up $200,000 by Friday August 29th for a massive PR campaign for the
voting
machine coalition. The money is to go to the ES division of the ITAA.
- Independent investigation of Diebold system for Maryland, Ohio, is
the SAIC.
- SAIC Senior Vice president: Ronald Knecht.
- Director of ES division of the ITAA: It is Ronald Knecht
- Firm that wrote the proposal for PR whitewash: ES division of ITAA.
- Money to be paid by Friday; those who don’t pay don’t get
protection. (Said in a nicer way, of course.)
2) Participants asked if a
task force composed of defense contractors and defense procurement
contractors could help them “again” like
they did with HAVA. They mentioned Lockheed (weapons contractor) and
Northrop Grumman (defense contractor) and Accenture (defense procurement
contractor). They discussed that these companies were the driving force
behind the HAVA bill, which requires purchase of new electronic voting
systems and also purchase of new, statewide, electronic voter registration.
The vendors who have advertised the new voter registration system are:
Northrop Grumman, SAIC, and Election.com which is owned by Accenture.
The vendors for voting machines are: Northrop Grumman (through an alliance);
Diebold (ties to Bush administration); Diversified Dynamics (a weapons
manufacturer; its machines created by SAIC); General Dynamics (defense
contractor); ES&S; Hart Intercivic (alliance with Accenture); Sequoia,
and VoteHere, which is seeking to provide a new “vote verification” software
which will go into EVERY machine made by EVERY vendor.
- SAIC Vice Chairman: Admiral Bill Owens, a member of the Defense Policy
Board.
- Chairman of the VoteHere board of directors: Admiral Bill Owens.
- Director of VoteHere: former CIA director, head of the George Bush
School of Business, Robert Gates.
VoteHere: No visible stream of revenue. Very minimal sales history. I
have not been able to find any record of venture capital deals. What
is the source of funding for this company?
3) There was a significant
amount of discussion about collusion and antitrust and "of course you know I really shouldn't be here" and
so forth.
While it is normal for an industry to meet to set up a lobbying coalition,
here is what is quite abnormal:
- The Election Center, the organization who oversees certification of
the voting machines, and coordinates activies of the secretaries of state
and the state election directors, was for some reason setting up this
lobbying meeting for vendors to launch a massive PR campaign -- not to
correct the problems with the machines, mind you, but to correct the
public perception.
- The 5-day deadline to pay $200,000 (and, as one vendor said, without
even specifying the deliverables!). Normal way would be to meet as
an industry, decide what you want in a lobbying firm, interview a
few and
select. In this case, the ITAA met privately with R. Doug Lewis of
The Election Center, then hastily called a teleconference and said "pay
us by Friday."
The ITAA then promised to come up with antitrust guidelines, at first
almost for free, then for a token sum, a couple thousand dollars.
4) They all agreed the meeting should never get into the media.
5) There was discussion of
how to gain influence over the FEC certification process, or more accurately,
try to preempt it and devalue it with
their own. They are planning to come up with their own "gold
standard."
(Will the "gold standard" be the new VoteHere “verification
system” which uses cryptography instead of a voter-verified paper
ballot? This way, there will be no evidence except for bits and bytes.
Watch the SAIC report on Diebold very carefully: if it identifies flaws
and suggests correcting them with some sort of cryptography, especially
if this includes a cryptographic solution for vote verification, what
they are doing is back-dooring the VoteHere product in. Here you go:
Get the VoteHere cryptography solution signed off on by various defense
contractors and homeland security agencies and then call it the new "gold
standard.")
If this happens there will never again be an evidence trail of the vote,
in the USA or in many other countries, because they are putting these
machines into England, Latin America, Eastern Europe, the Middle East,
India, and Asia.
6) A very interesting part
of this was the discussion of fees. Here's what is so unusual about
that: The fee proposed is in
no way commensurate
with the "deliverables" the ITAA outlines. There
must be funding from another source, flying under the radar,
on this.
They are promising a massive PR and media campaign, polling, market surveys,
a full congressional lobbying effort, approaching and rolling academics
and key organizations over to their side, setting up a panel of academics
to refute anything troublesome -- all this for the HIGH range of $200,000
divvied up among all the players.
No, that's not $200k per, that's $200k total.
No, that's not their fee plus expenses, they said their fee would be
$25 to $50k (250f the whole thing).
No that’s not a down payment.
Something here stinks to high heaven.
7) Another interesting part
of this meeting is that it was set up by "The
Election Center" which purports to represent the government side
of the election industry, the secretaries of state and the election officials
in each state. Yet, this is a lobbying meeting for vendors and at one
point the head of The Election Center, R. Doug Lewis, refers to the vendors
as "we." (Shouldn't it be "you guys?" And
why was he in this meeting at all?
Mr. Lewis, who was never elected by anyone and who runs the
private corporation "The
Election Center" has a resume that is Missing in Action,
and who hired him? But I digress)
There was also discussion that said, in essence, "of course, we'll
have to put some distance between the Election Center and this lobbying,
once it gets going. And then Lewis (Election Center) comes right out
and asks the voting machine vendors to cough up money. ITAA, who realizes
this is a gaffe, quickly says "you don't have to look after our
checkbook," and diverts the conversation.
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