Diebold
insider alleges company plagued by technical woes, Diebold
defends 'sterling' record
12/06/2005
@ 1:44 pm
Filed
by Miriam Raftery
In
an exclusive interview with RAW STORY, a whistleblower from
electronic voting heavyweight Diebold Election Systems Inc.
raised grave concerns about the company�s electronic voting
technology and of electronic voting in general, bemoaning an
electoral system the insider feels has been compromised by
corporate privatization.
The Diebold insider, who took on the appellation
�Dieb-Throat� in an interview
with voting rights advocate Brad Friedman (BradBlog.com),
was once a staunch supporter of electronic voting�s
potential to produce more accurate results than punch cards.
But
the company insider became disillusioned after witnessing
repeated efforts by Diebold to evade meeting legal
requirements or implementing appropriate security measures,
putting corporate interests ahead of the interests of voters.
�I�ve
absolutely had it with the dishonesty,� the insider told RAW
STORY. Blasting Wally O�Dell, the current president of
Diebold, the whistleblower went on to explain
behind-the-scenes tactics of the company and its officers.
�There�s
a lot of pressure in the corporation to make the numbers: `We
don�t tell you how to do it, but do it.� [O�Dell is]
probably the number one culprit putting pressure on people,�
the source said.
Diebold
spokesman David Bear rebuts the charges. �Diebold has a
sterling reputation in the industry," Bear said.
"It�s a 144-year-old company and is considered one of
the best companies in the industry."
Previous
revelations from the whistleblower have included evidence that
Diebold�s upper management and top government officials knew
of backdoor software in Diebold�s central tabulator before
the 2004 election, but ignored urgent warnings�such as a
Homeland Security alert posted
on the Internet.
�This
is a very dangerous precedent that needs to be
stopped�that�s the corporate takeover of elections,� the
source warned. �The majority of election directors don�t
understand the gravity of what they�re dealing with. The
bottom line is who is going to tamper with an election? A lot
of people could, but they assume that no one will.�
Concerns
about
Georgia
,
Ohio
elections
The
insider harbors suspicions that Diebold may be involved in
tampering with elections through its army of employees and
independent contractors. The 2002 gubernatorial election in
Georgia
raised serious red flags, the source said.
�Shortly
before the election, ten days to two weeks, we were told that
the date in the machine was malfunctioning,� the source
recalled. �So we were told 'Apply this patch in a big
rush.�� Later, the Diebold insider learned that the
patches were never certified by the state of
Georgia
, as required by law.
�Also,
the clock inside the system was not fixed,� said the
insider. �It�s legendary how strange the outcome was; they
ended up having the first Republican governor in who knows
when and also strange outcomes in other races. I can say that
the counties I worked in were heavily Democratic and elected a
Republican.�
In
Georgia
�s 2002 Senate race, for example, nearly 60 percent of the
state�s electorate by county switched
party allegiances between the primaries and the general
election.
The
insider�s account corroborates a similar story told by
Diebold contractor Rob Behler in an interview
with Bev Harris of Black Box Voting.
Harris
revealed that a program patch titled �rob-georgia.zip� was
left on an unsecured server and downloaded over the Internet
by Diebold technicians before loading the unauthorized
software onto
Georgia
voting machines. �They didn�t even TEST the fixes before
they told us to install them,� Behler stated, adding that
machines still malfunctioned after patches were installed.
California
decertified Diebold TSX touch screen machines after state
officials learned that the vendor had broken state election
law.
�In
California
, they got in trouble and tried to doubletalk. They used a
patch that was not certified,� the Diebold insider said.
�They�ve done this many times. They just got caught in
Georgia
and
California
.�
The
whistleblower is also skeptical of results from the November
2005 Ohio election, in which 88 percent of voters used touch
screens and the outcome on some propositions changed as much
as 40
percent from pre-election exit polls.
�Amazing,�
the Diebold insider said.
Diebold
is headquartered in
Ohio
. Its chairman Wally O�Dell, a key fundraiser for President
Bush, once promised in an invitation to a Republican
fundraising dinner to deliver
Ohio
�s electoral votes for Bush. The staffer said the company
has a deep conservative culture.
�My
feeling having been really deep inside the company is that
initially Diebold, being a very conservative and Republican
company, felt that if they controlled an election company,
they could have great influence over the outcome,� the
source, a registered independent, said.
�Does
that mean fixing elections? Not necessarily, but if your
people are in election departments and they are biased toward
Republicans, you will have an influence�I think this is what
they were buying, the positioning. Obviously screwing with the
software would be a homerun�and I do think that was part of
their recipe for getting into the election business. But the
public got involved and said 'Hey, what�s going on?' That
pulled the sheet off what their plan was with these paperless
voting machines.�
The
difficulties of installing paper trails
Responding
to public demand for paper trails, Diebold has devised a means
of retrofitting its paperless TSX system with printers and
paper rolls. But in
Ohio
�s November 2005 election, some machines produced blank
paper.
The
whistleblower is not surprised. �The software is again the
culprit here. It�s not completely developed. I saw the exact
same thing in
Chicago
during a demonstration held in
Cook
County
for a committee of people who were looking at various election
machines� They rejected it for other reasons.�
Asked
if
Ohio
officials were made aware of that failure prior to the recent
election, the source said, �No way. Anything goes wrong
inside Diebold, it�s hush-hush.�
Most
officials are not notified of failed demonstrations like the
one in
Cook
County
, the insider said, adding that most system tests,
particularly those exhibited for sale are not conducted with a
typical model.
California
, which recently conducted a test of the system without public
scrutiny that found only a three percent failure rate�far
lower than earlier tests that found a 30 percent combined
failure due to software crashes and printer jams.
Asked
if the outcomes of the newest test should be trusted, the
whistleblower, who does not know the protocols used in the
California test, warned, �There�s a practice in testing
where you get a pumped-up machine and pumped-up servers, and
that�s what you allow them to test. Diebold does it and so
do other manufacturers. It�s extremely common.�
Neither
the TSX nor the older TS6 election equipment systems used by
Diebold were designed to be retrofitted with paper trails.
�The TSX was designed and brought to market after the paper
trail issue erupted, yet it was introduced as a paperless
system. But the uproar became so great� The public forced
Diebold to put printers on their machines.� Adding printers
to existing computer hardware together poses challenges.
The
TS6 machines can�t be retrofitted with paper at all, leaving
35,000 voters in
Maryland
and
Georgia
to rely on paperless, faith-based voting.
Even
if the blank paper problem could be solved, there are other
serious problems with some TSX equipment. �The system that
was offered to
San Diego
was purely experimental�the TSX and the electronic poll
book, the check-in device,� the Diebold insider stated.
�Voters couldn�t access the system to vote with the
electronic poll book if the batteries died.� The high rate
of breakdowns involving access cards for the poll book caused
major problems, the source added. �The interesting part
about this device is that it had never been used before. That
was probably not certified.�
San
Diego
has since warehoused its TSX system, pending a decision by the
state on whether to recertify.
San Diego
County
now uses Diebold optical scanners�but those pose security
problems as well.
Although
Black Box Voting demonstrated during a demonstration in Leon
County, Florida that computer experts could hack into a
similar system in less than a minute and alter a memory card
to switch votes, election officials still brush off concerns
for additional security precautions.
San
Diego County Registrar of Voters, Mikel Haas, for example, was
questioned by this reporter for the city�s local paper,
Citybeat. He insisted
that no additional security measures were needed.
Asked
if Diebold had implemented any changes to close security holes
revealed by the
Leon
County
hack, the source replied, �None that I know of.�
Informed
that Haas allowed over 700 voting machines with memory cards
inside to be sent home overnight with poll-workers, the
insider raised alarm. �These memory cards need to be
protected every single step of the way, like money. If they
have people taking these machine home with memory cards,
that�s out the window.�
The
Diebold whistleblower also criticized election officials in
San Diego
and elsewhere for allowing Diebold personnel to be present
when votes reach the server. �The election office�s
employees�people who are paid with our tax dollars to
conduct elections and have proper security elections and
background check should do this � and no one else.�
Manufacturers should be a mile away on election night, the
source added.
The
best way for concerned citizens to detect fraud is to �be
there on election night� to observe vote tabulations, the
insider said. But in some cities, citizens have been barred
from watching votes being counted on Diebold tabulators �
and in
San Diego
, Black Box Voting activist Jim March was arrested
in July 2005 and charged with felony trespassing after entered
a secured room to watch votes being counted. The charges were
later dismissed.
But
no amount of observation can totally protect the public from
the dangers inherent in electronic voting, the whistleblower
says. �People are going to end up losing their rights in
many ways that they will never, never understand. For example,
the new electronic databases for voter registration is a great
idea, but it passes control away from local boards of
elections and puts it in the hands of the states�The final
database is manipulated by states instead of counties. Every
state must have it. It�s mandated by [the Help America Vote
Act]. It�s a sleeper issue.�
The
source, who once supported the Help America Vote Act (HAVA),
now concedes �it�s terrible�Most of this is a big money
grab.�
The
Diebold hand believes many election officials are naпve,
while others are �downright arrogant. They are serving
politicians and in many cases, vendors.�
How
Diebold woos state officials
The
insider described a systematic process Diebold uses to woo
election officials via cash doled out by lobbyists or
attorneys and favors to assist budget-strapped public
officials. �They promise the election directors the moon and
deliver things to them that really aren�t legitimate parts
of the contract.� Those promises range from providing
personnel to equipping warehouses with electrical systems to
recharge batteries in voting machines.
�The
corporation pretty much takes over. That�s how they capture
so many of these people. Diebold is making them look good and
they�re not going to bite the hand that feeds them.�
Diebold
creates a �monetary incentive� to stay involved via future
servicing contracts after selling election equipment, the
whistleblower noted, adding, �The machines are purposely
complex and poorly designed.�
Noting
that the GEMS software runs on Microsoft Access, Dieb-Throat
observed, �There are problems that can�t be fixed. I
understand they are going to redesign it around Oracle.�
Diebold
spokesman David Bear denied that the company is redesigning
software around an Oracle platform. �No, that�s not true
to my knowledge,� he said.
Asked
whether any TSX machine produced blank paper during a
demonstration in
Cook
County
, he replied, �I�m not aware of that.�
Bear
initially denied that any Diebold machines in
Ohio
produced blank paper rolls.
�That�s
not true,� he said. �They just ran an election November
8th with over 15,000 of the units and the Secretary of State
was overwhelmingly pleased.� After being told of news
reports describing blank paper rolls produced in
Ohio
, however, he replied, �It would not surprise me if a paper
roll was installed upside down.�
Diebold
consultant convicted for embezzlement
The
Diebold insider noted that the initial GEMS system used to
tabulate votes for the Diebold Opti-scan systems was designed
by Jeffrey Dean, who was convicted
in the early 1990s of computer-aided embezzlement. Dean was
hired by Global Election Systems, which Diebold acquired in
2000. Global also had John Elder, a convicted cocaine
trafficker, on its payroll. Diebold spokesman David Bear told
Citybeat that Dean left shortly after the acquisition and that
Elder also left �long ago.� Black Box Voting reported that
Diebold gave Elder a �golden parachute� in 2004 and that
he was let go only after his criminal past was revealed by BBV
and mainstream publications.
But
the Diebold whistleblower told RAW STORY that Elder remained
working for Diebold �as recently as the summer of this
year� [Elder creates ] the paper ballots for absentee
voting�They were making the ballots for the November
election for sure, for all over the country.�
Bear
denied that Elder is still on Diebold�s payroll as either an
employee or independent contractor.
�He
was with the company two companies ago, never was an employee
of Diebold, and worked for a company that was acquired by
Diebold,� he said.
Asked
if Elder works for a company producing ballots for any of
California
�s Diebold systems, Bear responded, �The counties contract
for that. I don�t have the slightest idea� There are
probably several different companies that produce ballots for
California
.�
Bear
denied allegations that Diebold has installed uncertified
patches. �Nothing is done in any state except under guidance
and authority of election officials in the state.�
He
also stated that the California Secretary of State�s staff
has recommended recertifying the Diebold TSX system
retrofitted with paper rolls.
Bear
defends Diebold's record.
�In
the last presidential election, over 150,000 touch screens
were run. They were recognized by CalTech and MIT for having
accurately captured the vote. From the presidential election
2004, they believe over 1 million more votes were captured.
They singled out touch-screens; the state with the most
improvement was
Georgia
.� (Full
text of the Caltech/MIT report)
The
Diebold insider says Americans who care about their vote must
remain vigilant. �I don�t look for the paperless people,
the corporations, to back off at all. They will continue to
try to keep the public in the dark.�
http://rawstory.com/news/2005/Diebold_insider__alleges_company_plagued_1206.html
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