HAPPY HALLOWEEN

NYPD Officer Accused of Robberies While on DutyThe officer allegedly assisted gangs with drug-related robberies.
Updated 10:21 AM EDT, Fri, Oct 31, 2008 |
| Find this article at: http://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/NYPD_Officer_Accused_of_Robberies_While_on_Duty.html |
Categories: GENERAL · IN THE NEWS
In Tight Race, Victor May Be Ohio Lawyers
By IAN URBINA
COLUMBUS, Ohio — If the outcome of next week’s presidential election is close, this precariously balanced state could be the place where the two parties begin filing the inevitable lawsuits over voting irregularities, experts say.
The battles could be over the rules for a recount, or how to deal with voters who were not added to the rolls even though they registered properly and on time. Lawyers could fight over how to count the paper ballots used when the electronic machines break down, or whether a judge was correct in deciding to keep certain polls open late.
But the most likely source of litigation is the state’s heavy use of provisional ballots, which are issued when a voter’s identity or registration cannot immediately be verified or when polls stay open late. Ohio has a history of requiring large numbers of voters to use these ballots, which are easy to disqualify and are not counted until after the election.
“Provisional ballots are really the Achilles’ heel of our electoral process, because in a close race that is the pressure point lawyers use to try to undo the results,” said Edward B. Foley, a law professor at Ohio State University who is one of the nation’s foremost experts on voting litigation. “The larger the number of provisional ballots cast in a state, the more vulnerable the Achilles’ heel, and Ohio has for a couple of elections used more of these ballots than most any other state.”
In 2004 and 2006, Ohio, unlike most other states, increased the percentage of provisional ballots used by voters. In the 2004 presidential election, which hinged on Ohio, the margin between the candidates was about 118,000 votes, of 5.7 million cast. Of those, more than 158,000 were provisional ballots.
Even more of these ballots will be cast in Ohio on Nov. 4, voting experts predict, because many newly registered voters may bring the wrong form of identification to the polls, failing to comply with the state’s new voter law that requires all voters to show government-issued identification or an approved document with a voter’s name and address. Others may go to the wrong polling place, or show up at the polls only to find that they are not listed on the state’s new computerized voter registration list, which has already been the subject of intense partisan wrangling.
Provisional ballots were created by Congress in 1993 to ensure that voters would never be turned away without casting a ballot when they showed up at the polls.
But federal law said little about how these ballots should later be verified and counted. In Ohio, unlike most other states, the methods for determining which provisional ballots count vary by county.
“Our goal has been to get in front of this problem,” said Jennifer L. Brunner, the Ohio secretary of state, who has issued directives over the past two weeks creating uniform standards for how counties must handle the ballots.
Ms. Brunner has instructed county election officials that they cannot disqualify a provisional ballot if a poll worker mistakenly gives one to a voter.
Provisional ballots will also come into play if a huge turnout causes long lines in Ohio, leading lawyers to ask the courts to keep polls open late. When polls are kept open after hours, the ballots cast must be provisional.
The latest state polls show Barack Obama with an edge of from three to nine points over John McCain, leaving Ohio in the tossup category. Problems with the ballots will not affect the outcome if the race is not close, but federal election officials and voting experts say they are closely monitoring their use and the possibility of lawsuits in Ohio and other swing states.
Rosemary Rodriguez, the chairwoman of the federal Election Assistance Commission, said members of the commission would be sent to Colorado, Florida, Indiana, New Mexico and Ohio on Election Day — all states where large numbers of provisional ballots were cast in past elections or where there have been voting problems.
Ms. Rodriguez added that the commission was also watching so-called place-holder lawsuits that have been filed recently in several states, including Colorado and Pennsylvania. These lawsuits allow parties to hedge their bets, so that if the margin is close, they will have a way to say they already raised concerns about various issues, including the role of Acorn, a left-wing organizing group, and the improper purging of some voters from the rolls.
“The conventional wisdom has been that litigation before an election is good because it helps clarify the rules, and litigation after an election is bad because it causes rancor and leaves the results uncertain,” said Doug Chapin, the director of Electionline.org, a Web site run by the Pew Center on the States, a nonprofit, nonpartisan research group. “Place-holder lawsuits blur that dichotomy and allow parties to leave options open for themselves.”
Tova Wang, the vice president of research for Common Cause, a voting rights group, said she was also watching for legal fights in Florida. More than 12,000 voters there will be required to cast provisional ballots unless they can resolve discrepancies between their voter registrations and driver’s license or Social Security numbers.
Still, Ohio remains the focus of most of the attention on potential voting problems. Professor Foley, from Ohio State, said post-election litigation was more likely in Ohio because that state provided a long window of opportunity to contest provisional ballots. Ohio officials cannot count such ballots for 10 days after the election, while in Florida, officials must count them two or three days after polls close, he said.
If the margin is close, partisan lawyers in Ohio are already warmed up for a fight, having spent the last two months wrestling over accusations of voter fraud and voter suppression in at least eight lawsuits, one of which went to the Supreme Court.
There also remains concern about whether poll workers, contending with long lines, will instruct voters correctly. In the 2006 election, the first under Ohio’s new voter identification law, about 10,600 of the 128,000 provisional ballots cast were rejected because they were cast in the wrong precinct, even though state law requires poll workers to direct voters to their correct precinct before issuing a provisional ballot.
In 2004, some precincts in Franklin County, which includes Columbus, had lines with four-hour waits. The county also had one of the state’s highest rates of provisional-ballot use, as overwhelmed poll workers tried to use them to ease the lines.
Earlier this week, staring at a line where early voters had been waiting nearly an hour and a half, Michael Stinziano, the elections director in Franklin County, said he was confident his county would avoid the lines and the over-use of provisional ballots on Election Day.
“We have more machines and voters casting ballots early and that means things should move more smoothly this time,” he said.
Categories: GENERAL
TELLS OF POLICE ASSAULTBy MURRARY WEISS
October 31, 2008
THE blue wall of silence is apparently cracking.
One of the officers who helped subdue an alleged pot smoker two weeks ago in a Brooklyn subway station has come forward with a detailed account that helps support the man’s claim that police sodomized him with an object during a vicious attack, law-enforcement sources said yesterday. read more [nyp]
Categories: GENERAL
Some Shed Their Gadgets by Turning to One: iPhone
By SARA SILVER
Lower-income households are turning in force to Apple Inc.’s iPhone and may be doing so to save the cost of a separate broadband connection and music devices, according to the media measurement firm comScore Inc.
A comScore study, set to be released Thursday, shows that the fastest growth in iPhone sales over the summer months came from households that earn less than the median income. ComScore noted sales to lower-income consumers accelerated since the July appearance of the iPhone 3G, which offers high-speed Internet access.
Due to higher production costs, the price of the New York Post’s weekend editions will increase starting tomorrow.
The Saturday edition will rise by 25 cents. The Sunday Post will also go up a quarter, from $1 to $1.25.
The Saturday edition now features Super Sports, with more than 20 pages of your favorite writers on your favorite teams, plus expanded football coverage.
The Sunday edition has the hottest read in town, the glossy Page Six Magazine – packed with fashion, food and fun – together with hard-hitting news and great opinions and ideas in PostScript.
Categories: GENERAL
DIABETIC SHOCK IN NEW YORK
By TODD VENEZIA
October 31, 2008 —
America’s super-sized obsession with Big Macs, fries and stuffed-crust pizzas is beginning to affect more than just waistlines – it has doubled the rate of diabetes over the last decade. 
The Centers for Disease Control warned that our buffet-bloated populace badly needs an intervention – New York state included.
“Interventions that promote weight loss and increased physical activity among persons at high risk for diabetes are needed to reduce diabetes incidence,” says the report, which was released yesterday.
“Also needed are public health interventions, including environmental and policy changes (e.g., creating or enhancing parks, walking trails and access to healthier foods) that encourage healthy lifestyles.”
The number of people across the country suffering from the blood-sugar disease has skyrocketed in the past 10 years. New York is among states with a higher-than-average rate.
A detailed phone survey showed that just 4.8 out of every 1,000 Americans had diabetes between 1995 and 1997.
But between of 2005 to 2007, that number rose to 9.1 per 1,000.
The worst rates are in the nation’s deep-fried Southern pork-barbecue belt.
In Georgia, 11.2 people out of every 1,000 now have diabetes. That’s up from just 6.2 per 1,000 a decade ago.
In Florida, 10.9 per 1,000 now have the disease, even though the rate was just 3.4 out of every thousand in the 1990s.
New York is not doing much better.
Although data from 1995 to 1997 is not available for the Empire State, the rate per 1,000 people is now 9.4. That’s much higher than the average of 8.2 in Northeastern states, and higher than New Jersey’s rate of 7.7.
Minnesota has just 5 people per 1,000 with the disease, the lowest rate in the nation.
West Virginia has the worst rate: 12.7 per 1,000.
The study, put up on the center’s Web site yesterday, is the first to look at the rise in diabetes rates from a state-by-state perspective.
“These findings affirm previous projections that diabetes will continue to be a major public health problem,” the CDC said.
Categories: GENERAL
It’s time for my annual fall PC buyer’s guide. As always, this guide covers what average consumers doing typical tasks should look for in a desktop or laptop PC. That excludes heavy-duty gamers, corporate buyers, techies, or enthusiasts.
But this autumn, we find ourselves in a serious global economic slowdown. So I will focus this edition of the guide on how folks whose PC budgets have shrunk can still get something adequate for light use.
The guide below applies to both desktops and laptops, since the latter, at least in the consumer market, have achieved rough parity in performance and versatility, and are now more popular than desktops.
Windows vs. Mac: I consider the Mac operating system, Leopard, to be faster, easier and more stable than Windows XP or Windows Vista. It isn’t susceptible to the vast majority of malicious software that circulates on the Internet. And Macs also include Apple’s superb built-in iLife multimedia suite. Macs can even run Windows, though that costs extra.
However, Apple has consciously chosen not to offer machines in the bargain category. The cheapest Mac desktop, the minimalist Mac Mini, which doesn’t even include a monitor, speakers, keyboard or mouse, costs $650 for a model with a hard disk I consider adequate. The cheapest Mac laptop, the base model of the prior-generation MacBook (which Apple has retained in its lineup) is $999.
Both are good values, mainly due to the software. And Macs can save you money over time. But if the lowest upfront cost is your objective, you can pay hundreds less for desktops and laptops from Windows PC makers.
Which Windows: Windows Vista is too often slow, and incompatible with older peripherals, such as the printers you might not want to replace in this economic climate. It also can cost more because it demands beefier, and thus costlier, hardware to run well than does the older Windows XP.
Budget shoppers should look around for a computer that still runs XP, either one of the dwindling number of models built with XP in mind, or one that has been “downgraded” by the manufacturer to XP. This downgrade “feature” can cost $50 or more upfront, but permits you to buy a cheaper machine.
For instance, I recently advised two of my budget-minded friends to buy a low-end Dell desktop, the Inspiron 530, at Micro Center, a small but very good national chain of computer superstores. This Dell runs XP, and has a low-end Intel processor. The store is currently selling a version with a 250-gigabyte hard disk — more than enough for an average user — and 2 gigabytes of memory, generous for XP, for just $400 after instant rebate. You can get a similar good deal directly from Dell.
These particular friends, one on each coast, each bought a nice LCD monitor for $100-$150, and were out of the store for very little money. Since they only wanted to run Microsoft Office, browse the Web, do email and manage photos, this machine met their needs.
Another option is a low-cost machine with the Home Basic version of Vista, which also tends to cost less and to require less-expensive hardware than the more-common Vista Home Premium. If my friends had wanted laptops, I could have steered them to a 15-inch Acer Aspire laptop at the same store. This machine runs Vista Basic, with 1 gigabyte of memory and a 120-gigabyte hard disk, and costs $380.
You can often buy an even less-costly computer if you opt for the Linux operating system, but I still don’t advise this for average non-techie users.
Memory: For XP, or a Mac, I suggest 2 gigabytes of memory, but you can get away with 1 gigabyte for light use. For Vista, I recommend 3 gigabytes, but 2 gigabytes will do on a tight budget. You can always add memory later.
Hard disk: On a laptop, 160 gigabytes is the minimum I usually suggest, but you can get by with 120 gigabytes and upgrade when economic times are better. On a desktop, 250 gigabytes is easily obtainable, but 160 gigabytes will do.
DVD drive: If you never record DVDs, you can save money by buying a cheaper combo drive, which plays both DVDs and CDs, but records only the latter.
Processor: Look for a dual-core processor, but to save money, don’t worry about the speed, model number, or brand.
Video: A separate, or “discrete,” video card is best, especially for Vista Home Premium, but budget shoppers should stick with lesser “integrated graphics.”
Other features: If your home lacks the fastest “n” version of Wi-Fi, spend less for a laptop with the older “g” version. If you don’t need to do video chats or recording, don’t pay for a built-in camera and microphone.
Netbooks: If you don’t mind a tiny screen, cramped keyboard and limited file storage, these popular new mini-laptops can save you money. Some sell for under $400, even equipped with Windows.
Remember, pay only for the computing capabilities you need.
Find all of Walt Mossberg’s columns and videos online, free, at the All Things Digital Web site, walt.allthingsd.com. Email him at mossberg@wsj.com.
Posted: 3:56 am
October 30, 2008
Fashion king William Eubanks must be cringing at his neo-Nazi nephew’s skinhead style.
Daniel Cowart, who is accused of plotting to assassinate Barack Obama while dressed in a white tuxedo and top hat, is the nephew of the flamboyant interior designer who has showrooms in Manhattan and West Palm Beach, has designed part of Graceland, and counts Rod Stewart among his clients.
Cowart, 20, planned to gun down Obama while dressed in the bizarre outfit, according to officials who arrested him and his pal, Paul Schlesselman, 18.
Beatrice Eubanks, 84, the designer’s mom and Cowart’s grandmother, has been temporarily moved out of her Tennessee nursing home because of attention brought by the plot.
Categories: GENERAL
RICH GET RICHER IN LUCKY $CRATCH
By JEREMY OLSHAN
October 29, 2008 —
If the first winner of the “$1 million a year for life” scratch-off game seemed less than ecstatic yesterday, it’s because he wasn’t exactly struggling to scratch out a living.
Keenan Altunis, 33, a banker raised on Long Island and now living in London, accepted his prize with a smug shrug, noting he’s already a multimillionaire.
“Is it going to materially change my life? No,” he told The Post. “I have been a very blessed and fortunate person.”
And if that isn’t an argument for spreading the wealth around, how about this: Since he lives in Britain, Altunis, an executive at the European banking firm Unicredit, will have to pay New York but not federal taxes on his winnings, which means he’ll net $931,500 a year for the rest of his life.
Under a US treaty with Britain, income from lottery winnings and several other sources is not subject to taxation for British residents. Altunis is not an American citizen.
The first grand prize in the $30-ticket drawing comes with a minimum payout of $20 million, should something unforeseen happen to Altunis, who just celebrated his fourth wedding anniversary and has a 1-year-old daughter.
Altunis and his family emigrated from Turkey when he was 5 years old and he graduated from Massapequa HS and the University of Pennsylvania before moving to London for a career in finance.
On a trip home to New York last month for a wedding, he gave his mother $100 to buy him tickets for the newly advertised game before heading to the airport. His mother tossed in another $20 and bought four.
“I knew there wouldn’t be time that weekend to buy tickets for myself, so I left enough money with my mother to buy three before leaving for the airport,” said Altunis. “It turned out to be the best return on any investment I’ve ever made.”
After discovering she had a winner, his mother kept the ticket under her mattress for days until Altunis could make the trip home.
“She called me up and said, ‘You’re not going to believe this,’ ” he said. “At first, I didn’t.”
Since the scratch-off games are “bearer devices,” it does not matter that he did not buy the tickets himself, officials said. In fact, it makes sense in this case to give the prize to a younger relative to maximize the award.
“I am in fine health,” he said. “I also don’t do anything risky – I don’t do bungee jumping or stuff like that.”
Altunis said that part of his desire to downplay his winnings is the current economic crisis, which has caused his industry and many of his friends a great deal of strife.
“It’s very unfortunate to see friends losing their jobs,” he said. “We are all feeling the pinch a bit. This has been one of the toughest times in the world, so the win for me is bittersweet.”
Lottery winners often say that they will not allow their newfound fortunes to change who they are, but in Altunis’ case, that isn’t such a stretch.
“Don’t get me wrong, no matter how rich anyone is, a million a year is a lot of money,” he said. “But I don’t expect this to change my life very much at all.”
The family left New York yesterday for a vacation in the Caribbean – one that had already been planned and paid for prior to his winning ticket.
Categories: GENERAL
Date: Friday, October 31st
Time: 4:00pm – 6:00pm
Location: Bryant Park Carrousel (40th between 5th and 6th)
Cost: Free
In the spirit of Halloween, Bryant Park welcomes children from ages three to eight that are in costume to join in at Bryant Park’s first annual Halloween party on October 31st from 4 to 6pm. Children will have the opportunity to paint pumpkins, listen to scary stories, and meet popular storybook character Clifford, the Big Red Dog. The event is free but carrousel rides $2.
Posted by Lindsay at 4:00 PM | View This Article | Email to a friend
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Date: Friday, October 31st
Time: 5:30pm and 7:30pm
Location: Children’s Museum of Manhattan (212 West 83st)
Cost: Free
The Children’s Museum of Manhattan invites you and your children to watch performances from Princess Katie and Racer Steve on Halloween Night! They’ll be performing 2 shows. This event will be lots of fun with music, delicious food – spooky & friendly! All ages & costumes encouraged!
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Date: Friday, October 31st
Time: 7:00pm – 12:00am
Location:The Silent Barn (915 Wykcoff Ave)
Cost: Free
Not sure what to do on Halloween? How about you check out The E.V.E. Project (Earthly View of Eden), a work-in-progress art work of a life size female human being sewn together from animal parts collected from Chinatown fish markets, garbage, and from taxidermy websites. Come on, what says Halloween more then sewn together animal carcass?
Categories: GENERAL
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My name is Derrick Barnes and I am the author of RUBY & THE BOOKER BOYS. The first two books in the series were released on July 1st of this year (Book #1 Brand New School, Brave New Ruby and Book #2 Trivia Queen, Third Grade Supreme). They are doing extremely well across the country and selling out in the Scholastic Book Fairs. But a brotha could definitely use more national love. This is the type of series, and Ruby is the type of character that little Black girls, their parents, grandparents, aunts, and teachers have been waiting on. Ruby Marigold Booker is an eight year old intelligent, creative, talented, sassy fashionista that will do anything to step out of the shadows of her three ultra popular big brothers (the Booker Boys). Sibling rivalry is only a small part of the series. Ultimately, its about self, family, and community love. Book three, The Slumber Party Payback, hit bookstores on October 1st worldwide. Book # 4 will be released on January 1st 2009 and I just signed a deal for books five and six! Please, go out, pick up a copy of all three books and pass on the information to anyone and everyone that you know. Scholastic needs to know that there is a huge market for books, characters and series like RUBY & THE BOOKER BOYS. Spread the word about your new favorite children’s series and your new favorite children’s book author…you know who it is. peace and blessings
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Categories: GENERAL
Search our database to see if you are one of 17,000 New Yorkers entitled to a stimulus or refund check from the IRS.
Categories: GENERAL
Flaxseed Oil Quadruples Risk of Premature Birth
A study has found that the risks of a premature birth quadruple if flaxseed oil is consumed in the last two trimesters of pregnancy. The research was conducted by Professor Anick Bérard of the Université de Montréal’s Faculty of Pharmacy and the Sainte-Justine Hospital Research Center and Master’s student Krystel Moussally.
In Canada, 50 percent of pregnant women take prescription medication. Yet many of them prefer to use natural health products during the pregnancy. “We believe these products to be safe because they are natural. But in reality, they are chemical products and we don’t know many of the risks and benefits of these products contrarily to medication,” says Bérard.
Bérard and Moussally set out to conduct one of the largest studies ever undertaken on by analyzing data from 3354 Quebec women. The first part of the research established that close to 10 percent of women between 1998 and 2003 used natural health products during their pregnancy. Before and after pregnancy they were respectively 15 and 14 percent to use these products. The increase means that about a third of women consuming natural health products stopped during the pregnancy.
The most consumed natural health products by pregnant women are chamomile (19 percent), green tea (17 percent), peppered mint (12 percent), and flaxseed oil (12 percent). Bérard and Moussally correlated these products to premature births and only one product had a very strong correlation: flaxseed oil.
“In the general population, the average rate of premature births is 2 to 3 percent. But for women consuming flaxseed oil in their last two trimesters that number jumps up to 12 percent,” says Bérard. “It’s an enormous risk.”
The correlation existed only with flaxseed oil, yet women consuming the actual seed were unaffected. Even if more studies must be undertaken to verify these results, Bérard recommends caution when it comes to consuming flaxseed oil.
Categories: GENERAL
Housing Authority to Switch 8,400 Apartments to U.S. Voucher Program – NYTimes.com
City Housing Authority to Switch 8,400 Apartments to U.S.
Voucher Program
By MANNY FERNANDEZ
Thousands of apartments at nearly two dozen public housing complexes will be rented out to tenants with federal Section 8 vouchers under a new plan by the New York City Housing Authority that has drawn criticism for reducing the city’s already dwindling supply of privately owned subsidized housing.
The Housing Authority’s plan will remove 8,400 units at 21 of its complexes from the public housing inventory and make them available to Section 8 voucher holders. The move is intended to help the agency stem its financial crisis by pumping money from the federally financed vouchers into 21 cash-poor developments.
Those 21 developments were built by the city and state but receive no continuing financial assistance from either, one of the reasons why the Housing Authority is facing a $177 million shortfall in its operating budget in fiscal year 2009.
But critics of the plan, including elected officials and advocates for low-income housing, said the agency was using Section 8 vouchers in a way they were never intended: to subsidize public housing. click for full story [nyt]
Categories: GENERAL
ELECTION DAY TEST LOOMS
FOR NEW VOTING DEVICES
Nov. 4 should be the beginning of the end for the city’s lever voting machines, as New York continues its belated effort to comply with the Help America Vote Act.
By Jarrett Murphy
Eight years after hanging chads marred a presidential election and spurred calls for nationwide reform of voting systems, the signature of Election Day here is shifting from the heavy clank of metal machinery to the tap of fingertips on a computer screen.
In a cautious step toward improving election technology and complying with a federal court order, every polling place in New York state will feature one electronic ballot marking device on Nov. 4 that lets voters make selections on a touchscreen and then prints out a paper ballot that is counted by hand.
Anyone can use the new electronic machines, but their primary target audience is disabled people. Using New York state’s old-fashioned lever machines is difficult for people who aren’t able to see the choices or flip the levers. By contrast the electronic ballot marking device, or BMD, offers an audio feature for the visually impaired, a push-button device for people with limited manual dexterity, and what’s called a “sip-puff” device for voters who can use their mouths but do not have any use of their hands. What’s more, the desk-level BMD machine is a lot easier to reach for a person who uses a wheelchair, or who needs to sit down while voting. Based on U.S. Census figures, it appears that around 1 million voters across New York state could benefit from the new device.
The lever machines on which New Yorkers have voted for decades will still be available for use next week. But this is supposed to be their last election. In fact, according to the Help America Vote Act of 2002 (HAVA) – aimed at avoiding another voting debacle like the one in Florida in 2000 – they were to have disappeared years ago. Among other things, HAVA offered states federal money to replace aging voting technology.
But the Empire State is years behind schedule in complying with HAVA. First, state legislators took a long time agreeing on how to implement HAVA, finally deciding not to select one statewide system but to allow each county to pick its own voting device. Then, as the clock ticked, the state Board of Elections had to come up with a detailed testing regimen so it could vet the machines that the counties would be allowed to buy. Many complications arose with that effort; at one point, a firm hired by the state to perform quality testing on the voting machines was found to have been decertified by the Federal Elections Commission. Meanwhile, the Justice Department grew impatient with New York’s delays and went to court to force compliance with HAVA, putting millions of dollars in federal funding at risk and – according to one judge’s threat – exposing state elections officials to possible jail time for contempt. Only one other state, Wisconsin, waited as long as New York did to implement the voting machine measures called for by HAVA.
Last December, U.S. District Judge Gary Sharpe from New York’s Northern District instituted new requirements. Finding that New York state had “failed substantially to comply” with previous court orders and HAVA itself, Sharpe ordered that the state meet two deadlines. By fall 2008, each polling place was to offer voters a ballot marking device “accessible to persons with disabilities” that would produce paper ballots to be counted by hand. By the fall of 2009, the lever machines are supposed to be replaced by a combination of BMDs and optical scanners, which read and tally votes from the sheets created by the BMDs.
So far, the 2008 requirement is being met. The ballot marking devices were in place for the September primary. Turnout was light. Only 1,491 voters statewide and 851 in the city used the new machines. Next week, says New York State Board of Elections spokesman Bob Brehm, “We expect very high turnout. It’s anyone’s guess how many people will use the BMDs.”
Rima McCoy, the voting rights coordinator at the Center for Independence of the Disabled NY (CIDNY), says the BMDs are “a vast improvement over the lever machines because it gives people a chance to experience voting in private.” But their implementation leaves something to be desired, she says, adding, “One of the reasons is pollworkers are not trained, not prepared. Some are afraid of the machine.” A CIDNY survey conducted on Primary Day found problems at most of the 24 New York City polling places visited: At John Jay College there was no place to plug in the machine, at Coalition High School an election worker was so frustrated with the BMD that she said she wanted to blow up the machine, and at a few locations workers erroneously said that non-disabled voters could not use the BMDs. The machines were sometimes placed among tables or other furniture in a way that made them inaccessible, while at three schools, the BMDs did not work for at least part of Primary Day, according to the CIDNY report. The accessibility of polling places themselves is also an issue, says CIDNY; its survey found that 21 of the 24 sites surveyed had features that made it difficult for the disabled to get access.
Procurement problems
The problems with the BMDs seen on Primary Day could be magnified on Election Day, when the presidential race is expected to draw very high turnout. An even greater challenge faces local elections officials in 2009, when the plan is for everyone to vote on a BMD and pass their ballot through an optical scanner.
First, however, the state Board of Elections has to certify scanners for the counties to purchase, and that’s not going to be easy. In late July, the state board began stating in its weekly progress reports to Judge Sharpe that “activities and progress toward HAVA compliance are in jeopardy per the project timeline.” According to the most recent progress report, the two firms vying to have their optical scanners approved by New York state – Sequoia Voting Systems and Election Systems & Software – have been told to correct scores of problems in their devices and related materials. Sequoia, for instance, has 104 discrepancies in its source code and ES&S has 174 discrepancies in its documentation, according to the state board. Previous progress reports indicated that the board wasn’t satisfied with SysTec, the firm doing the testing, either.
“The problem the vendors are having is New York state has a higher standard than they’re accustomed to,” says Bo Lipari, executive director of New Yorkers for Verified Voting, a group that has pressed for rigorous vetting of electronic voting devices. New York is believed to be the only state to require that BMDs and scanners meet guidelines promulgated by the U.S. Election Assistance Commission in 2005. “What we’re seeing is the vendors are not prepared to meet that standard.” In fact, several vendors have pulled out of the competition in New York since 2006. One company that withdrew in July, Premier Election Solutions of Texas, cited the costs of complying with New York’s testing regime as its reason for pulling out.
As time has passed, some voting integrity advocates have come to see New York’s delay in approving voting machines as a virtue. Other states that already purchased new voting systems have experienced problems that New York, by waiting and enforcing higher standards, might avoid. But if the state risks missing next year’s deadline, it’s unclear whether Judge Sharpe will respect those higher standards. The state board says it’s still on track to make the date, but Lipari isn’t as sure. “It’s hard to see how we could deploy those machines in 2009 given the testing we have to do,” he says. “Will the judge step in and say, ‘I don’t care about machines failing tests. I want them to deploy’?”
Board vs. Board
Meanwhile, another HAVA mandate – the directive to centralize and computerize the state’s list of registered voters – has caused a rift between the state board and the New York City Board of Elections.
In April, Robert McFeeley, a Staten Island Republican and member of the city’s Voting Assistance Commission, filed a complaint with the state alleging that the city Board of Elections had failed to remove duplicate voters from the local rolls. McFeeley presented what he said was evidence of voters registered under the same name at addresses within and without New York City, of women voters listed under both married and maiden names at the same address, of people listed under given names and nicknames (e.g., “Robert” and “Bob”) and of voters listed at addresses they no longer occupy, like those displaced from a public housing development that the city was redeveloping.
McFeeley says the number of alleged duplicate voters erects a higher-than-necessary barrier to getting on the ballot, since the number of petitions that candidates for some offices must collect is based on the size of the electorate. He also worries that the amount of “dead wood” on the rolls lowers estimates of voter turnout. What’s more, McFeeley says, a large number of illegitimate registrations could allow a losing candidate to challenge future election results. He adds, however, that to his knowledge, “there has been no fraud.”
The state didn’t accept all McFeeley’s claims, but did find in a July ruling that the city Board of Elections wasn’t following state election law and that “the number of duplicate voters on the City of New York voter registration rolls is increasing rather than decreasing.” The ruling instructed the city board to match its files to the statewide registration system, called NYSVoter.
In August, the city Board of Elections fired off its own complaint against the state Board of Elections, claiming that state law grants local boards discretion over removing duplicate voters. What’s more, the city argues, state law requires that decisions on adding voters to or removing voters from the rolls be made in a bipartisan matter. The city claims that it has no assurance that NYSVoter is being maintained with bipartisan oversight. The city board’s lawyer, Steven Richman, says his client is merely trying to protect voters. “The Board has not decided to disenfranchise voters in the City of New York based on a system that’s relatively new, untested and we’re not sure it’s accurate,” Richman testified at a state hearing in June.
According to the progress reports filed with Judge Sharpe, representatives of the city and state board met earlier this month to try to “reach a resolution to the impasse.” According to Brehm, “It’s safe to say we continue to have a dialogue.”
As election officials struggle with voter registration and testing new machines, voters face a choice this fall of whether to stick with the lever machine or use the voting device of the future, the BMD. Non-disabled voters can use it, either in solidarity with the disabled or simply out of curiosity.
At a recent demonstration by the city Board of Elections in Queens, more than 300 people showed up to try the machine. Each user slips the ballot into the machine and makes selections by touching the screen. If a person fails to vote for a particular office, the machine issues a warning. When the voter has made selections down the whole ballot, the machine displays all the choices for review and allows the voter to make changes. After the voter approves the selections, the machine prints out a ballot – creating a permanent, paper record that a voter can check before submitting. The voter then drops the ballot in a box where it’s held until the polls close.
Verified Voting director Lipari has decided not to use the BMD himself this time around. He doesn’t want to hold things up. “I was struggling with it. It would probably take me 45 minutes to vote,” he says of a recent test. Disabled voters’ advocate McCoy isn’t sure what she’ll do. But she’s optimistic that more disabled people will make it to the polls, rather than not voting at all or casting an absentee ballot – both of which, McCoy says, keeps disabled voters hidden and separated from the consummate civic experience. “The hope is that they will go out to polling sites and be visible,” she says. “We’re hoping that people with disabilities will be part of the communal experience.”
Since HAVA’s enactment six years ago, there has been occasional tension between voting integrity advocates and advocates for the disabled, whose interests overlap but do not totally align. The integrity movement insisted on eliminating any possibility of errors in new voting technology, even if that delayed the arrival of new machines. The voices for the disabled, while concerned about integrity, were more anxious to replace current technology that made it hard for many disabled people to vote. After all, with so many disabled people needing help from election workers on the lever machines, many had already surrendered their right to a private ballot.
With New York State now beginning the end of the lever devices, Lipari says, those tensions have largely abated. The BMDs that voters will see Election Day, he says, “are not temporary. This is the first year of the permanent solution.”
- Jarrett Murphy
Categories: GENERAL
COPS SHOT 2 IN BACK
By MURRAY WEISS and SEAN GARDINER
October 28, 2008 —
Two brothers who came up fatally short in a gun battle with police outside a Brooklyn nightclub early Sunday were both shot in the back, according to the city’s medical examiner.
Kayshawn Forde, 21, was shot once in the back of his left arm and a second time in the middle of his back with the bullet exiting his stomach, the ME said. His brother, Dwayne David, 22, was shot twice in the lower back.
The brothers sustained the fatal wounds after shooting at two plainclothes cops who had confronted them at 3:30 a.m. Sunday as the siblings fired on a crowd outside RJ’s Place on Rutland Road, according to police.
The pair had been involved in a fight outside the East Flatbush nightclub a short time earlier, left and returned with guns blazing, police said.
A gun was taken off Forde, but no weapon was recovered from David.
Police believe someone in the crowd took David’s gun before they could find it.
NYPD spokesman Paul Browne yesterday acknowledged that a narcotics lieutenant, who fired once, and another officer, who emptied his 16-bullet clip, hit the brothers in their backs.
But Browne insisted that, despite the officers identifying themselves as cops, the brothers were coming at them shooting when the policemen returned fire.
Police said the shooting appears to be within departmental guidelines.
“I lost my two sons. Nobody knows how I feel inside,” the brothers’ mom, Dale Baptiste, said last night. “I want answers, because they were shot in the back.”
Earlier in the day, Mayor Bloomberg said, “What I’m satisfied with is the investigation that’s being done right now. And until the investigation is complete, nobody really knows what happened.”
Categories: GENERAL
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Monday, October 27th 2008, 3:30 PM
Wright/AP
‘To make such a blatant racist statement about an African-American football player with a neck injury is completely unacceptable,’ Sharpton says about column in the Post.
An outraged Rev. Al Sharpton is calling for the New York Post to take immediate action to address an Oct. 27 column that he calls “blatant racism” and a “media lynching.”
Post columnist Steve Serby led his column Monday morning with “Good for Tom Coughlin. Good for Coughlin for tightening the noose around Plaxico Burress.”
Burress has been fined and benched many times by the Giants this season for infractions including tardiness and missing multiple practices.
The wide receiver skipped a treatment on Saturday for his ailing neck, and was benched during the first quarter of the Giants win in Pittsburgh Sunday.
In criticizing Burress, Serby used a racially loaded and offensive term, Sharpton tells the Daily News. “To make such a blatant racist statement about an African-American football player with a neck injury is completely unacceptable,” Sharpton says. “Clearly, the racial connotation is very disturbing … This is the verbal reflection of a hanging noose.”
Sharpton said that if the Post does not acknowledge that the column was offensive, he will further highlight the issue – but he did not specify what steps he would take. “They have to act swiftly,” Sharpton says. “If we don’t see action, I will lay out exactly what that is (he will do) … we would like to talk to someone there about whether it was the writer or editor who let this in.”
Sharpton says that he is willing to consider that Serby did not intend to make a racially loaded statement. But the impact of the columnist’s words troubles Sharpton regardless of the intent. “Intent certainly makes a difference,” Sharpton says. “As long as they understand the effect.”
Sharpton says that he has received numerous calls and emails from people who are angry about Serby’s column. He is hoping that the Post will explain their thinking behind the loaded lead.
“I’m asking for them to take action and explain this,” he says. “A lot of people are offended, and a lot of people were outraged by it. The ball is in their court now.”
Calls to Burress’ agent, Drew Rosenhaus, were not immediately returned, nor were calls to Serby.
Categories: GENERAL
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Law enforcement arrested two men in Tennessee who had plans to rob a gun dealer to shoot Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama and “as many non-Caucasians” as possible, an official said on Monday.
An official from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said police found the men in the Jackson, Tennessee area with a number of guns, including a sawed-off shotgun, in their car.
“They wanted to go to a place where they could shoot as many non-Caucasian as they could,” the official said, noting that the men first planned to rob a gun dealer. “They also had a plot to assassinate Sen. Obama.”
Obama, who would be the first black U.S. president, is leading Republican John McCain in opinion polls ahead of the November 4 election.
(Reporting by Deborah Charles, Editing by Sandra Maler)