Election Fraud Experts

June 24, 2021 By: Juanita Jean Herownself Category: Uncategorized

Sometimes you gotta wonder why Republicans holler so much about election fraud but can’t give us any examples of it.

Well, I kinda figure that’s because election fraud does exist but it’s like lumps in the liter box that GOP cats are scratching like the dickens to cover up.

We have a couple more examples today.  First there’s this guy in Ohio.

Edward Snodgrass, who is a Porter Township trustee, has admitted to forging his dead father’s signature on an absentee ballot and then voting again as himself, court records and other sources revealed.

Snodgrass says he’s a victim of the election fraud tooth fairy.  He says that his father had advanced Parkinson’s disease and that he had been signing for his Dad for years.  The ballot was mailed to his dad the day after his dad died.

“I was simply trying to execute a dying man’s wishes,” he said.

Instead of a felony with 6 months in jail and a $5,000 fine, he’s pleading to a sweetheart deal of 3 days in jail (which will be probated) and a $500 fine.  If he was black and a Democrat, they’d be rustling up a firing squad by now.

And we have this one from North Carolina.

McCrae Dowless got caught in a massive voter fraud scheme for Republicans that has gone on since 2012. Among other election violations, he paid people to gather absentee ballots and fill in any undervotes for Republicans.  It got so bad that opponents began outbidding each other for his “services.”

Once caught, the Baptist preacher wannabe congressman who had hired him and privately admitted he would win was never charged, even after people – including his own son – warned him that Dowless was committing felonies.

Dowless was charged but, as Republican do, he got greedy and hid his salary in order to keep his government disability checks. He was allowed to plead guilty to the government fraud but the election fraud case was dropped. That also cleared all the Republicans who hired him.

I’m just 100% natural guaranteed certain there’s more.

 

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0 Comments to “Election Fraud Experts”


  1. What a non-surprise!!! The voter fraud was on the rePUKEians!!! Well every case of voter fraud I saw was also rePUKEians stacking the deck!!! This does not even consider all the fraud associated with gerrymandering and other forms of voter suppression!

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  2. el lagarto says:

    Meanwhile is Crystal Mason still doing her 5-year prison sentence for casting a provisional ballot while on probation? Oh, Texas, yall are killin’ us….

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  3. slipstream says:

    Dunno why the rethuglicans are making so much noise about ballot fraud in Arizona, when the real ballot fraud is in Alaska.

    Six felony charges.

    Where is the rethuglican outrage?

    Oh yeah . . . it was a rethuglican what dunnit.

    https://www.alaskapublic.org/2021/06/10/former-alaska-rep-ledoux-and-her-aide-face-new-charges-of-felony-voter-fraud/

    The Alaska State Troopers say that seven dead voters voted for Gabrielle.

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  4. Steve from Beaverton says:

    What’s going on in Arizona IS the big election fraud.

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  5. Grandma Ada says:

    And don’t forget the Republican JP in Hondo, TX who was vote harvesting at the local nursing home. I never heard what fine, if any, he got!

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  6. Just a point of vocabulary. There’s plenty of election fraud. Gerrymandering, purging, caging, that sort of thing. There is virtually no individual voter fraud. I hope nobody jumps on me for this. I’ve mentioned this before and been jumped on. I’ve also mentioned at one point that a Thomas Jefferson quote wasn’t really said by Thomas Jefferson and was told it didn’t matter. Not here, other

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  7. Places.

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  8. And now I don’t even know why I said that, because the original post does say election fraud. When I’m wrong I say I’m wrong, quote from Dirty Dancing. I’m old and tired and retirement does not suit me, although I felt compelled to retire. What can I say.

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  9. john in denver says:

    The Ohio case has a nice twist — the original charge was a 4th degree felony. The bargain for a guilty plea was a misdemeanor. What’s the difference? In Ohio, a felony conviction precludes voting only while in custody — EXCEPT if the crime involved election fraud, which ends the right to vote.

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