|
Pennsylvania State Supreme Court Allows Voting Rights Case to Proceed |
|
|
|
|
By Voter Action
|
|
December 19, 2008 |
State’s Highest Court Denies Pennsylvania Secretary of State
Permission to Appeal Lower Court Ruling in Voters’ Favor
Case Challenging the Use of Electronic Voting Machines Now Moves Toward
Trial
Pennsylvania voters challenging the continued use of
unverifiable electronic voting machines in their state won another
major round on Tuesday when the Pennsylvania Supreme Court issued a
ruling allowing their case to proceed toward trial. The state’s highest
court, in a one-sentence order, denied the Pennsylvania Secretary of
State’s petition seeking permission to appeal a lower court ruling
decided in the voters’ favor. In April 2007, the Commonwealth Court of
Pennsylvania had ruled that voters have a right under the Pennsylvania
Constitution to reliable and secure voting systems and can challenge
the use of electronic voting machines “that provide no way for Electors
to know whether their votes will be recognized” through voter
verification or independent audit. Following that ruling, Pennsylvania
Secretary of State Pedro Cortés filed his petition before the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court and further proceedings in the case,
Banfield v. Cortés, had been suspended pending the outcome of the
petition. The order issued on Tuesday gives a green light for the
voters to pursue their claims.
“We
now look forward to moving this case toward trial,” says Mary Kohart, a
partner at Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP, one of the lawyers
representing the voters. “There is overwhelming evidence showing that
electronic voting machines are unreliable and insecure for the counting
and recording of votes. We are pleased that our clients will now have
the opportunity to present this evidence to the court and to
demonstrate why these machines should be decertified in Pennsylvania.”
In their complaint, the voters allege that the electronic voting
systems, otherwise known as Direct Recording Electronic voting systems
or DREs, have failed during elections in Pennsylvania and in other
states by losing votes; registering votes for one candidate when the
voter was attempting to vote for another candidate; causing high
“undervote” rates; failing to register votes when the ballot contained
only one question; counting votes twice; failing to print “zero tapes”
to demonstrate that no unlawful votes were stored on the machine prior
to the election; printing “zero tapes” after votes had been cast; and
reporting phantom votes and other irregularities. Fifty of
Pennsylvania’s 67 counties use electronic voting systems without a
voter-marked paper ballot.
The growing concerns around DRE machines have led several states,
including California, Florida, New Mexico, and Iowa, to shift to using
optically-scanned paper ballots which voters may mark directly or
through a ballot-marking device. Further, the State of Ohio is
currently suing one of the major electronic voting machine
manufacturers, Premier Election Solutions (formerly Diebold), alleging
that the company sold the state a defective product. The lawsuit, which
includes breach of contract and commercial fraud claims, seeks to
recover tens of millions of taxpayer dollars spent in purchasing the
company’s DRE systems.
“Across the country, states are realizing that electronic voting
systems cannot be trusted,” says Michael Churchill, senior counsel with
the Public Interest Law Center of Philadelphia and another lawyer for
the voters in this case. “Like voters in other states, Pennsylvania
voters have a right to a voting system which will properly count their
votes.
The voters assert that the Pennsylvania Secretary of State’s process
of examining voting systems and approving them for use in Pennsylvania
is inadequate because it fails to detect flaws. Last year, the states
of California and Ohio subjected their electronic voting systems to
rigorous and thorough testing by outside computer science and
electronic voting experts. In both states, the testing teams found
severe security, reliability and workmanship defects.
“The California Top to Bottom Review and the Ohio EVEREST report
conclusively destroy the myth spread by voting system vendors that
their systems have undergone thorough and painstaking testing,” said
Douglas W. Jones, Associate Professor of Computer Science at the
University of Iowa and a nationally known expert in electronic voting
systems. “The truth is that seriously defective voting systems have
remained in the marketplace for more than a decade.” Dr. Jones is
serving as an expert witness in the case.
“The Secretary’s certification process has failed to protect the voters
of Pennsylvania,” says Marian K. Schneider, a Chester County attorney
and co-counsel for the voter-plaintiffs. “Court intervention is now
necessary to ensure that the Secretary follows the mandate of the
Pennsylvania Election Code and the Pennsylvania Constitution.”
>The state supreme court’s order on Tuesday marks the second time in as
many months that a court has ruled against the Pennsylvania Secretary
of State in a case dealing with the state’s electronic voting
systems. On October 29, 2008, a federal judge issued an emergency order
requiring Pennsylvania to provide emergency paper ballots to voters
when 50% or more voting machines break down in any precinct in the
Commonwealth. Secretary Cortés had previously required the distribution
of emergency paper ballots only when 100% of voting machines
malfunctioned in any precinct.
“All Pennsylvania citizens should enjoy the same confidence in the
accuracy and reliability of voting in their county,” says Mary Vollero,
one of the voter-plaintiffs seeking to halt the use of unverifiable
electronic voting systems and chair of Concerned Voters of Centre
County. Last year, Vollero’s group convinced the Centre County Board of
Elections to switch from using DRE voting machines to precinct-based
optical scan equipment.
“As this case moves into the trial phase, it will be watched by voting
rights advocates across the country,” says John Bonifaz, legal director
of Voter Action, a national voting rights organization which has
provided support for the case since its filing in 2006. “The voters in
this case have the potential of impacting not only the integrity of
Pennsylvania’s elections but also the integrity of elections
nationwide.”
Comment on This Article
You must login to leave comments...
Other Visitors Comments
There are no comments currently....
|