And this little tidbit from California, circa 2016.
'Voter fraud'? California man finds dozens of ballots stacked outside home
Jerry Mosna was gardening outside his San Pedro, Calif., home Saturday when he noticed something odd: Two stacks of 2016 ballots on his mailbox.
The 83 ballots, each unused, were addressed to different people, all supposedly living in his elderly neighbor’s two-bedroom apartment.
“I think this is spooky,” Mosna said. “All the different names, none we recognize, all at one address.”
His wife, Madalena Mosna, noted their 89-year-old neighbor lives by herself, and, “Eighty people can’t fit in that apartment.”
They took the ballots to the Los Angeles Police Department, but were directed to the post office. They felt little comfort there would be an investigation, and called another neighbor, John Cracchiolo – who contacted the Los Angeles County Registrar's office.
A spokeswoman for the Registrar said the office will investigate. Both Cracchiolo and Jerry Mosna told FoxNews.com they think they stumbled upon a case of fraud.
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/vo...-finds-dozens-of-ballots-stacked-outside-home
Yeah, so what? 83 votes for one guy? I'm guessing that is the totality of all voting irregularities in the state during the 2016 election. I think that voter fraud is a lot like an inverted iceberg. You pretty much see everything and no way **** is going on undetected, involving thousands of ballots.
No way. Otherwise, California's diligent voter fraud department would be ALL OVER IT. Voting fraud? Pffft, so rare. Unicorn stuff really.
Von Spakovsky, senior legal fellow and manager of the Election Law Reform Initiative at the Heritage Foundation, said voter fraud is prevalent enough that it could make the difference in a close election. The Heritage Foundation, he said, has recorded 430 cases of voter fraud -- proven cases where someone was convicted or a judge ordered a new election.
A former FEC commissioner and counsel to the assistant attorney general for civil rights at the U.S. Justice Department, von Spakovsky said California is of particular concern because of the rising number of noncitizens illegally registering and voting in elections, as well as the “terrible shape” the voter registration rolls are in.
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/vo...-finds-dozens-of-ballots-stacked-outside-home
Nothing to see here, move along, 430 convictions and prosecutions, no big deal, I'm sure that 100% of all voter malfeasance and voter fraud is caught and prosecuted, you know, like all other crimes. I mean, it's not possible that 2000 or 2500 instances of voter fraud, covering tens of thousands of votes, are going on, not, not possible.
Oh, there are actually 1,285 documented instances of proven voter fraud the past 8 years??
https://www.heritage.org/voterfraud
Pffft, so freaking what? 1,285 instances of convictions of voter fraud. Big freaking deal. Like I was saying, I am wagering that 100% of all those engaged in voter fraud are caught, prosecuted and convicted by the DA's very large and well-financed voter fraud department. Unlike the stolen car department, I mean, which has more than 500 police officers and detectives and another 100 civilian staff. They solve ...
About 25% of the thefts.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/20...-not-caught-number-vehicles-stolen-increases/
Okay, so the chances of catching a voting fraud perpetrator has to be higher, right, with how ballots have VIN numbers, owners who report them stolen, photos of the ballot, descriptions given out to the police, identifying tags such as voting license plates.
I doubt that one in twenty involved in voting fraud are caught, let alone prosecuted and convicted. Meaning the number of voting fraud matters is probably closer to 25,000 over the past 8 years. If the average voting scammer is churning and faking 40 ballots each - the real number is probably higher since why the hell get involved in voter fraud or 10 or 15 ballots?? - that is 1,000,000 votes.
But hey, every vote counts. Except for the 1,000,000 canceled by fake voting. And it's not like 1,000,000 votes over four elections could affect an outcome ...