quarta-feira, outubro 27, 2004
Absentee Ballots Missing in Florida County
Police Investigating as Many as 58,000 Ballots Yet to Reach Voters in Broward County
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. -- Up to 58,000 absentee ballots may never have reached the Broward County voters who requested them more than two weeks ago, election officials said, and state police are investigating.
Hundreds of people have called the county elections office to complain that they never got their ballots. The phone system was so overwhelmed some frustrated voters could not get through.
The county election office said the problem involved ballots mailed on Oct. 7-8, though the number of those actually missing was uncertain. Some absentee ballots mailed on those dates have already been returned to be counted.
"We are trying to determine what occurred and whether there was any kind of criminal violation," said Paige Patterson-Hughes, spokeswoman for the Florida Department of Law Enforcement.
The county blamed the U.S. Postal Service. "That is something beyond our control," Deputy Supervisor of Elections Gisela Salas said. "We really have no idea what's going on."
Postal officials said the post office was not to blame.
"We have employees that we assign to handle the absentee ballots that come in," said Enola C. Rice, a Postal Service spokeswoman in South Florida. "So all the absentee ballots that are received by the Postal Service are processed and delivered immediately."
Absentee voters who did not receive a ballot can request another, which officials said would be sent by overnight mail.
© 2004 The Associated Press
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. -- Up to 58,000 absentee ballots may never have reached the Broward County voters who requested them more than two weeks ago, election officials said, and state police are investigating.
Hundreds of people have called the county elections office to complain that they never got their ballots. The phone system was so overwhelmed some frustrated voters could not get through.
The county election office said the problem involved ballots mailed on Oct. 7-8, though the number of those actually missing was uncertain. Some absentee ballots mailed on those dates have already been returned to be counted.
"We are trying to determine what occurred and whether there was any kind of criminal violation," said Paige Patterson-Hughes, spokeswoman for the Florida Department of Law Enforcement.
The county blamed the U.S. Postal Service. "That is something beyond our control," Deputy Supervisor of Elections Gisela Salas said. "We really have no idea what's going on."
Postal officials said the post office was not to blame.
"We have employees that we assign to handle the absentee ballots that come in," said Enola C. Rice, a Postal Service spokeswoman in South Florida. "So all the absentee ballots that are received by the Postal Service are processed and delivered immediately."
Absentee voters who did not receive a ballot can request another, which officials said would be sent by overnight mail.
© 2004 The Associated Press