Hillary Has Thousands Of Votes In Ohio Even Before Early Voting Begins.

registering people who didn't exist as voters.....then rounding up homeless folks like you, putting them in vans and driving around to various polling places to vote under the false names.....
 

Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now
The Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) was a collection of community-based organizations in the United States and internationally that advocated for low- and moderate-income families by working on neighborhood safety, voter registration, health care, affordable housing, and other social issues. At its peak ACORN had over 500,000 members and more than 1,200 neighborhood chapters in over 100 cities across the U.S.,[3][4] as well as in Argentina, Canada, Mexico, and Peru.[5] ACORN was founded in 1970 by Wade Rathke and Gary Delgado.[6]
ACORN conducted voter registration drives, as well as working to remove systemic barriers to registration of low and working-class voters. The Republican Party regularly alleged that it committed voter fraud, but few cases have been found or prosecuted. The organization conducted its own audits and cooperated with investigations of employees, referring some cases to law enforcement.
ACORN suffered an extremely damaging nationwide controversy beginning in the fall of 2009 after two conservative activists secretly made and released videos of staged interactions with low-level ACORN personnel in several offices, portraying them as encouraging criminal behavior. Several independent investigations eventually found the videos to have been partially falsified and selectively edited by the activists, James O'Keefe and Hannah Giles,[7] and cleared ACORN, finding its employees had not engaged in the alleged criminal activities and that the organization had appropriately managed its federal funding - but in the meantime the organization suffered an immediate loss of funding from government agencies with which it had contracts, and from private donors.[8][9][10]
The loss of funds had been too damaging and by March 2010, 15 of ACORN's 30 state chapters had already closed[8] and ACORN announced it was closing its remaining state chapters and disbanding.[11] On November 2, 2010 its U.S. offices filed for Chapter 7 liquidation effectively closing the organization.[12]
ACORN members and organizers formed new organizations
 
they are trying to claim that the improperly filled out regs that the group has turned in FLAGGED as incomplete are fraud



they did the same thing to Acorn




they lied
 
http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/in...ud-case/ar-BBx0q5y?li=BBmkt5R&ocid=spartandhp




Craig Varoga, president of*Patriot Majority, said because the IVRP has been specifically referenced in a*statement from Secretary of State Connie Lawson,*the investigation could impede the processing of the 45,000 voter registration cards that have been completed through the organization across the state.
The IVRP uses quality-control procedures to catch issues with voter registrations. Varoga said any of the applications that have been earmarked as fraud were already earmarked by the IVRP as incomplete or incorrect.
For example, if someone transposes digits in a phone number or forgets to fill out their ZIP code, the canvasser cannot complete that information for them, Varoga said. That card would then be flagged before being turned over to the local clerk's office.
"If they transpose a number and that’s inaccurate, that’s*a mistake," he said. "That’s not fraud."
Varoga said he does not know the status of those 45,000 applications*but said the seizure of cellphones and laptops during Tuesday's search warrant impedes the organization from further registering people to vote before the Oct. 11 deadline.
Varoga said State Police have been coordinating with the secretary of state's office, which he said became clear because of the timing of Lawson's statement and the onset of the State Police investigation. He said*the investigation*is a partisan effort "designed to make it harder to vote in this election."
 
Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now
The Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) was a collection of community-based organizations in the United States and internationally that advocated for low- and moderate-income families by working on neighborhood safety, voter registration, health care, affordable housing, and other social issues. At its peak ACORN had over 500,000 members and more than 1,200 neighborhood chapters in over 100 cities across the U.S.,[3][4] as well as in Argentina, Canada, Mexico, and Peru.[5] ACORN was founded in 1970 by Wade Rathke and Gary Delgado.[6]
ACORN conducted voter registration drives, as well as working to remove systemic barriers to registration of low and working-class voters. The Republican Party regularly alleged that it committed voter fraud, but few cases have been found or prosecuted. The organization conducted its own audits and cooperated with investigations of employees, referring some cases to law enforcement.
ACORN suffered an extremely damaging nationwide controversy beginning in the fall of 2009 after two conservative activists secretly made and released videos of staged interactions with low-level ACORN personnel in several offices, portraying them as encouraging criminal behavior. Several independent investigations eventually found the videos to have been partially falsified and selectively edited by the activists, James O'Keefe and Hannah Giles,[7] and cleared ACORN, finding its employees had not engaged in the alleged criminal activities and that the organization had appropriately managed its federal funding - but in the meantime the organization suffered an immediate loss of funding from government agencies with which it had contracts, and from private donors.[8][9][10]
The loss of funds had been too damaging and by March 2010, 15 of ACORN's 30 state chapters had already closed[8] and ACORN announced it was closing its remaining state chapters and disbanding.[11] On November 2, 2010 its U.S. offices filed for Chapter 7 liquidation effectively closing the organization.[12]
ACORN members and organizers formed new organizations

exactly what they did to acorn
 
Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now
The Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) was a collection of community-based organizations in the United States and internationally that advocated for low- and moderate-income families by working on neighborhood safety, voter registration, health care, affordable housing, and other social issues. At its peak ACORN had over 500,000 members and more than 1,200 neighborhood chapters in over 100 cities across the U.S.,[3][4] as well as in Argentina, Canada, Mexico, and Peru.[5] ACORN was founded in 1970 by Wade Rathke and Gary Delgado.[6]
ACORN conducted voter registration drives, as well as working to remove systemic barriers to registration of low and working-class voters. The Republican Party regularly alleged that it committed voter fraud, but few cases have been found or prosecuted. The organization conducted its own audits and cooperated with investigations of employees, referring some cases to law enforcement.
ACORN suffered an extremely damaging nationwide controversy beginning in the fall of 2009 after two conservative activists secretly made and released videos of staged interactions with low-level ACORN personnel in several offices, portraying them as encouraging criminal behavior. Several independent investigations eventually found the videos to have been partially falsified and selectively edited by the activists, James O'Keefe and Hannah Giles,[7] and cleared ACORN, finding its employees had not engaged in the alleged criminal activities and that the organization had appropriately managed its federal funding - but in the meantime the organization suffered an immediate loss of funding from government agencies with which it had contracts, and from private donors.[8][9][10]
The loss of funds had been too damaging and by March 2010, 15 of ACORN's 30 state chapters had already closed[8] and ACORN announced it was closing its remaining state chapters and disbanding.[11] On November 2, 2010 its U.S. offices filed for Chapter 7 liquidation effectively closing the organization.[12]
ACORN members and organizers formed new organizations

from your link Desh....
FactCheck.org acknowledged that ACORN had problems with phony registrations.[74]
 
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