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Home Front: Politix
Orlando Mayor, Judge, Campaign Worker Surrender in Probe of Absentee Ballot Collection
2005-03-11
Mayor Buddy Dyer, his campaign manager and a judge surrendered Friday on a felony charge that they paid for the collection of absentee ballots in last year's election. Dyer, Judge Alan Apte and campaign manager Patti Sharp surrendered at the Orange County Jail. None spoke to reporters as they left the jail after being booked. The three were among four people indicted Thursday by a grand jury. The fourth indictment remained sealed pending the person's surrender. State Attorney Brad King declined to comment, an aide said. The grand jury had looked at whether Ezzie Thomas, a campaign consultant for Dyer and Apte, had illegally collected absentee ballots in predominantly black neighborhoods before the election.
That's funny, I could have sworn that their votes were suppressed
Thomas was hired by Dyer's campaigns for state attorney general and Orlando mayor for get-out-the-vote activities. Thomas also has worked for some of central Florida's most prominent politicians, including Sen. Mel Martinez when he was a local county official, and Secretary of State Glenda Hood when she was mayor. Dyer has said he signed checks and approved invoices worth about $10,000 for Thomas during his campaign. The documents do not say what Thomas was being paid to do, and Dyer has said he didn't know, either.
"I dun know, I just signed the check. You mean I was supposed to ask?"
Earlier this year, Dyer testified in a separate civil lawsuit deposition that he was not involved in the field work for his re-election campaign. That suit was brought by the mayoral runner-up, Ken Mulvaney, who wanted the election thrown out. Dyer won re-election by nearly 5,000 votes but cleared the threshold that triggers a runoff by only 234. "I was mayor. I spent most of my time being mayor," Dyer said in the deposition. "I spent very little time actually on the campaign." The three were charged with violating a state law enacted after Miami's 1998 mayoral election was thrown out because of fraud committed in the collection of absentee ballots. The charge, providing pecuniary gain for absentee ballot possession or collection, is a third-degree felony punishable by up to five years in prison. Under Florida law, public officials charged with a felony are usually suspended by the governor until their case is decided and are removed if convicted.
Anyone notice what fact is missing in this story?
Posted by:Steve

#5  MSMBC dem mouthpieces will swallow this story!
Posted by: Hupuck Thrish6219   2005-03-11 12:44:25 PM  

#4  Howard The Screamin' Dean:


Every vote must count
Every vote must count
Every vote must count
Every vote must count
Every vote must count
Every vote must count
Posted by: BigEd   2005-03-11 12:39:08 PM  

#3  Yet another story about Democrat election fraud that fails to mention the party.

I know there's no active conspiracy. I know there's no coordination to it.

But, *damn*.
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2005-03-11 12:33:49 PM  

#2  Lol - I guess the St Pete Times will have to eat a flock of crows... They recommended this creep for Atty Gen'l in 2002. Donkey apologist assholes.
Posted by: .com   2005-03-11 11:41:54 AM  

#1  That they're DONKS?
Posted by: .com   2005-03-11 11:26:05 AM  

00:00