Presidential election: Michigan’s ‘dead voters’ still alive



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The BBC continues to search for that list of Michigan states. There are about 10 thousand names on that list.

A group of Trump supporters first posted the list on Twitter. Later, the list went viral through other social networks. Several Republican lawmakers also published the list.

The list includes the name along with the zip code, the date the ballot was received, the date of birth, and the date of death. The list shows that some people died even 50 years ago.

The state of Michigan has an online database, according to the BBC. By searching by name, zip code, birth month, and year, you can find out if they have voted the ‘absentee ballot’ this year. Anyone can access that database.

In addition, the United States has a database of various websites to keep records of the dead.

But the search is not always the correct information. Because, in the United States, a huge country of about 330 million people, there is more than one person born with the same name in the same year or even in the same month. There are also several “common” names. As a result, a man with the same name may have been born in January 1940 in Michigan and another in the United States. One of them may be dead now. In that case, the database may display incorrect information.

The BBC first randomly selected 30 names to verify Michigan’s “dead” voters list. He then added the oldest person on the list and began searching for a total of 31 people.

The BBC’s research team has spoken with 11 of those 31 people directly or by phone with their relatives, neighbors or their carers to confirm that they are alive.

Of the rest, there is no record of 17 deaths. Fairly clear evidence has been found that they are alive.

And the other three are really dead.

A BBC search found:

The BBC team first looked at Michigan’s online database to see if the 31 people they had selected had returned the battle papers.

List of

Michigan “dead voters” list that went viral on social media. Photo: BBC

They then went to the database of the dead to find their names and found that people with the same name had actually died, not in Michigan but in other parts of the United States.

They later began searching for anyone with the same name in Michigan. After much searching, they realize that they are actually working with two groups of people. One of those parties lives in Michigan and voted. Another group of the same name has died in other parts of the United States.

One of them is Roberto Garcia, a retired teacher from Michigan who is on the death list. He told the BBC: “I am definitely alive and I voted for Biden. I could die if I want to vote for Trump.”

Another 100-year-old woman has been found who now lives in a nursing home in Michigan. However, the list shows that he died in 1982.

Maria Aredando, 72, said by phone: “I am old. But I am alive and breathing. I am also in good mental shape and in good health.”

He said he had voted for Joe Biden and was “shocked to see his name on the list of dead voters.”

However, this was not the case for everyone. Another 100-year-old woman on the list, who was shown to have died in 1986, voted by mail while she was alive. He voted by mail last September. But neighbors say he died just weeks before the November 3 election.

Under Michigan state rules, if a voter dies before Election Day after voting early by mail, their vote will not be invalidated. However, the BBC team could not confirm whether the woman’s vote was counted.

The BBC reports that those who could not be contacted directly were found alive through daily activities.

The list of 31 people includes two more men whose names are the same in the Electoral Commission’s database but the zip code and date of birth have been set.

According to the search, the names and addresses of his deceased parents have been recorded in the database.

In the case of both, the ballot papers have been sent in the name of their deceased father and not to them.

A local election official said: “One of the two has voted by mail and has been counted. There is no evidence that the man voted in his own name even though he voted for his dead father.”

Search results based on:

The BBC’s list of 10,000 “dead” people published by Trump supporters alleging voter fraud has been found to be flawed. There is nothing wrong with the people on the list dying. But most of them died in Michigan, not anywhere else.

The same has happened with the 31 people who were randomly selected by the BBC team.

Professor Michigan Levitt, a legal expert, said, “If Michigan is a big state, if it’s just a list of names and dates of birth, it’s definitely wrong.”

This is called “The Birthday Problem” in the language of statistics. Two students in a classroom are more likely to have the same date of birth. Therefore, if millions of Michigan voters were searched in the US database of deaths, the names and dates of birth would match. Especially when the date of birth is not mentioned in any month.

“It is a very general statistical question,” Professor Levitt said.



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