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Beijing time:05-11-2020 04:46
On November 3, a police officer with the Glendale Police Department in Arizona issued a statement on his Facebook page stating that in late October, a police officer was on a farm near Glendale. A man named Blayan Ruiz found 18 early ballot papers mailed under some rocks and concrete.
Police said Ruiz was doing the right thing to inform officials that the votes were stolen. It also said that a Glendale police officer and two special agents of the Attorney General had returned the ballots to the recipient.
According to a press release, “Investigators discovered that these votes were stolen from mailboxes in a community south of 107th Avenue and North Avenue. The envelope was still sealed.”
The local police station added: “It is not yet clear what the motives for stealing votes were.” “The investigation is still ongoing and no one has been arrested.
Officials with the Arizona Attorney General’s Office said there may be other victims of ballot theft.
Arizona voters should check the status of ballots that are mailed in and if they find information about the stolen ballots, speak up.
President Trump (Trump) has always been critical of large-scale vote-by-mail, saying it will lead to widespread fraud. Trump told Democratic presidential candidate Biden in the first presidential debate: “This will be an unheard of scam.”
Voting by mail is a controversial measure that is believed to reduce the credibility of elections. In a July 8 article in The Hill media, author Tom Fitton noted that voting by mail can cause many problems, including sending votes to the wrong address, reducing the risk of counterfeiting, facilitating intimidation. and bribery of voters, etc. The “Federal Electoral Reform Commission” once stated in a report that ballots sent by mail “remain the largest source of possible electoral fraud.”
(Full report by reporter Luo Tingting / Editor-in-chief: Wen Hui)
URL of this article: https://www.ntdtv.com/gb/2020/11/05/a102979625.html