Press Release

ALERT: Nevada Will Likely Mail November 2022 Ballots
to Thousands of Ineligible Voters

Watchdog group claims over 40,000 who have moved out of state or likely died could be mailed Nevada ballots, opening the door to election crimes.

August 15, 2022 - Reno, Nevada. – Election Integrity Project® Nevada, LLC (EIPNv) today reported that it has submitted voter registration irregularities to the county clerks and registrars of all 17 Nevada counties. The irregularities, which include relocated, deceased, and duplicated registrants as well as those with missing legal names, were identified using the June 6, 2022 official state voter list and other related government databases. EIPNv summarized its findings by county and by congressional, senate and assembly districts.

Since 2020, Nevada has routinely mailed ballots to all 1.8 million Active-status registrants. Such election practice requires not only up-to-date, accurate voter lists, but also strict standards for signature verification and well-trained election staffs. Yet over 40,000 questionably eligible registrants are on the “Active” list and will be mailed 2022 ballots that could end up at incorrect addresses and “voted” by persons of ill intent.

  • 18,667 registrants have a government record indicating they have moved permanently out of state in the past four years, yet they remain in “Active status” in Nevada.
  • 21,845 registrants have not voted or updated their registrations in 10+ years. It is reasonable to conclude they have likely moved or died, yet they inexplicably remain in “Active status.”

Election officials claim that the verification of voter signatures on mail ballot envelopes is a reliable and effective safeguard to prevent fraudulent voting. But, a November 12, 2020 Las Vegas Review-Journal article reported on a journalist’s test where eight of nine mail ballots with incorrect signatures were accepted and counted by Clark County in the 2020 election. The article concluded that “…signature verification isn’t the fail-safe security check elections officials made it out to be.”

“Mailing ballots to persons who have likely moved or died opens the door to election crime, especially if signature verification is not a sufficient safeguard,” said Judy Moss of EIPNv. “Nevadans receiving ballots for people not living at their address also lose confidence in elections. We are hopeful the counties will remove the ineligible registrations, so they are not mailed ballots for the upcoming election.”

Interested candidates, legislators and officials of all parties are invited to contact Judy Moss to request detailed EIPNv findings for their specific political districts. They can also request the findings files directly from their respective county clerks and registrars.

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About Us

After years of election corruption being reported in Nevada, we formed Election Integrity Project®Nevada LLC (EIPNv) under the 501(c)3 EIPCa to proactively combat fraud before ballots are cast and counted. Over the past 14 year we have documented, filed lawsuits, and had a few convictions. Here are some: Since 2006, cases of election corruption have been documented and filed in court without success. The Secretary of State was accused of electioneering from his office regarding absentee ballots but the judge refused to hear the case regardless of citizen eyewitness testimony. In that same election polls remained closed until 10am, polling places were moved in the night without the knowledge of the registrar of voters or notification of voters, and electronic voting machines malfunctioned.

In 2008, five hundred votes were cast by non-existent voters- enough to change the outcome of the election.

In 2010 an exit poller recorded 9.3% illegitimate ballots cast-60,000 votes, coincidentally the number of culinary union members. Also in 2010 a lawsuit against a casino and the Democrat party for documented voter coercion was rejected by the Secretary of State and the State Attorney General.

In 2011, Amy Adele Busefink and Christopher Howell Edwards, senior ACORN executives, convicted of election fraud in connection with a voter registration scheme in which employees were paid a bonus to register voters. Busefink received a two-year suspended prison sentence and was ordered to pay a $4,000 fine and perform 100 hours of community service.

In 2013, In Roxanne Rubin, a casino worker in Las Vegas, tried to vote twice in 2012. She was ordered to pay $2,481 and to 100 hours of community service.

In 2014, Hortencia Segura-Munoz, an illegal immigrant living in Washoe County, Nevada, registered to vote under a false name and cast ballots in the 2008 and 2010. She was sentenced to time served (103 days in jail) and fined $1,000.

In 2014, Las Vegas resident, Biqui Diana Parra Rodriguez used personal information of Mary Lou Aguirre to register to vote under her name in 2011 and in 2012. She was caught through the use of photo ID cards and facial recognition software that identified the two IDs ames. She pleaded guilty to two felony counts of registration fraud and identity theft.

In 2016, Tina Marie Parks pleaded guilty to one felony voter registration offense. She was initially charged with 11 felony offenses for having improperly completed others' voter registration forms. She was sentenced to 48 months in prison. Candidate Stan Vaughn reported thousands of returned first class mailed literature addressed to active voters on the registered voter rolls in Clark County.

In 2017, Renaldo Johnson of Las Vegas pleaded guilty to one felony offense for submitting a falsified petition. Johnson was indicted on multiple charges related to submitting fake ballot signatures to have Jill Stein. Johnson awaits sentencing.

In 2018, 19voter registrations out of 195 high propensity Republican voters did not exist reported Pershing County postmaster after a first class mailing returned 19 postcards. One Elko County voter was registered at the Mortuary . The mortician confirmed, “There is no one living here.”

In 2020, Over 200,000 ballots sent to inactive voters —those who have not voted in recent elections, a roster that can include people who either have moved or are deceased – and the envelopes piled up in post office trays, outside apartment complexes, on community bulletin boards, and on sidewalks in and around Las Vegas.

 

Questions? Contact us .