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IPFS News Link • Voting - Election Integrity

Actions: The Brakey Method

• Bev Harris - Black Box Voting

THE BRAKEY METHOD

  • Preserve and make public the "ballot images" — Modern voting systems take a picture of every ballot, called a "ballot image."
  • Peg the ballot image to the actual ballot using a unique ID number (not connected to any voter identifier in any way).
  • Make sure ballots are a public record so that any person can arrange to inspect the actual ballots at any time.
  • Ballot images can be released electronically, either upon request or — better — by placing them on the Web, allowing any person to examine pictures of any or all ballots. These electronic images can be authenticated by any person by checking any ballot, which must contain same unique ID number.

    QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

    Q. Do all voting systems make ballot images?

    A. Most of them do. The best ballot images are actual photographic images of voter-marked paper ballots, but even the paperless DRE machines are capable of, and usually do, automatically make ballot images.

    Q, Where do I go to ask to see ballot images?

    A. Public records and freedom of information laws direct persons to the "custodian of the records." For most locations, the custodian of the records for ballot images is the county elections office. In some locations, primarily in New England, the custodian of the records is a municipality.

    Q. How do I ask for the ballot images?

    A. You can go to the elections office with a USB stick in hand and ask for a copy as a public records request.

    Q. What if they tell me the ballot images don't exist?

    A. There are two possible reasons this could be the case: (1) They destroyed the ballot images, which violates records retention requirements and destroys a crucial audit record, and, in some states, constitutes a felony. (Note that one case, in Alameda County Calif, required an election official to re-run an election after she destroyed audit records.) Or (2) They are using old, out of date voting machines, some of which do not produce a ballot image. If they destroyed the ballot images, seek out a qualified attorney to take appropriate legal action, or focus on obtaining legislation to require preservation of ballot images and making them public. If they are using machines which do not produce the images, focus on public pressure to purchase the right kind of voting machines next time, and/or on getting legislation requiring the use of machines that produce ballot images, plus public release of the images.

    Q. What if they won't let me see anything at all?

    A. Some states, like Kansas, Utah, and Nevada, have passed exceptionally undemocratic laws which prohibit any inspection of key election audit documents. If this is the case, litigation or change of legislation will be the appropriate action.

    Q. How does the Brakey Method address issues like voter purges or voter ID?

    A. It doesn't. The Brakey Method solves transparency problems with the counting of the vote. There is no magic wand that solves all types of election integrity issues in one swoop. It helps to parse election integrity into four components:

    – Who can vote (voter lists)

    – Who did vote (participating voter lists)

    – Counting of the vote (The Brakey Method produces transparency and auditability of the count).

    – Chain of custody (Are the ballots and images the real ballots? Have any gone missing or been added?)

    Q. Why is it called The Brakey Method?

    A. Actually it has a lengthier pedigree. The first election integrity advocate to propose using ballot images to authenticate the count was Harri Hursti, in 2006. Hursti is the computer security expert who demonstrated hacking voting machines in the film Hacking Democracy. (See http://hackingdemocracy.com). Black Box Voting promoted this concept in 2006, working with Hursti to produce a prototype to allow public, open source, automated counting of ballot images if desired. A commercial fisherman named Kevin Collins, from Humboldt County California, together with Carolyn Crnich, a Humboldt County election official, met with Bev Harris to discuss actually implementing the use of ballot images to authenticate the count. Humboldt County purchased an off-the-shelf scanner and began making its ballot images available to the public in 2008. A Humboldt County citizen named Mitch Trachtenberg developed free open source software which improved on the original Hursti prototype. The first time Humboldt County allowed public authentication of the count using ballot images, it was discovered that the central tabulator had miscounted. A Colorado citizen named Marilyn Marks filed, and won, a succession of lawsuits establishing that both ballots and ballot images must be treated as public records in Colorado. But it was in 2016, under the relentless and strategic efforts of Arizona election integrity advocate John Brakey, that the ballot image concept really began to take off.

    JonesPlantation