No there doesn't need to be a chain of custody established. The very fact that people were stuffing multiple ballots -any multiple ballots - into a box 25 times a day, then turning around and peeling off the latex gloves they had on and dropping them in a conveniently-placed trash barrel is more than enough to charge them with a crime. Because that alone is a crime. Wake up!
I'm agreeing with you. I'm saying if these people were voting for relatives or friends, they need to be able to identify exactly who they were submitting the votes for and why. They can't do that, and that's therefore proof enough of a crime.
"Oh, but those ballot drops were just done by kind people volunteering to deliver ballots for the sick and disabled!"
NO.
Cops use cell phone data all the time to build their cases against criminals.
If that were the case, there needed to be solid chain of custody on those ballots. There isn't.
No there doesn't need to be a chain of custody established. The very fact that people were stuffing multiple ballots -any multiple ballots - into a box 25 times a day, then turning around and peeling off the latex gloves they had on and dropping them in a conveniently-placed trash barrel is more than enough to charge them with a crime. Because that alone is a crime. Wake up!
I'm agreeing with you. I'm saying if these people were voting for relatives or friends, they need to be able to identify exactly who they were submitting the votes for and why. They can't do that, and that's therefore proof enough of a crime.
wearing gloves. and taking pictures of the box. And looking around furtively.
1:45 am is the most popular time to vote, don't ya know...
Yeah their spouse or adult child with power of attorney can deliver ONE ballot for a disabled loved one, not backpacks full! Lol
Have you noticed many cops investigating these criminals? If they're not, who are they actually working for?