ES&S Opti-Scan Machines Found Miscounting By 4%
ES&S Opti-Scans Found Miscounting by 4% (8% margin-swing)
Dear Friends,
I do not have all the details, but this story needs immediate investigation before calling winners tomorrow in any state using ES&S M-100s to count its votes whenever the reported margin is closer than 8%.
The paper ballot precinct-based optical scan voting system used in a large proportion of US jurisdictions is producing wildly inaccurate counts of ballots that are off by as much as 4% per precinct - thus altering the vote margin possibly by as much as 8% by shifting votes from one candidate to another - depending on how the errors occur.
The ES&S M100 is used in at least some or all counties in the following states: AL, AR, AZ, CA, CO, FL, IA, IL, IN, KS, ME, MI, MN, MO, MS, MT, NC, ND, NE, NM, OH, PA, RI, SD,TN, TX, VA, WA, WI, WV, and WY.
The story, with links and copies of at least one original document is forwarded in the email below.
Voter marked paper ballots, even if the machines that count them are inaccurate, are more auditable because accurate vote counts can always be recovered by hand-counting the paper ballots, unlike with touchscreen voting systems, but machine counts are not to be blindly trusted - and this is a good example why not. It is easier to detect errors produced by paper ballot optiscal-scan systems than by touchscreen e-ballot systems.
The usage distribution of the ES&S M-100 scanners in the U.S. can be found here:
http://verifiedvoting.org/verifier/index.php
This is yet another reason why States should be conducting routine independent manual post-election audits like those described in this proposal: How to Audit Election Outcome Accuracy http://electionarchive.org/ucvAnalysis/US/paper-audits/VoteCountAuditBillRequest.pdf
---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Strauss
charlie There has been a grave
concern raised about the accuracy of ES&S M-100 opscans
(ES&S's primary precinct model) raised 10 days ago. A
Michigan Clerk wrote to the (federal-ish) Election
Assistance Commission on october 24 to tell them she has
been given a substantial reason to doubt their accuracy.
In Logic and Accuracy testing for the the clerk reports that
some of her Communities reported "the same ballots run
through the same machines, yielded different results each
time" http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/files/m100_issue_letter_10.24.08.pdf How
big was the error? Wired extends the story: "According to
news stories, a race in the August Republican primary in one
Michigan township did have a discrepancy in tallies that
were counted by hand and by ES&S optical-scan machines. The
clerks race in Plymouth Township was recounted after the
losing candidate requested it. The initial machine count had
showed Joe Bridgman defeating Mary Ann Prchlik by 1,920 to
1,170. But the hand count
(http://www.journalgroup.com/Plymouth/8342/canvassers-uphold-decision-in-plymouth-township-recount)
- narrowed the margin to 1,885 to
1,727." http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2008/11/michigan-electi.html That
is, the totals shifted nearly 4% of one candidates 1170
votes to his opponent: that reduced the margin of victory in
that township by 8%!! (a very uncomfortable error) It was
both ironic and especially disconcerting since that the race
in question was for the township's clerk and the winning
candidate was the Deputy Clerk. Note that this is one
township. And also note that the L&A tests were off in 4%
of the communities running the L&A tests. It does not report
how many machines in each community failed, but if follows
the common pattern their probably is 1 or at most 2 machines
in a typical precinct. So the impact on statewide raises
is presumably somewhat damped over the impact on local races
but is still absurdly large. Conversely, the problem is
attributed to dust buildup blocking the sensors and possibly
interfering with the electronics. The concern is that the
next election is going to dwarf the past one in the amount
of dust generated. "In Oakland county when officials there
met with ES&S to discuss the errors encountered during logic
and accuracy testing, ES&S maintained that the problem was
dust and debris build-up on the sensors inside the
machines. "This has impacted the Digital to Analog
Converter (DAC) settings for the two Contact Image Sensors
(CIS)," Johnson wrote the EAC." Now presumbaly, a lot of
the dust comes from the kind of ballot stock used so we
don't know if this will occur nationwide. But since these
are spec-ed by ES&S it's plausible that this will be
ubiquitous. Like NM, Michigan also is forbidden from doing
their own "cleaning" by ES&S on pain of voiding the
warrantee (and possibly the certification). I have
advocated before that NM urgently needs to get a larger IT
staff in the SOS office to get this situation under control.
NM needs to have a credible staffing level in part to give
it leverage to renegotiate these maintenance contracts that
are bankrupting the clerks, or causing them not to maintain
machines. Charlie ------------------- forwarded
by Kathy Dopp The material expressed herein is the
informed product of the author's fact-finding and
investigative efforts. Dopp is a Mathematician, Expert in
election audit mathematics and procedures; in exit poll
discrepancy analysis; and can be reached at P.O. Box
680192 Park City, UT 84068 phone
435-658-4657 http://utahcountvotes.org
http://electionmathematics.org http://electionarchive.org
http://kathydopp.com/serendipity/ How to Audit Election
Outcome Accuracy
http://electionarchive.org/ucvAnalysis/US/paper-audits/VoteCountAuditBillRequest.pdf History
of Confidence Election Auditing Development & Overview of
Election Auditing Fundamentals
http://electionarchive.org/ucvAnalysis/US/paper-audits/History-of-Election-Auditing-Development.pdf Voters
Have Reason to Worry
http://utahcountvotes.org/UT/UtahCountVotes-ThadHall-Response.pdf