News (Media Awareness Project) - US PA: Students' Polling Places Switched in Scam |
Title: | US PA: Students' Polling Places Switched in Scam |
Published On: | 2004-10-23 |
Source: | Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-17 21:02:51 |
STUDENTS' POLLING PLACES SWITCHED IN SCAM
An unknown number of University of Pittsburgh students who signed a
petition to legalize medical marijuana have had their party
registrations and polling places switched -- adding to the number of
college students apparently targeted by a voter registration scam.
In the latest cases to come to light, students say they never filled
out voter registration forms and that they believe their names,
addresses and other details were simply copied onto a form by someone
else.
"My polling place was switched to the basement of an apartment
building in south Oakland," said Margaret Talarico, who usually votes
at home in Upper St. Clair. She was among dozens of students
approached as they walked across the campus last month and asked to
sign a petition to legalize medical marijuana.
On other campuses, students have said they signed such a petition but
were then asked to fill out the signature and address portions of
voter registration forms in order to verify their identities. Those
forms were later filled out to register the students as Republicans.
In the latest case, students say they never saw a registration form.
"My son never put a change of address in anywhere," said Mara O'Neill,
whose son, Sean, 22, was among the Pitt students who signed the
petition. O'Neill said her son listed an address where he stays with
friends during the school week and that he has never listed that
address any other place. He receives his mail at home in O'Hara, and,
until he was suddenly reassigned as a Republican voter in Shadyside,
has always cast his ballots near his home.
A friend of O'Neill's, Camilla Kydland, also signed the petition, but
listed her home address in Fox Chapel. That's where she received her
notice that she is now enrolled in the Republican Party.
Another student, Margot Goldberg, said she was approached by a team of
canvassers in another part of campus. They asked her to sign the
petition, then presented her with a form to verify her citizenship.
Goldberg isn't certain whether it was a voter registration form. What
she is sure of is that she was suddenly a registered Republican and
her polling place had been switched from Colfax School to Wightman
School, both in the 14th Ward.
"It's pretty wacky," Goldberg said. "I hope that people can figure out
where they're supposed to vote."
The newest wrinkle in the voter registration scam comes on the heels
of reports that hundreds of students at Indiana University of
Pennsylvania and dozens at colleges in eastern Pennsylvania were told
they needed to fill out blank voter registration forms in order to
sign petitions advocating medical marijuana or lower auto insurance
rates. Similar scams have been reported in Oregon, where students at
Portland State University and Oregon State had their registrations
switched, as well as Florida.
The total number of students affected is not known, because elections
officials do not learn of problems until voters complain about having
their party affiliations changed or until they show up at the polls
only to discover that they have been registered to vote in other places.
"It's going to confuse a lot of votes," said Talarico, who said a
dozen or so students in one of her classes said they had signed the
marijuana petition on their way across campus. Talarico said she saw
approximately four canvassers working the plaza between the Litchfield
Tower dormitories and the William Pitt Student Union building the
morning she signed the petition.
"They got a ton of people signed," she said.
An unknown number of University of Pittsburgh students who signed a
petition to legalize medical marijuana have had their party
registrations and polling places switched -- adding to the number of
college students apparently targeted by a voter registration scam.
In the latest cases to come to light, students say they never filled
out voter registration forms and that they believe their names,
addresses and other details were simply copied onto a form by someone
else.
"My polling place was switched to the basement of an apartment
building in south Oakland," said Margaret Talarico, who usually votes
at home in Upper St. Clair. She was among dozens of students
approached as they walked across the campus last month and asked to
sign a petition to legalize medical marijuana.
On other campuses, students have said they signed such a petition but
were then asked to fill out the signature and address portions of
voter registration forms in order to verify their identities. Those
forms were later filled out to register the students as Republicans.
In the latest case, students say they never saw a registration form.
"My son never put a change of address in anywhere," said Mara O'Neill,
whose son, Sean, 22, was among the Pitt students who signed the
petition. O'Neill said her son listed an address where he stays with
friends during the school week and that he has never listed that
address any other place. He receives his mail at home in O'Hara, and,
until he was suddenly reassigned as a Republican voter in Shadyside,
has always cast his ballots near his home.
A friend of O'Neill's, Camilla Kydland, also signed the petition, but
listed her home address in Fox Chapel. That's where she received her
notice that she is now enrolled in the Republican Party.
Another student, Margot Goldberg, said she was approached by a team of
canvassers in another part of campus. They asked her to sign the
petition, then presented her with a form to verify her citizenship.
Goldberg isn't certain whether it was a voter registration form. What
she is sure of is that she was suddenly a registered Republican and
her polling place had been switched from Colfax School to Wightman
School, both in the 14th Ward.
"It's pretty wacky," Goldberg said. "I hope that people can figure out
where they're supposed to vote."
The newest wrinkle in the voter registration scam comes on the heels
of reports that hundreds of students at Indiana University of
Pennsylvania and dozens at colleges in eastern Pennsylvania were told
they needed to fill out blank voter registration forms in order to
sign petitions advocating medical marijuana or lower auto insurance
rates. Similar scams have been reported in Oregon, where students at
Portland State University and Oregon State had their registrations
switched, as well as Florida.
The total number of students affected is not known, because elections
officials do not learn of problems until voters complain about having
their party affiliations changed or until they show up at the polls
only to discover that they have been registered to vote in other places.
"It's going to confuse a lot of votes," said Talarico, who said a
dozen or so students in one of her classes said they had signed the
marijuana petition on their way across campus. Talarico said she saw
approximately four canvassers working the plaza between the Litchfield
Tower dormitories and the William Pitt Student Union building the
morning she signed the petition.
"They got a ton of people signed," she said.
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