Arizona State Representative John Kavanagh: Defending the Employer Sanctions Law

Michael Bryan

I posted some pretty strong views on how effective the new employer sanctions law taking effect January 1st will be, and expressed concern about their impact on Arizona’s economy. State Representative Kavanagh, one of the sponsors of the sanctions bill here in Arizona, responded to my post and I invited him to respond to two … Read more

Peace On Earth, Goodwill Towards All

Michael Bryan

"Peace is not the product of terror or fear. Peace is not the silence of cemeteries. Peace is not the silent result of violent repression. Peace is dynamism. peace is generosity. It is a right and it is a duty."— Archbishop Oscar Romero "I maintain that nothing useful and lasting can emerge from violence."— Shirin … Read more

Navelgazing News on the Stemwinding Stump

Michael Bryan

I hate housekeeping (as my wife, Lauren, will ruefully affirm…), so I’m going to get a bunch of it out of the way in one go. First, I had to disable the Odiogo listen feature (hopefully) temporarily. I know from usage stats that many of you enjoyed the feature, but it was causing freezes for … Read more

Pima County Election Integrity Public Hearings

Michael Bryan

Please see the Election Integrity Homepage for complete coverage and the latest news. Pima County held some public meetings following the trial to which the public was invited to express their views and make suggestions. Interestingly, the public hearings were set during the pendancy of Judge Miller’s verdict. I wonder how much of the motive … Read more

UPDATED! Giffords and Mitchell Vote to Continue Funding Iraq War Without Conditions, Again

Michael Bryan

Link: Final Vote Results for Roll Call 1186. I can’t begin to express my disappointment with the comportment of these two Democrats. Their own political convenience continues to remain a higher priority than forcing Bush to bring our troops in Iraq home. I want to hold CD 5 and 8 as much as any other … Read more

Pima County Election Integrity Homepage

Michael Bryan

"If the GEMS system had been deliberately designed to enable covert vote manipulation without detection, it could hardly be more open to undetected covert manipulation."         -Bruce O’Dell, Founder, US Count Votes The Pima Democratic Party website is hosting an archive of case related primary materials that is a great resource. The site … Read more

Pima County Election Integrity Trial: Judge Miller Orders Release of 2006 Primary and General Election Databases, But Not RTA Election

Michael Bryan

Pimacountyaz_dieboldPlease see the Election Integrity Homepage for complete coverage and the latest news.

Judge Michael Miller, in a carefully reasoned and balanced opinion, today ordered the release of the final MDB and GBF database files for the 2006 RTA election primary and general elections. The judge denied without prejudice access to every MDB and GBF file for the 2006 elections, which would include the RTA election, until and unless the plaintiffs can address remaining security concerns which might arise from that larger release.

For background and commentary on the case and why it is critical to election integrity, please see my earlier posts cataloged on the trial’s home post.

The immediate goal of the Democratic party – to be able to look closer at the final election databases – is satisfied by the ruling. But the broader goal of being able to look at a time series of backups for discrepancies or discontinuities that could indicate manipulation of the RTA election specifically is stymied for the moment. John Denker has some very useful additional commentary on the judge’s apparent strategy.

It is still unclear whether the judge will grant on-going injunctive relief to turn over the final database files from every election going forward. The denial of access to the entire series of database files indicates that the court may still need to be satisfied as to any remaining concerns about security resulting from on-going and multiple disclosures of this type of data before granting such an injunction.

The ruling will allow the Democratic party to perform the forensic analysis required to search for any evidence of wrong-doing. It will also allow the experts for the Democratic party to begin to more closely address the unquantified and unspecified potential security threats from the public disclosure of the data in these files claimed by the County. This access will be crucial in satisfying the court that there is little or no practical threat to elections integrity posed by this information being in the public domain. Once that task is complete, broader public access to these files (the entire backup history of the election and that of future elections) can be secured.

There is no doubt that the factual findings of the court and this ruling are an resounding and unqualified victory for transparency in our elections process. However, there are further battles that must be fought: to access the entire time-series of backup database files, and to gain permanent injunctive access to the files of future elections without having to litigate each time.

As I digest the ruling and get feedback from the principals in the case, I will continue to update this post.

Here is Judge Miller’s ruling in PDF format: Download MillerRuling.pdf

UPDATE:

Having had a chance to digest the ruling fully and consult with Bill Risner, I have a few additional comments.

The bottom line is that the public will get access to the final databases in the 2006 RTA election primary and general elections and all future elections, though the timing of future releases remains indeterminate.

The possibility for getting all database versions throughout the election process remains open pending further demonstration that there is no security issue. To my mind, the judge has adopted the County’s burden shifting standards of ‘plausible’ or ‘possible’ security harms, when the legal standard requires that the County demonstrate a specific probable harm attendant to the release of a public record. However, I don’t think this final reservation will long stand in light of the factual findings the court announced in this ruling.

A question that comes up often is whether this ruling will be appealed by the Board of Supervisors. I think there is really only one person who know that answer to that question: Chuck Huckelberry. My recommendation is that if you are concerned about his decision whether to appeal, you should call his office and let him know how you feel about that possibility.

Detailed analysis of Judge Miller’s Under Advisement Ruling after the flip…

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