ALF voters "assisted" in electing

  • Sumo

One of the most outrageous things seen during the pretty riduculous Hialeah elections came Friday when a group of elderly and confused residents from an assited living facility on West 18th Avenue were driven to the early voting site in a chartered school bus and were “assisted” in voting by people working for or supporting Su Alcaldito Carlos Hernandez.

Many of them, or maybe all of them, voted without any identification. They were allowed to vote using provisional ballots that will later be reviewed and, Ladra believes, deemed invalid. Most of them, or maybe all of them, were assisted in the voting process by people from the home or this woman photographed in a black shirt assisting a man with a walker, who told them not to speak to the media and called police over when Ladra took photos. She was told that there was nothing they could do to stop me (that was refreshing). She is driving a Nissan Versa registered to Carmen Rodriguez Echea with Hernandez campaign material inside and a bumper sticker for su acaldito and also council candidates Pablito “Huh?” Hernandez, who is in a runoff with candidate Frank Lago, and Council President Isis “Gavelgirl” Garcia-Martinez (who won in the first round over former councilwoman Cindy Miel). She would not give me her name but was identified to me by a Martinez supporter as someone who works for AB Fraud Queen Sasha Tirador, su alcaldito’s campaign manager, who has been investigated for electoral fraud before. The woman is supposedly her right hand woman. The woman with the white shirt and colorful scarf, who posed for Ladra as she sat on the platform at JFK Friday with Carlos Rodriguez, a paid alcaldito supporter, is the woman in black’s daughter. She smiled and preened and pretended to be Rodriguez’s girlfriend while her mom basically voted for the six voters from the ALF.

One man’s diaper was showing and he complained of having urinated on himself. Others could not tell the reporters — not just Ladra, but Erika Mayor of MegaTV, Sandra Peebles of Univision 23 and Marili Llano of Telemundo 51 — who they voted for or what their names were even. (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1SGLayUBxS4) One man said “We were told we have to vote today.” The driver of the bus told The Miami Herald’s Christina Veiga that she did not know where she  picked them up and did not know where they would be dropped off. All of this to supress the fact that these people’s votes downright stolen. Veiga followed the school bus, which went in circles through a residential area before finally coming to a stop at the ALF — in an apparent effort to lose the tail. Owner (since 20120) Alicia Almeida arrived right after — likely called by the bus driver or this lady in black or Hernandez people, in a black Lexus, Veiga wrote.

Hernandez denied having anything to do with the half dozen voters. “I don’t know about that,” he was quoted in El Nuevo Herald as saying. “I think that it is very important that the people who come to vote are people who are capable and can do so.” But when Veiga talked to Almeida, owner of Alelise ALF at 6230 West 18th Ave. — where there is a large “Keep Carlos Hernandez” sign in the front yard — the woman said Hernandez had sent the yellow school bus. She did not allow Veiga to speak to any of the residents, claiming they had been shaken up by the media that clammored to find out what was going on — not by the crazy detour taken by the bus driver in an un-airconditioned vehicle. Almeida also toldVeiga that the residents of the home — which has a license to care for seniors with mentall illness — were “of sound mind… They make decisions.” But that’s not what reporters saw when they were at JFK library and in Florida, voters can be barred from excersing their right if they are deemed mentally incapacitated.

Almeida added, as quoted in The Miami Herald. “They know Carlos. They’ve seen him They know I support him. But they can vote for whoever.”

Garcia-Martinez said she saw campaign workers for former Mayor Raul Martinez — who was voting with his wife, Angela Martinez, when the bus came — had helped seniors vote. “There have been frail seniors here all day,” Gavelgirl told Veiga. “I’ve seen Raul’s people …actually going in and voting for people. I have no idea how that was allowed.” Martinez called her a liar and said she was just trying to take attention away from what Hernandez had done with the frail and confused voters.

But the truth is Martinez has not chartered any bus for ALF voters to be shuttled to the library. And his campaign reports do not show any ALF contributions. The Hernandez campaign finance reports, however, show more than a dozen ALFs made donations that add up to thousands of dollars to su alcaldito’s the campaign. A resident at another such facility, where the office is filled with su alcaldito’s campaign, said that they were told that they had to vote for Hernandez because he was “going to improve the situation at the ALFs” and a nurse at a rehabilitation center told a Ladra collaborator that su acaldito himself had been there a couple of weeks ago to talk to residents about making improvements.

This is being added to the documentation that Ladra is compiling about absentee ballot fraud and voter manipulation on behalf of the Hernandez campaign. Let’s see if more busloads of elderly and confused voters — who can’t tell us their names of what day of the week it is — vote Saturday.