Page 12 - Election Fraud in Korea-ENG-KOR
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– The NEC’s excuse when presented with evidence of "pristine" ballots: They (used) “a
special material with the ability to restore the paper to its original state.”
– Ballots that appear to have been "machine folded" – i.e. identically.
– Ballots that are misaligned, misprinted, miscolored, or improperly formatted. For
example, the right and left margins should always be identical as the ballot printing
machine settings maintain regular margin distances, and the machine’s "roll printer"
cuts from the top, not the side.
– Ballots that appear to have been printed by laser printer, rather than ink-jet printers as
would be the case with legitimate ballots.
– Ballots that are glued together.
– Ballots with unreadable stamps. Early vote ballots should be stamped with the individual
seals of the local election site supervisors. These should be clearly marked and legible.
At the 6 polling station in Songdo 2-dong, Incheon, more than 1,000 ballots with red
th
stamps (known as Japanese flag ballots) that could not be identified as to which polling
officer’s stamp they belong to were found.
– The NEC is now allowing a generic stamp, rather than the election official affixing his
personal stamp to each ballot. Observers have pointed out that this leaves room for
manipulation and mass reproduction as ballots can be copied in bulk in any quantity.
– Ballots with the same distinctive pattern or mark on top of Out-of-District early voting
ballots from specific polling places were found in Geoje, Gyeongnam, and Seoul,
respectively. Since early voting ballots are printed at individual polling places, it is
suspicious that the same pattern is found in other places.
Procedural issues
– The number of ballots exceeded the number of voters in certain districts – despite
objections from observers.
– CCTV cameras were reportedly covered up at early voting locations, but uncovered for
election day voting.
– Citizen observers at voting locations counting fewer voters than votes announced on the
NEC website. This has been reported in previous elections. One YouTuber, Han Young-
man was arrested for trying to install cameras in polling stations before the April 10th
General Election in order to verify actual voters and votes announced.
– Voting at improbable speeds. For example, in one location, to handle the number of
reported voters (based on total votes cast) it would have been necessary for voters to cast
their ballot every 4.2 seconds.
– Numerous "chain of custody" complaints involving improperly secured and monitored
ballot storage boxes and storage areas, including evidence of storage areas that were
tampered with.
– Tracking of mail-in votes revealing questionable if not impossible delivery routes.
– Suspect NEC announcements, such as the official broadcast of voter turnout at 12:53 on
April 10th as 49.9%, and 25 minutes later at 13:18 the turnout rate declined to 49.6%.
There was also reported similar ‘downward’ adjustment of vote totals during election
day. The excuse: “the votes are just tentative.”
Statistical anomalies
– Since at least the 2020 National Assembly election, respected statisticians have noted
an anomalous difference between "early voting" (EV) that heavily favors Democratic
Party candidates, while "same day voting" on election days favors "conservative"
candidates. Some experts argue this difference should not exist under laws of statistical
probability.
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