L.A. County Recorder Dean Logan Goes After Recall Gascón Effort After After Malfeasance Accusation – Opinion

Officials state that monitors won’t be permitted to see the count of votes in recall balloting for Los Angeles County District attorney George Gascon, as the county doesn’t consider it an election.

The recall campaign organizers stated that they want to ensure the correct counting of voter petitions in order for the measure to go on the November ballot.

The supporters argue that since the law states that recall is an election, the process must be made public.

“We are concerned about it, and we have attorneys looking at it,” retired LAPD Sgt. Dennis Zine was one of the petition organizers.

Kira also confirmed L.A. R-R’s lies.

The law does indeed clearly identify recalls as elections, and supporting language can be found in the Procedures For Recalling State and Local Officials handbook provided by the state. On page 13, it says:

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The Governor shall call an election for recalling officers and, if necessary, electing successors. It will be held no less than 60 days and not more than 80 days after the certification of sufficient signatures. (Cal. Const., Art. II, Sec. 15(a))

You may hold a recall election within 180 days after the date when sufficient signatures were certified. The election will be combined with the next scheduled regular election which is being held in the same area where the recall elections are held. (Cal. Const., Art. II, Sec. 15(a))

The law requires that officers with duties related to elections make arrangements. Elections must be held, results must be declared and returns must been canvassed. (Elections Code § 11110)

This sounds to me like Dean C. Logan the Registrar Recorder got the bat sign from high. It’s been full-court interference since the Recall Gascón effort turned in 717,000 signatures for verification to the Registrar-Recorder’s office. In order to comply with the August 17 deadline, the Registrar Recorder has the authority to validate the signatures and possibly certificate them. The RegistrarRecorder has to verify that 566,857 signatures have been officially verified. This will allow the RegistrarRecorder to certify the number and make the final decision about whether George Gascon should re-elect or not.

You know that the powers that be do not want to see what happened to San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin happen to Gascón, so they are slow-walking the verification of signatures in order to find a way to disqualify the effort.

On August 2, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors was scheduled to discuss the Gascón Recall and potentially order the recall be placed on the ballot.

According to the Santa Clarita Valley Signal, the agenda item was “postponed.”

An agenda item for the Board of Supervisors to possibly discuss and/or order a recall election for L.A. County District George Gascón was postponed on Tuesday as the counting of the signatures remains ongoing.

According to county officials, despite the petition’s presence on the agenda for the Tuesday’s regular meeting of the Board of Supervisors, the motion was “referred back,” meaning that the Office of the Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk pulled back the motion.

There was no vote or discussion because the RRCC, according to officials, is still attempting to verify the hundreds of thousands of signatures that were submitted to remove the county’s top prosecutor.

Yeah, they’re scared, and the Recall organizers strongly suspect foul play, as is Registrar Recorder Dean C. Logan’s way. In 2004, Logan was the King County, Washington Registrar-Recorder who was instrumental in ballot stuffing the governor’s election in favor of the Democrat Christine Gregoire. An automatic recount was initiated after Dino Rossi, the Republican candidate, was declared first winner. This resulted in Dino Rossi being declared the winner with 261 votes. 42 votes were needed for the second recount.Rossi won, despite the fact that there were only 42 votes. Logan was then able to take action. As disclosed in the lawsuits filed, as reported by Seattle’s KIRO Radio:

It was amazing to see what was revealed by subsequent lawsuits. On the third recount, they miraculously found a few hundred more votes for Gregoire to steal away the governor’s race. There were apparently 300 illegal votes and 400 additional votes where the voter couldn’t be verified. Additionally, there was 240 felons who had voted illegally. 44 votes came from deceased people. 10 voters voted twice. After all those votes had been counted, Christine Gregoire became the governor.

It is discussed how Logan quit in disgrace and ended up becoming Registrar Recorder in Los Angeles.

So, we’re here.

Steve Cooley (former L.A. district attorney) and the other leaders aren’t backing down. They decided to expose Logan’s current malfeasance to The Washington Examiner. The paper reported that the organizers have submitted a Public Record’s request to determine what standards Logan is It is reallyUse this to verify your signatures

A training manual was prepared by a forensic investigator and given to the campaign.

In 2020, state law was amended to make it simpler for county officials and signers to verify that the signature is legal. If the signature appears substantially different, it is presumed that it is valid. Two additional officials will then have to agree unanimously that the signature is invalid.

According to Steve Cooley (ex-District Attorney), the numbers of invalid ballots dropped by 83% when the law was amended for 2020 elections. He is also one of the leading campaign organizers.

“Something is not adding up. Almost everything is not adding up,” Cooley told the Washington Examiner.

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