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Moss v. Bush

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Jguk 2 (talk | contribs) at 21:41, 18 December 2004. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

On Dec. 13th, a case was filed in Ohio Supreme Court as "Verified election contest petition in the Supreme Court of Ohio Case No. (R. C. 3515.08)", a.k.a. "Moss v. Bush". [1] (First filing, pdf, 82KB)

The legal suit is headed by Cliff Arnebeck of the Alliance for Democracy, representing a group of thirty-seven voters. According to statements made by Mr. Arnebeck, he will ask the courts to set aside the results and possibly declare John Kerry the winner of Ohio, on the basis of widespread systematic election fraud that altered the outcome of the election. He claims to have sufficient evidence to prove the allegations. Ohio law permits the state Supreme Court to review elections in such cases. [2]

On Dec. 16th, the case was thrown out on a technicality [3] The technicality is that two races were disputed in one challenge. One race was the presidential. The other was the election of the judge himself; Ohio Supreme Court Justice Thomas Moyer. The judge threw out the case against himself and the president, instead of recusing himself. [4] (dismissal, pdf)

On Dec. 17th, the case was refilled. (Second filing, pdf, 1.2MB)

The court case will have no impact on the 2004 presidential election, which was won by George W. Bush, and which his main adversary John Kerry conceded the day after the election. Kerry comments on the voting problems in Ohio were that they should be investigated to ensure there are no doubts in future elections. His campaign does not dispute that Bush won the election, but supports the recounts.

Google web query - Moss v. Bush

See also

2004 U.S. presidential election controversy