Richard Charnin

Mar.8, 2016 (updated for AAPOR link)

Late changes to the MA Democratic Primary exit poll indicate that the election was likely stolen. As always, the exit poll was adjusted to match the recorded vote.

Sanders led the Unadjusted MA Exit Poll Gender crosstab (1297 respondents) by 52.3-45.7%. The poll was captured from CNN at 8:01pm .

Clinton led the adjusted exit poll (1406 respondents) by 50.3-48.7%, a near-exact match to the 1.4% RECORDED vote margin. But her 50.3% share was IMPOSSIBLE. The proof is self-explanatory: How could Clinton gain 114 respondents and Sanders just 7 among the final 109 exit poll respondents?

Clinton won by 51-49% on electronic voting machines from ES&S, Diebold and Dominion. Sanders won 68 hand-counted precincts by 58-41%. He won 250 of 351 jurisdictions and had at least 58% in 110.

The probability is 97% that Sanders won the election given the 3.55% Margin of Error. The MoE includes the exit poll cluster effect (30% of the 2.72% calculated MoE). Sanders 53.4% two-party share and the MoE are input to the Normal distribution function to calculate his win probability:

P = 97% = Normdist (.534, 0.5, 1.3* MoE/1.96,true)

Recent Massachusetts elections are highly suspect and show similar anomalies. The True Vote and Registered Voter Turnout models and CVS analysis indicate to a near 100% probability that the 2014 MA Governor election was stolen from Coakley (D).

In the special 2010 senate election for Sen. Kennedy’s seat, Coakley won the 71 hand-counted precincts with 51.1% of the vote (32,247) to Brown’s 47.8% (30,136).

Massachusetts has 71 hand count locations, 91 ES&S and 187 Diebold locations.



In the 2008 MA primary, Clinton snatched victory from the jaws of defeat, overcoming an Obama 8 point lead in the final pre-election polls. Obama won the hand-counted precincts by the same 5% that Clinton won the machine counts: 52-47%

The American Association for Public Opinion Research (AAPOR) discusses the matching process in Explaining Exit Polls. But they never mention election fraud as a likely cause of the discrepancies. In actuality the adjusted exit poll crosstabs contaminate the true statistical results and are misleading as they do not reflect the the actual responses of those exit polled.

” In close races, the projection models also employ actual vote totals, first in sample precincts as it becomes available and then at the county level for all counties in a state as they become available. It is important to note that after the votes have been counted, the exit poll results are adjusted to match the actual election outcomes. It is in this way that the final exit poll data can be used for its primary and most important purpose – to shed light on why the election turned out the way it did”.

Exit pollsters at Edison Research should not be making adjustments. But it is standard operating procedure. Why? It is unscientific and hides the actual exit poll results. It serves to cover-up the fraud which is measured by the recorded vote discrepancy (view the 2004 and 2008 National Exit Polls below).

CNN UNADJUSTED MA Exit Poll: 8:01PM (1297 respondents, 3.55% MoE)

Gender Pct Sanders Clinton Other Male 42.0% 61.0% 37.0% 2.0% Female 58.0% 46.0% 52.0% 2.0% True Vote 100.0% 52.3% 45.7% 2.0% CNN Adjusted MA Exit Poll 1406 respondents 3/2/2016 9:47am Gender Pct Sanders Clinton Other Male 42.0% 58.0% 41.0% 1.0% Female 58.0% 42.0% 57.0% 1.0% Recorded Vote 100.0% 48.7% 50.3% 1.0%

Change in final 109 exit poll respondents Total Sanders Clinton Unadjusted 1297 678 593 26 Adjusted 1406 685 707 14 Increase 109 7 114 -12

Ted Soares provided the following Exit Poll vs. Reported vote table on the Election Integrity Forum. Discrepancies in eight of nine exit polls favored Clinton in the reported vote. The average margin discrepancy was 8.5%, The 4.25% vote share discrepancy is far beyond the 9-poll margin of error (approximately 2%).

Cumulative Vote Shares

The diverging lines confirm the unadjusted exit poll and indicate fraud. Clinton’s cumulative vote share increases going from small to large towns. The vote shares should be nearly constant. At the 10% CVS mark, Sanders had 57%. He had 54% at the 25% mark. View the Town Precinct vote data.

National Exit Poll manipulation

In 2004 Kerry led the National Exit poll by 51-48% after the first 13047 respondents, but Bush had 50.8-48.3% (the recorded vote) at 13,660 respondents. When the unadjusted exit poll became available years later, it showed that Kerry won the 13,660 by 51.7-47.0%.

The pollsters had to switch 471 (6.7%) of Kerry’s 7,064 responders to Bush in order to match the recorded vote. Kerry had 51% at 4pm (8,349 respondents). His exit poll share increased to 51.7% at the final 13,660.

Unadjusted 2004 National Exit Poll… Margin of error: 1.1% Respondents Kerry Bush Other 13,660 7,064 6,414 182 Total 51.7% 47.0% 1.3%

In 2008 Obama had 61% in the unadjusted National Exit Poll (17,836 respondents), but just a 52.9% recorded share. The pollsters had to reduce Obama’s respondents from 10873 to 9430 (13.3%) in order to force a match to his 52.9% recorded vote.

Unadjusted 2008 National Exit Poll … Margin of error: 0.93%.

Respondents Obama McCain Other 17,836 10,873 6,641 322 Total 61.0% 37.2% 1.8%

Links

Matrix of Deceit: Forcing Pre-election and Exit Polls to Match Fraudulent Vote Counts

Proving Election Fraud: Phantom Voters, Uncounted Votes and the National Exit Poll (E-book)

LINKS TO WEB/BLOG POSTS FROM 2004

Election Fraud Overview

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1sGxtIofohrj3POpwq-85Id2_fYKgvgoWbPZacZw0XlY/pubchart?oid=899328808&format=image

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1sGxtIofohrj3POpwq-85Id2_fYKgvgoWbPZacZw0XlY/pubchart?oid=899328808&format=image