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Public Reports Suggest Bank of N. Dakota Corruptly Protecting State’s Political Class with Hundreds of Millions in Sketchy Loans, Concealed Losses

October 22, 2024 by admin

by Assistant Editor Oct. 22, 2024 10:00 am
Read PDF Here

 

North Dakota has the nation’s only state-run bank, the Bank of North Dakota (BND). The bank has over $10 billion in assets, and does not have to follow federal regulations, rules and laws. The bank is able to loan out billions with little to no oversight.

The oversight of the bank is limited to the state’s Governor, the Attorney General, and the State Agriculture Commissioner.

Every state-level public entity is required to keep their deposits with the bank, creating a class of ‘captive customers’ from whose deposits loans can then be made.

Reading between the lines of a $395,000 state taxpayer-funded report released midway through last month, according to the bank’s hired consultant, the bank is taking the state’s public entity deposits and delivering substandard returns, writing down approximately $475 million in bad loans every year and providing sweetheart loans and investments to others in the state.

Multiple anonymous sources have confirmed that the bank buys bad loans from private financial institutions. Critics wonder whether the bank’s ability to buy off bad private debt incentivize bad behavior by the state bank, or worse, force state taxpayers to foot the bill for bad loans to the politically-connected?

A businessman in North Dakota who asked to remain anonymous, said that the state’s other banks are highly pressured to align with the state’s financial institution. He has observed political pressure being applied to a bank, and said such pressure can be applied in a variety of ways. He suspects the pressure can be used to further political motives and potentially subsidize loans from the bank to the politically-connected and those who follow orders.

“What appears to going on here is that the bank is quietly supporting a large portfolio of bad investments. One banking executive said BND is buying bad loans off their books to keep them solvent. This raises a question as to the quality of the loans at BND, which politicians keep opaque. Whereas state entities with deposits should be getting a normal return in this market, they are likely getting negative returns through write-downs even though the bank is claiming it is turning a profit. Potentially, the bank loses several hundred million a year if it maintained its depositors’ funds like any other financial institution. This situation continues because people are too afraid to speak up.”

Current North Dakota U.S. Senator John Hoeven is a former President of the Bank. Hoeven was President of the Bank of North Dakota from 1993-2000, when he used that position to then become the state’s Governor from 2000-2010, and then has been one of the state’s Senators in Washington ever since. Hoeven owns shares in First Western Bank and Trust, headquartered in Minot, North Dakota, and serves as a member of that bank’s board. He has been accused by some watchdog groups of failing to avoid conflicts of interest relating federal legislation beneficial to his own bank.

Currently, Bank of North Dakota is exempt from public disclosure requirements that other governmental bodies operate under. In 2023, the bank’s auditor issued an adverse opinion, stating the bank fails to adhere to U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP). This lack of public oversight may add risks to adequate transparency and accountability, North Dakota State Senator Kent Weston suggests.

Another source suggests this practice protects the North Dakota political class and allows for questionable loans free from any public, legislator, media, or regulator, oversight. The Bank of North Dakota also handles financial reporting for many of the state’s smaller financial institutions, including FDIC insurance and compliance, as well as providing the back-end work for wire transfers and other IT services. Some private financial institutions in the state are using BND’s SWIFT code and are executing wire transfers through BND, as an example.

The Bank’s 2023 annual report makes some startling disclosures as to the quality of its multi-billion dollar loan portfolio. Almost $2.5 billion in loans are rated at best as “exhibiting the earliest signs of potential problems” with “unproven” or “somewhat erratic” cash flow, all the way to a deteriorated rating where “collection or liquidation” is “highly questionable and improbable”.

Critics wonder why the bank fails to ‘risk rate’ an additional $1.5 billion in loans on its books. $41 million out of $399 million bank stock loans are “unproven” or “somewhat erratic” in cash flow. The bank recorded nearly a quarter billion loss on unrealized securities in 2022, and an “off-balance sheet” risk of over $850 million in letters of credit and guarantees in 2023.

One source says BND has been in troubled financial straights before, and was bailed out with nearly a billion in ARPA money in 2021.

BND’s annual report – some of the best insight available publicly – utilizes reporting methods which may conceal potentially enormous risk, losses, and irregularities. All of this begs the question as to whether BND is benefiting North Dakota taxpayers, and whether BND’s willingness to accept billions in riskier lending bets may give the Governor and Attorney General, specifically, major influence over those on the receiving end of such contracts.

At a time when North Dakota is embroiled in new scandals, critics both within and outside of the government wonder whether the Governor and Attorney General are the right people to be controlling over $10 billion in unregulated banking assets and influencing billions of dollars in private sector loans and private bank subsidies.

Those recent scandals include the deletion of all emails from the office of the late Attorney General Wayne Stenehjem following his sudden death where no autopsy was performed, the recent sudden death of Stenehjem’s former Deputy Attorney General Troy Seibel who was at the center of the deleted emails scandal and a key witness as to what evidence was destroyed. Seibel died aged 48 last month, and his cause and location of death are still being withheld.

There was also the recent state scandal involving a federal guilty plea of former State Senator Ray Holmberg (R) for traveling to Prague to have sex with young boys. The plea was in exchange for prosecutors dropping child pornography charges against Holmberg. Holmberg was charged after Governor Burgum announced his bid for President, and Burgum’s current Attorney General Drew Wrigley then conveniently located some of Stenehjem’s deleted emails and the accusation last year in North Dakota newspapers was that state officials participated in an activity that may jeopardize national security and flight safety. Federal prosecutors working for the Biden administration let former educator Holmberg back out with no bail and no bond, just a promise that he’d be good.

Trending: 31,000 Mail-In Ballots Requested At Ineligible Addresses – In One Swing State!
Reports that Holmberg has violated the terms of his release, and is regularly online, have gone ignored by the Biden Department of Justice. Holmberg had received awards for delivering major projects through the legislature for government jurisdictions in the state, transactions that were very likely facilitated by the Bank of North Dakota.

This consolidation of the Bank of North Dakota’s power is concerning to North Dakota legislators who worry about the potential for its abuse and additional scandals.

According to Senator Weston, speaking exclusively to the Gateway Pundit, “The idea that our state entities would save $9.5 billion over 20 years – if they moved their deposits out of Bank of North Dakota – raises some questions. If the recent report is accurate, those potential savings amount to roughly one annual state budget in savings, or put another way, we could potentially cut 5% from our annual budget. If the bank is writing down deposits below market or perhaps delivering negative returns to our State entities because of bona fide development projects, then let’s talk about that, and about how it amounts to $475 million annually, and maybe I’ll support that with appropriate disclosures.”

Sen. Weston continued, “Otherwise, there are some serious discussions that need to take place at the legislature as to whether those underperforming deposits are wasting close to 5% of our State’s annual budget owing to ineptitude or something worse at BND. This would pay for one-third of our state’s property tax revenues, which are up for vote this November on Measure 4 to be eliminated.”

Senator Weston has observed instances of state officials with lending authority seeking to leverage a private investor, then retaliating against that investor. While this occurred outside of the bank, the Senator notes that the bank also failed to step in when it most likely ordinarily would have if the undertones were removed from that transaction. “We need to see the proper controls and separations so that all our citizens experience the ‘North Dakota nice’ that I grew up experiencing and believing in.”

The Bank of North Dakota was asked to comment on this story, and refused to respond. Our inquiry was referred to the bank’s governing authority, the Industrial Commission controlled by the state’s Governor, Attorney General, and Agricultural Commissioner.

Filed Under: Abuse, Banking, Child Abuse, News Tagged With: news articles

Criminal Referral Accuses DOJ’s Kristen Clarke of ‘Perjury,’ ‘False Statements’

July 17, 2024 by admin

Mary Margaret Olohan


FIRST ON THE DAILY SIGNAL—The Justice Department’s Kristen Clarke, assistant attorney general for civil rights, will be hit with three ethics complaints and a criminal referral Monday, The Daily Signal has learned.

Article III Project is filing both the ethics complaints and criminal referral, which calls upon Attorney General Merrick Garland to open a criminal probe into Clarke on the grounds that she “knowingly and willfully” made “materially false statements” and that she committed “perjury.”

“There is ample evidence to support this referral for false statements and perjury,” Mike Davis, founder and president of Article III Project, said in the criminal referral. Davis’ organization is focused on defending constitutionalist judges, opposing radical judicial nominees, and pushing back on “radical assaults on judicial independence” such as court-packing.

The Daily Signal depends on the support of readers like you. Donate now

The filings follow an April 30 report from The Daily Signal revealing for the first time that Clarke hid her arrest for a domestic violence incident and its subsequent expungement from investigators when she was awaiting Senate confirmation to her high-ranking Justice Department post.

Her ex-husband, Reginald Avery, has told The Daily Signal that Clarke attacked him with a knife, slicing his finger to the bone, while they were married in 2006. That record was later expunged, The Daily Signal confirmed.

Asked by Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., during her confirmation, “Since becoming a legal adult, have you ever been arrested for or accused of committing a violent crime against any person?” she responded, “No,” according to a 66-page document she submitted under oath to “Questions for the Record” from senators.

Clarke has not responded to requests for comment from The Daily Signal, though the DOJ previously acknowledged receipt of these requests. Following The Daily Signal’s initial report, Clarke told CNN she hid the arrest during her Senate confirmation but then alleged she was the victim of domestic violence at the hands of her ex-husband.

Avery told The Daily Signal he did not abuse his ex-wife.

“Avery has accused Kristen Clarke of a violent crime,” the Article III Project criminal referral states. “He also has alleged that local Maryland police arrested her. Police and court records corroborate the occurrence of the arrest.”

“Most crucially, Kristen Clarke acknowledged it in her statement to reporter Hannah Rabinowitz of CNN,” the criminal referral continues. “Kristen Clarke answered Senator Cotton’s question under oath in a manner contrary to her admission three years later.”

That criminal referral calls Clarke’s conduct “egregious,” arguing that Cotton asked her a straightforward question that she “willfully” and “knowingly” gave a false answer to.

“Kristen Clarke claims that she had an ‘option’ not to disclose this incident,” Davis continues in the referral. “This assertion shows an utter disregard for the role of the United States Senate in evaluating the worthiness of a nominee for confirmation. Neither Kristen Clarke nor the State of Maryland is entitled to decide what information the Senate deserves to know. That prerogative lies with the Senate. Senator Cotton asked a routine question, and Kristen Clarke failed to answer it honestly.”

That referral also points out that Garland has repeatedly stated that “nobody is above the law,” including former President Donald Trump.

“But,” Davis said, “with Garland’s refusal to take any action more than seven weeks after uncontroverted evidence and public reporting of Kristen Clarke’s perjury to the Senate, it is very clear Kristen Clarke is above the law.”

Article III Project also filed ethics complaints with the New York and Washington, D.C., offices of disciplinary counsel, as well as with the DOJ’s Office of Professional Responsibility.

The DOJ and Washington ethics complaints note that Clarke, like every other nominee who requires confirmation by the Senate, had to answer a series of questions under oath in both in writing and verbally.

“Kristen Clarke’s knowingly and willfully false answer to one of these questions constitutes the basis for this complaint,” the complaint to the DOJ states.

The New York ethics complaint accuses Clarke of violating the state’s code of professional conduct that prohibits lawyers from “engaging in illegal conduct that adversely reflects on the lawyer’s honesty, trustworthiness, or fitness as a lawyer.”

It also argues that Clarke’s “unambiguous answer to Senator Cotton’s question was dishonest because she denied an accusation and an arrest that had occurred”—a “misrepresentation” that was “material because such an accusation bears on the character and fitness of a nominee for a powerful government position, especially one that involves enforcement of our laws.”

“Kristen Clarke’s misrepresentation is aggravated by her continuing refusal to acknowledge it three years later,” the New York ethics complaint states. “Instead, she maintains that the Senate was not entitled to know the truth about the July 4, 2006, incident.”

The Daily Signal’s reporting on Clarke prompted calls for her to resign from Utah Sen. Mike Lee, a Republican, the New York Post Editorial Board, and others. In early May, a group of conservative leaders called on Clarke to resign from her leadership position in a letter they sent to the high-ranking DOJ official.

“The American people have lost trust in your ability to lead the Civil Rights Division,” reads the letter to Clarke signed by Advancing American Freedom Executive Director Paul Teller, American Accountability Foundation’s Tom Jones, Students for Life President Kristan Hawkins, and Catholic Vote President Brian Burch. “We request that you resign immediately.”

That letter repeatedly references The Daily Signal’s reporting and includes a copy of the original story. It also points to Clarke’s enforcement of the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act, also known as the FACE Act, against pro-life activists.

“The American people deserve a Civil Rights Division at the U.S. Department of Justice led with honesty and integrity,” the letter says. “Since taking over the Civil Rights Division, you have weaponized the Department of Justice by wielding the FACE Act against pro-life Americans in an unprecedented manner—even while standing idly by as churches and pro-life pregnancy centers are vandalized and Jewish students are unable to attend class on college campuses.”

Filed Under: DOJ, Government, News Tagged With: news articles

Postal Service Releases Final Report – Contract Driver Jesse Morgan Vindicated

July 17, 2024 by admin

Report CONFIRMS He Hauled Trailer of Ballots from NY to PA in Late October 2020
Jim Hoft


As The Gateway Pundit reported back in 2020, election fraud whistleblowers came forward in December following the controversial election, including one who witnessed the shipping of an estimated 144,000-288,000 completed ballots across three state lines on October 21 2020.

The information was made public at a press conference by the Amistad Project of the Thomas More Society, a national constitutional litigation organization.

The Amistad Project said at the time that they had sworn declarations that over 300,000 ballots were issued in Arizona, 548,000 in Michigan, 204,000 in Georgia, and over 121,000 in Pennsylvania.

They said that their evidence reveals multi-state illegal efforts by USPS workers to influence the election in at least three of six swing states.

The whistleblower statements included potentially hundreds of thousands of completed absentee ballots being transported across three state lines and a trailer filled with ballots disappearing in Pennsylvania.

Attorney Phil Kline said, “130,000 to 280,000 completed ballots for the 2020 general election were shipped from Bethpage, NY, to Lancaster, PA, where those ballots and the trailer in which they were shipped disappeared.”

Truck driver Jesse Morgan was present at the press conference and spoke for 9 minutes about his unbelievable ordeal. Morgan was tasked with delivering completed ballots to Pennsylvania from New York State.

This was explosive testimony.

Jesse Morgan: In total I saw 24 gaylords, or large cardboard containers of ballots, loaded into my trailer. These gaylords contained plastic trays, I call them totes or trays of ballots stacked on top of each other. All the envelopes were the same size. I saw the envelopes had return addresses… They were complete ballots.”

Jesse went on to say that he sat in Harrisburg for hours, and when he was told to leave, the supervisor at the post office would not give him a slip or an overtime slip so he could get paid. Jesse said the manager-supervisor was “kinda rude.”

Jesse’s testimony revealed that United States Post Office employees were in on the conspiracy to steal the votes.

The Gateway Pundit later discovered that rather than investigate this massive alleged crime, US Attorney General Bill Barr called up investigator Tony Shaffer and KILLED the investigation! He never lifted a finger to investigate this enormous act of election fraud!

In June 2022, The Gateway Pundit reported that the United States Postal Service investigated the allegations by the truck drivers – but they would NOT release their report.

Now this… The American Thinker published a report this weekend. The USPS finally released their report on the accusations of truck drivers hauling completed ballots across state lines into Pennsylvania before election day!

Jesse Morgan was exonerated. No wonder they hid this for a year!

The USPS is running ballots!

Via Joe Fried at American Thinker.

You might think that this is a yarn that Morgan made up, but you’d be wrong. In its highly-redacted “Closing Memorandum,” the Post Office Inspector General (OIG) does not deny that Morgan was a subcontractor truck driver who took mail from Bethpage to Harrisburg, and then to Lancaster. The OIG claims that Morgan identified the wrong trailer number, and that his estimate of ballots could be much lower.

In the document, the OIG acknowledges that a contractor in Rochester, New York printed 650,000 general election ballots that went to Pennsylvania. Of the total, 450,000 went to Philadelphia County and 200,000 went to Chester County. In explaining how the printing company delivered the ballots to the Pennsylvania counties, the OIG states:

[Redacted name of printing company] explained, but could not confirm, the ballots for both PA BOEs [Pennsylvania Boards of Elections] were most likely delivered to those respective locations by their delivery trucks, or entered in the mail stream locally in Rochester, NY (emphasis added).

So, after more than a year of investigation, the Post Office IG was still not sure if the two batches of printed ballots were shipped into Pennsylvania in trucks owned by the printing company, or were taken to Rochester-area post offices to be delivered in government trucks. Wouldn’t the Post Office know whether or not it delivered the 650,000 ballots?

Mark Mendlovitz has more:

2) …his integrity & bringing his past into the discussion, bcuz it couldn’t refute his charges.
The Post Office IG quietly commissioned an investigation, which apparently was completed over a year ago but was just released, for some mysterious reasons. The report is heavily…

— Mark Mendlovitz (@MendlovitzMark) June 4, 2023

4) …of ballots in a critical swing state, now officially confirmed by the Post Office OIG, be of concern to anybody but “MAGA conspiracy nuts?”)

It would be a real shame if Congress (@RepBryanSteil) were to call the USPS IG & Jesse Morgan himself to testify on this matter…

— Mark Mendlovitz (@MendlovitzMark) June 4, 2023

6) P.S. Given that we know the trailer went missing with hundreds of thousands of ballots, can anyone now claim that
end-to-end chain of custody of ballots, from printing to final counting, is not critical or that it was maintained here?

— Mark Mendlovitz (@MendlovitzMark) June 4, 2023

Filed Under: Absentee/mail ballots, Elections, Government, News Tagged With: Absentee, news articles

Four Stolen Elections: The Vulnerabilities of Absentee and Mail-In Ballots

July 17, 2024 by admin

By: Hans von Spakovsky

Election Law Reform Initiative Manager, Senior Legal Fellow

SUMMARY

All 50 states have bans on electioneering in and near polling places. By contrast, there are no prohibitions on electioneering in voters’ homes—which is what happens all too often with absentee ballots and voting by mail. This makes voters vulnerable to intimidation and unlawful “assistance,” as well as pressure by candidates, campaign staffers, political party activists, and political consultants—all of whom have a stake in the outcome of the election—to vote in the campaign’s interests, not their own. Absentee ballots are also more vulnerable to being misdirected, stolen, forged, and altered. This Legal Memorandum details four cases studies of election fraud committed through absentee and mail-in voting.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

Universal absentee or mail-in voting leaves America’s electoral system vulnerable to fraud, forgery, coercion, and voter intimidation. Uncovering instances of voter fraud is difficult, and those who commit fraud are often able to get away without repercussions. Preventing voter fraud is crucial for protecting election integrity, ensuring public confidence in the election system, and maintaining a stable democratic republic.

No one disputes the need for absentee or mail-in ballots for people who cannot make it to their neighborhood polling places on Election Day, such as because they are sick, physically disabled, or serving the country abroad, or because they cannot make it to the polls for some other legitimate reason. But changing the U.S. election system to no-fault absentee balloting, in which anyone can vote with a mail-in ballot without a reason, or to mail-only elections, in which voters no longer have the ability to vote in person, is an unwise and dangerous policy that would disenfranchise voters and make fraud far easier.

Mail-in ballots are completed and voted outside the supervision and control of election officials and outside the purview of election observers, destroying the transparency that is a vital hallmark of the democratic process. The many cases of proven absentee-ballot fraud in The Heritage Foundation’s Election Fraud Database1
The Heritage Foundation’s Election Fraud Database presents a sampling of recent proven instances of election fraud from across the country. This database is not an exhaustive or comprehensive list. It does not capture all cases and certainly does not capture reported instances that are not investigated or prosecuted. But it demonstrates the vulnerabilities in the election system and the many ways in which fraud is committed. See https://www.heritage.org/voterfraud.

show that mail-in ballots are susceptible to being stolen, altered, forged, and forced. In fact, a 1998 report by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement concluded that the “lack of ‘in-person, at-the-polls’ accountability makes absentee ballots the ‘tool of choice’ for those inclined to commit voter fraud.”2
“Voter Fraud Issues: A Florida Department of Law Enforcement Report And Observations,” Florida Department of Law Enforcement (Jan. 5, 1998), p. 2, http://www.ejfi.org/Voting/Voting-9.htm (accessed July 9, 2020).

All states have bans on electioneering in and near polling places. In contrast, there are no prohibitions on electioneering in voters’ homes.3
For a complete listing of state statutes banning electioneering in or near polling places, see “State Laws Prohibiting Electioneering Activities Within a Certain Distance of the Polling Place,” National Association of Secretaries of State (August 2016), https://www.nass.org/sites/default/files/surveys/2017-10/state-laws-polling-place-electioneering-2016.pdf (accessed July 9, 2020).

This makes voters vulnerable to intimidation and unlawful “assistance,” as well as pressure by candidates, campaign staffers, political party activists, and political consultants—all of whom have a stake in the outcome of the election—to vote in the campaign’s interests, not their own. Thus it also potentially destroys the secrecy of the ballot process, another basic and important hallmark of American elections for more than a century.

This type of electioneering is a particular problem in the 27 states that allow “vote harvesting,”4
For a detailed explanation of the problems with vote harvesting by third parties, see Hans A. von Spakovsky, “Vote Harvesting: A Recipe for Intimidation, Coercion, and Election Fraud,” Heritage Foundation Legal Memorandum No. 253 (Oct. 8, 2019), https://www.heritage.org/sites/default/files/2019-10/LM253_0.pdf.

as well as in the District of Columbia. These jurisdictions expressly allow any third party to pick up a completed absentee ballot from the voter and deliver it to election officials. Twelve of these states “limit the number of ballots an agent or designee may return,” but there is no information on whether that limitation is enforced.5
The 12 states are Arkansas, Colorado, Georgia, Louisiana, Maine, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, New Jersey, North Dakota, South Dakota, and West Virginia.

Vote harvesting is such a common practice in some states that harvesters (or ballot brokers) are paid by campaigns to collect absentee ballots from voters and “even have their own region-specific names. In Florida, they are known as ‘boleteros.’ In Texas, they are called ‘politiqueras.’”6
Eric Eggers, Ballot Fraud, American-Style…and Its Bitter Harvests, RealClearInvestigations (Dec. 13, 2018), https://www.realclearinvestigations.com/articles/2018/12/12/ballot_fraud_american-style_and_its_bitter_harvests.html (accessed Sept. 19, 2019).

The differing approaches to the return of absentee ballots can be seen in the contrast between, for instance, North Carolina and California. North Carolina allows (apart from the voter) only “a voter’s near relative or the voter’s verifiable legal guardian” to return an absentee ballot.7
N.C.G.S.A. § 163A–1298 and 1310.

California had a similar law, but amended it in 2016, effective in the 2018 election.8
AB 1921.

Prior to the change, only the relatives of a voter or someone living in the same household could return an absentee ballot.9
Luis Gomez, What Is “Ballot Harvesting” and How Was It Used in California Elections? San Diego Union-Tribune (Dec. 4, 2018), https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/opinion/the-conversation/sd-what-is-ballot-harvesting-in-california-election-code-20181204-htmlstory.html (accessed Sept. 19, 2019).

California eliminated that restriction and now allows a voter to “designate any person to return the ballot” (emphasis added), exposing California residents to intimidation and pressure in their homes by representatives of candidates, campaigns, and political parties.10
Cal. Elections Code § 3017.

Mail-in ballots certainly make illegal vote buying easier since the buyer can ensure that the voter is voting the way he is being paid to vote, something that cannot happen in a polling place. This is illustrated by the 2019 conviction of a city council candidate in Hoboken, New Jersey. Frank Raia was convicted for “orchestrating a widespread scheme” that targeted and bribed low-income residents for their absentee ballots in a 2013 election. Sources told a local reporter that “the operation began in 2009, when changes in state law eased requirements for voting by mail. Prior to that a resident needed to provide a reason why they couldn’t make it to the poll in order to get an absentee ballot.”11
Corey W. McDonald, Developer’s Conviction for Voter Fraud Reverberates Throughout Hoboken, The Jersey Journal (June 26, 2019), https://www.nj.com/hudson/2019/06/developers-conviction-for-voter-fraud-raises-questions-of-vote-by-mail-ballots-in-hoboken.html (July 9, 2020).

Mail-in elections and absentee ballots also subject the election process and the votes of the public to the problem of ballots being misdirected or not delivered by the Postal Service. According to a Public Interest Legal Foundation analysis of reports filed by the U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC) on the 2012, 2014, 2016, and 2018 elections, more than 28 million mail-in ballots effectively disappeared—their fate is listed as “unknown” by the EAC based on survey data sent to the EAC by state election officials.12
“28.3M Mail Ballots Went Missing from 2012–2018 Elections,” Public Interest Legal Foundation, https://publicinterestlegal.org/files/Mail-Voting-2012_2018-1P.pdf (accessed July 9, 2020). The biennial Election Administration and Voting Survey Reports published by the U.S. Election Assistance Commission can be found here: https://www.eac.gov/research-and-data/studies-and-reports (accessed July 9, 2020).

The EAC defines “unknown” as mail-in ballots that “were not returned by the voter, spoiled, returned as undeliverable, or otherwise unable to be tracked by your [state] office.”13
“2018 Election Administration and Voting Survey (EAVS),” U.S. Election Assistance Commission, https://www.eac.gov/sites/default/files/eac_assets/1/6/2018_EAC_Election_Administration_and_Voting_Survey_Instrument.pdf (accessed July 9, 2020).

The EAC lists another 2.1 million ballots as “undeliverable,” meaning they were returned by the U.S. Postal Service because the registered voter did not live at the registered address.

An example of the risk posed by relying on mail delivery for the important task of making sure that a voter’s ballot gets into the ballot box is illustrated by the April 7, 2020, primary election in Wisconsin. News reports indicated that many voters never received the absentee ballots they had requested, or received them too late. After the election, “3 large tubs of absentee ballots” were discovered in a mail-processing facility: They were apparently never delivered.14
Ruthie Hauge, “Postal officials investigating Wisconsin absentee ballots that were never delivered,” Wisconsin Public Radio (April 9, 2020), https://madison.com/ct/news/local/govt-and-politics/postal-officials-investigating-wisconsin-absentee-ballots-that-were-never-delivered/article_fecca2ca-7a8d-11ea-af47-87255ac26d72.html (accessed July 9, 2020); Patrick Marley, Alison Dirr, and Mary Spicuzza, Wisconsin Is Discovering Problems with Absentee Ballots, Including Hundreds that Were Never Delivered, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (April 8, 2020), https://www.jsonline.com/story/news/politics/elections/2020/04/08/wisconsin-election-3-tubs-ballots-found-mail-processing-center/2971078001/ (accessed July 9, 2020).

Similarly, “thousands of residents who requested an absentee ballot” for the June 2, 2020, primary election in the District of Columbia never received their requested absentee ballots.15
Mark Joseph Stern, “D.C.’s Election Was an Unmitigated Disaster,” Slate.com (June 3, 2020), https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2020/06/dc-election-curfew-police-long-lines.html (accessed July 9, 2020).

As a result, there were long lines at polling places when those voters showed up at the radically reduced number of polling places opened by the DC government.

According to the EAC reports, another 1.3 million completed absentee or mail-in ballots were rejected by election officials in the last four federal elections for not being in compliance with relevant state rules and regulations, including signature mismatches.16
News release, “Report: 28 Million Mail Ballots Went Missing in Past Decade,” Pubic Interest Legal Foundation (April 13, 2020), https://publicinterestlegal.org/blog/report-28-million-mail-ballots-went-missing-in-past-decade/ (accessed July 9, 2020).

This illustrates one of the other key drawbacks of absentee ballots. Unlike a polling place where there are election officials who can answer questions or resolve any problems an individual may have with her registration or other issues, there is no election supervisor in a voter’s home who can ensure that all of the information required by state law for an absentee ballot has been properly completed by the voter. This leads directly to the disenfranchisement of otherwise eligible voters.

States, such as Washington and Oregon, that have mail-only elections have similar problems. According to the EAC reports on the past four federal elections, Oregon listed more than 170,000 ballots as “undeliverable,” almost 29,000 ballots as “rejected,” and 871,737 ballots as “unknown.” Furthermore, in a survey of voters in just one Oregon county by an assistant professor at Portland State University, 5 percent of voters admitted that “other people marked their ballots, and 2.4% said other people signed their ballot envelopes.”17
A “Modern” Democracy That Can’t Count Votes, Los Angeles Times (Dec. 11, 2000), https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2000-dec-11-mn-64090-story.html (accessed July 9, 2020).

The professor suspected that “the real number is higher, because people are reluctant to admit being party to a crime,” but if that percentage held for the rest of the state, it would mean tens of thousands of illegal ballots.18
Id.

The professor told the Los Angeles Times that she did not have much faith in the process since she is able to forge her husband’s signature perfectly.19
Id. Illustrating this point, when the author of this Legal Memorandum worked for the Department of Justice, he attended a meeting of state election officials in Oregon. As the head of Oregon elections was telling the audience about how good the state’s security was, particularly its signature matching protocols, an election official from another state told the author that his sister-in-law, who lived in Oregon, had successfully voted three times without detection in the past election. She voted her ballot, her husband’s ballot after forging his signature, and a third ballot that had arrived for her by mail under her maiden name.

The experience of a Heritage Foundation colleague shows the type of problems that occur in a state such as Washington with mail-only elections when voter registration rolls are inaccurate. She grew up in King County, but has not lived in the state since 2012, and therefore is not an eligible voter in Washington. One of her sisters left Washington 10 years ago, registered in another state, and is also not eligible to vote in Washington. Another sister, who has Downs syndrome, has never been registered to vote by her family.

Yet every time there is an election, ballots are mailed to her parents’ home for all three sisters. Those ballots could easily be completed and returned by the parents, or forwarded to the sisters who live out of state to be completed and returned, and election officials would be none the wiser. The colleague’s father is particularly concerned that his daughter with Downs syndrome was somehow registered without his knowledge: “Someone could easily take advantage of her and cast a vote under her name.”

In fact, in the 2018 election, the EAC reports that King County had more than 13,000 ballots listed as “undeliverable,” illustrating the unreliability of its voter registration list, while the fate of 352,624 ballots was listed as “unknown.”20
News release, “Report: 28 Million Mail Ballots Went Missing in Past Decade,” Pubic Interest Legal Foundation (April 13, 2020), https://publicinterestlegal.org/blog/report-28-million-mail-ballots-went-missing-in-past-decade/ (accessed July 9, 2020).

That “unknown” category no doubt includes the ballots the county mistakenly mailed to the three sisters.

To understand the problems with, and the vulnerabilities of, absentee or mail-in ballots, it is useful to examine cases where fraud and voter intimidation have been proven. Here are four cases that illustrate many of these issues.21
For other Heritage case studies by this author on election fraud, including absentee ballots, see “Absentee Ballot Fraud: A Stolen Election in Greene Country, Alabama,” Heritage Foundation Legal Memorandum No. 31 (Sept. 5, 2008), https://www.heritage.org/election-integrity/report/absentee-ballot-fraud-stolen-election-greene-county-alabama; “Where There’s Smoke, There’s Fire: 100,000 Stolen Votes In Chicago,” Heritage Foundation Legal Memorandum No. 23 (April 16, 2008), https://www.heritage.org/election-integrity/report/where-theres-smoke-theres-fire-100000-stolen-votes-chicago; ”Stolen Identities, Stolen Votes: A Case Study in Voter Impersonation,” Heritage Foundation Legal Memorandum No. 22 (March 10, 2008), https://www.heritage.org/report/stolen-identities-stolen-votes-case-study-voterimpersonation; and “Election Fraud in the 2008 Indiana Presidential Campaign: A Case Study in Corruption,” Heritage Foundation Legal Memorandum No. 111 (Jan. 13, 2014), https://www.heritage.org/election-integrity/report/election-fraud-the-2008-indiana-presidential-campaign-case-study.

1. School Board Election, Fresno County, California—November 5, 1991
With its recent change of law to allow vote harvesting by candidates, political parties, campaign organizations, and political guns for hire, California seems to have forgotten the lessons it should have learned from Gooch v. Hendrix, a 1993 decision by the California State Supreme Court.22
Gooch v. Hendrix, 5 Cal.4th 266 (1993).

The court in that case overturned the results of consolidated school board elections in Fresno County due to fraud and “tampering” with absentee ballots.23
Gooch, 5 Cal.4th at 285.

The November 5, 1991, election was for school board positions in one high school and four elementary school districts. In essence, a local political organization, the Fresno Chapter of the Black American Political Association of California (BAPAC), took over the voter registration and absentee balloting process, completely controlling the application for, delivery to, completion of, and return of absentee ballots of minority voters. Additionally, a trial court found evidence of “fraud and tampering” with the absentee ballots by BAPAC.

BAPAC had an elaborate strategy orchestrated by Frank Revis, who headed BAPAC’s Voter Education Project, to deliver the absentee ballots necessary to win the 13 seats it had targeted in these school districts. The trial court found that the plan that BAPAC volunteers and paid staff carried out was to:

Visit registered and unregistered voters’ residences to get them to sign both a voter registration form and an absentee-ballot request form, under the proviso that BAPAC would deliver those forms to election officials and the requested ballot would be sent to BAPAC, not the voter;
Voters were told to leave blank the part of the absentee-ballot request form in which it asked for the address to which the absentee ballot should be sent;
BAPAC took the forms to its headquarters and filled in the address to which the absentee ballot should be sent—the address for the Voting Education Project, the home residence of Frank Revis;24
When third parties have access to completed absentee-ballot request forms, it gives them a sample of a voter’s signature, making forgery of the signature on an absentee ballot easy.

When BAPAC received the absentee ballots from election officials, BAPAC staff delivered the ballots to voters’ homes;
Voters were “encouraged to vote in the presence” of the BAPAC vote harvesters, who then collected the completed ballot for delivery to election officials.25
Id. at 272–273.

Given BAPAC’s unsupervised access to all of these absentee ballots, it is unsurprising that the group took advantage of voters, who, according to the BAPAC president, were targeted through a “highly selective process.”26
Id. at 281.

Numerous witnesses testified at a five-day trial about their experiences with BAPAC that illustrate all of the problems with, and vulnerabilities of, the absentee balloting process. The trial included the testimony of:

A voter who did not sign the absentee-ballot request form, nor the envelope for the absentee ballot, which had been sent to BAPAC; her signatures had been forged;
A voter who was “urged” by a BAPAC solicitor (through a translator) to “sign for the schools” and that it was “all right” for his daughter to sign his absentee-ballot application;
Another voter who said that three BAPAC staffers came to his door late at night, “told him for whom to vote,” and “were emphatic that he not seal his ballot.” They returned to his house when he was not home because he had not signed the ballot and told his wife “to sign her husband’s name for him”;
A voter who was told to sign a “petition for a free breakfast” that was actually an absentee-ballot request form—an absentee ballot was later mailed to election officials by BAPAC “ostensibly by him”; and
A voter who was visited by a candidate being supported by BAPAC along with a BAPAC staffer. The staffer filled out an absentee ballot without the voter’s consent, permission, or consultation.27
Gooch, 5 Cal.4th at 274.

Election officials sent almost 1,300 “requested” absentee ballots to BAPAC; 269 were never returned, and BAPAC could not account for what had happened to them. Of the remaining 1,023 ballots, 63 were disqualified for invalid signatures (signatures that did not match voter signatures on file); 93 were disqualified because there “had been fraud and tampering” with those ballots; and the rest were disqualified due to unlawful and illegal conduct by BAPAC, including using its own address for the absentee-ballot delivery address instead of that of the voters.28
Id. at 275–276.

One of the problems noted by the court, a problem which applies to many election fraud cases, is that “once illegal ballots are cast and comingled with the legal ballots, they cannot be traced to reveal for whom they were cast.”29
Id. at 277. In discussing the applicable law, the court referenced another fraud case in which votes were disqualified because the voters were nonresidents and others had been made illegal offers by city officials if they voted in favor of a city consolidation. See Canales v. City of Alviso, 3 Cal.3d 118 (1970).

But the election ended up being overturned by the California Supreme Court because the “widespread illegal voting practices that permeated this election—including fraud and tampering” with absentee ballots and other “illegal votes affected the outcomes of the consolidated elections.”30
Gooch, 5 Cal.4th at 285.

2. Mayoral Election, Miami, Florida—November 4, 1997
In the Miami mayoral election held on November 4, 1997, incumbent Joe Carollo won a plurality in a field of five candidates, but was 155 votes short of winning a majority. Carollo won a majority of the in-person precinct votes, but his challenger, Xavier Suarez, won a majority of the absentee ballots; Carollo “would have won outright on Nov. 4” if not for “Suarez’s lopsided advantage in absentees.”31
Joseph Tanfani and Karen Branch, $10 Buys One Vote: Dozens Cast Votes in Miami Mayoral Race–for $10 Each, Miami Herald (Jan. 11, 1998). One indicator of possible election fraud is when the ratio of absentee ballots cast for candidates is substantially different than the ratio of votes they received through in-person voting.

Carollo then lost the run-off election on November 13 when Suarez received two-thirds of the absentee votes cast in the election. However, the November 4 election was overturned, and Carollo was returned to office, after a court found evidence of widespread, massive fraud involving 5,000 absentee ballots.32
Will Lester, “Court: Carollo Is Mayor of Miami,” Associated Press (March 11, 1998).

A Miami-Dade County grand jury in 2012 summarized what happened:

In 1997, the City of Miami had one of its most memorable elections. The mayoral election for that year was plagued with widespread absentee ballot fraud. Many absentee ballots were filled out by boleteros, … one absentee ballot was cast in the name of a voter who was already dead, … charges were filed against fifty-five (55) persons, including a City of Miami Commissioner (charged with being Accessory After the fact to Voter Fraud), his Chief of Staff, and the Chief of Staff’s father. The Commissioner, Chief of Staff and the father were all convicted and sentenced to jail. Collectively, findings of guilt were entered against fifty-four (54) of the fifty-five (55) defendants and one was sent to a pretrial diversion program. On the civil side in a lawsuit filed by the mayoral candidate who lost the election, the judge found that fraud was involved in so many of the absentee ballots that he threw them out. That action resulted in the losing candidate being declared the winner of that mayoral election.33
Final Report of the Miami-Dade County Grand Jury, State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle, Circuit Court of the Eleventh Judicial Circuit of Florida in and for the County of Miami-Dade, Spring Term A.D. 2012 (Dec. 19, 2012), p. 1, https://www.miamisao.com/publications/grand_jury/2000s/gj2012s.pdf (accessed July 9, 2020).

As the grand jury explained in a footnote, and as previously mentioned, boleteros “roughly translated, means ‘ticket-person’ and is used for a person who assists in collecting absentee ballots, primarily helping elderly and disabled voters.” As case after case proves, all too often these boleteros do not just assist voters—they fill out the voters’ ballots or intimidate and pressure voters to vote for the candidates who are paying the boleteros to collect the ballots. Others go even further and alter the choices of the voters or forge witness and voter signatures, much of which seemed to have happened in the Miami case.

The Florida state court of appeals that upheld the findings of the trial court noted that the 1997 election was overturned because the evidence showed an extensive “pattern of fraudulent, intentional and criminal conduct that resulted in such an extensive abuse of the absentee ballot laws that it can fairly be said that the intent of these laws was totally frustrated.”34
In Re the Matter of the Protest of Election Returns and Absentee Ballots in the November 4, 1997 Election for the City of Miami, Florida, 707 So.2d 1170, 1171 (3d Dist. Ct. of Appeal of Fla. 1998).

The fraud was so pervasive that “the integrity of the election was adversely affected.”35
Id. at 1172.

Miami Commission District 3 was the focal point of the fraud; in fact, the district “was the center of a massive, well-conceived and well-orchestrated absentee ballot voter fraud scheme.”36
Id. at 1172.

The scheme included stolen ballots, ballots cast by voters using false registration addresses, ballots falsely witnessed, and hundreds of ballots cast that violated state statutory requirements or were “procured or witnessed by the 29 so-called ‘ballot brokers’ who invoked their privilege against self-incrimination instead of testifying at trial.”37
Id. at 1172.

One of the Suarez volunteers criminally charged in the case was caught “trying to buy fake absentee ballots that used the names of dead people” who were still on the voter registration roll, demonstrating the mischief that can be caused by the failure of election officials to maintain the accuracy of their voter rolls.38
Will Lester, “Court: Carollo Is Mayor of Miami,” Associated Press (March 11, 1998).

The ruling by the trial court also cited “witness after witness” who testified to “a catalogue of abuses that included ballots cast by persons who did not ask for an absentee ballot, who did not live in [Miami] or did not know the person who supposedly witnessed their signatures.”39
Donald P. Baker, New Mayoral Election Is Ordered for Miami, The Washington Post (March 5, 1998).

In a description that correctly summarizes the effect that fraud has on all of the voters in an election, the trial court concluded that the absentee-ballot fraud in the Miami mayor’s race “literally and figuratively, stole the ballot from the hands of every honest voter in the City of Miami.”40
So.2d at 1172.

Much of the wrongdoing in the election was uncovered through investigative reporting by the Miami Herald, which won a Pulitzer Prize in 1999 for this reporting—quite a contrast to the work of so many in the media today, who seem to spend most of their time trying to deny that election fraud occurs.41
Pulitzer Prizes, https://www.pulitzer.org/prize-winners-by-year/1999 (accessed July 9, 2020).

Among the findings of the Miami Herald’s extensive, in-depth investigation were:42
This summary of the findings of the Miami Herald’s investigation are from the series of articles the newspaper published that were considered by the Pulitzer board, including: Joseph Tanfani and Karen Branch, “$10 Buys One Vote: Dozens Cast Votes in Miami Mayoral Race–for $10 Each” (Jan. 11, 1998); Karen Branch et al., “The Outsiders: Voters Crossed the Line in Miami Non-residence No Bar at Polls” (Feb. 1, 1998); Karen Branch et al., “Dubious Tactics Snared Votes for Suarez, Hernandez” (Feb. 8, 1998); Karen Branch, Dan Keating, and Elaine DeValle, “Some Miami Employees Crossed the Line to Vote” (Feb. 9, 1998); Herald Special Report, “Felons Vote, Too–But It’s a Crime: Killers and Thieves Cast Miami Ballots” (Feb. 15, 1998); Joseph Tanfani, Karen Branch, and Manny Garcia, “Suarez Adviser Investigated in Vote Buying: He Supplied Cash, Ran Scheme, Witnesses Say” (Feb. 22, 1998); and Andres Viglucci, “Nonprofit Agency Collected Absentee Ballots” (April 5, 1998). All of these articles are available at https://www.pulitzer.org/winners/staff-44 (accessed July 9, 2020). See also Manny Garcia and Tom Dubocq, Unregistered Votes Cast Ballots in Dade; Dead Man’s Vote, Scores of Others Were Allowed Illegally, Miami Herald (Dec. 24, 2000).

Volunteers, including a former food stamp worker, who pressured elderly food-stamp recipients into voting for Suarez;
Inner-city, “poor and homeless” voters who were transported in “white vans and beat-up cars” to County Hall to vote by absentee ballot43
Some states have what is termed “in-person” absentee balloting where a person can vote using an absentee ballot at the county government’s election department prior to Election Day.

and then to the “back lot at St. John Baptist Church” where they were paid $10 apiece for their votes by “a man with a wad of cash”;
Among the numerous witnesses to this vote-buying operation was one who lived in an apartment overlooking the church lot (and took $10 himself) who estimated that the operation, which went on all day, paid off “300 or 400 people”;
The man “with a wad of cash” admitted that he had participated in “two or three” such vote-buying schemes in the past, a clear indication that this type of fraud was not unique to the 1997 mayor’s race;
Fraudulent absentee ballots coming from homes of supporters of a commissioner involved in the fraud;
A man who signed as a witness the absentee ballot of a voter who had been dead for four years, and who gathered dozens of other fraudulent ballots; that same dead voter had “voted three other times since his burial in a pauper’s grave”;
Other dead Miamians voted, including a Haitian immigrant (and U.S. citizen) who voted in his first and only election in 1996; he died in May 1997, and his registration was cancelled by election officials; however, his name was “resurrected” at a polling place in the mayor’s race when his name was “handwritten on…the precinct voter roll, along with an obvious forgery of his signature”;
Many votes by nonresidents, including employees of the city, “even though their homes are miles outside city limits”; “records show that many had been voting for years, in election after election—cancelling the votes of real Miami residents and taxpayers”;
Campaign workers who “registered people to vote at addresses where they didn’t live, … punched44
In 1997, Miami was still using punch card voting machines; “punching” the ballot means a hole was punched in the punch card with a stylus next to the candidate’s name—this is how punch card ballots were completed.

voters’ absentee ballots without permission, … cast ballots in the names of people who insist they did not vote, … signed dozens of ballots as witnesses even though they weren’t present when the voters signed the envelopes”;
Similar behavior by a nonprofit organization barred by law from engaging in political activity that had received two million dollars in grants from city officials, including completing absentee ballots without the permission of voters;
Elderly voters who said “someone cast ballots in their names” and voters who said “they didn’t vote” and that the “signatures on the [absentee] ballots are forgeries”;
Six adult members of the same family, registered at the same address in Miami, all of whom voted in the election even though only one of them lived in Miami (this was just one of numerous such examples); and
Votes by convicted felons who had not yet regained their right to vote, including muggers, con artists, car thieves, robbers, drug traffickers, murderers, a flasher who beat his cellmate to death, and an ex-Miami detective who “covered up the murder of a drug dealer.”
Although this case concentrated on absentee ballots, the Miami Herald’s investigation found that dozens of “ineligible voters came and voted at the poll,” too.

One poignant story uncovered by the Miami Herald demonstrates how elderly and disabled voters can easily be manipulated and pressured in their homes, hospitals, or nursing homes where there are no election officers or poll watchers to supervise or observe the voting process. “I was taken advantage of” Ada Perez told the investigative reporters. A campaign operative tracked down Perez, 70, at the hospital where she was recovering from a severe stroke. She described how the operative “badgered her to vote for Suarez, then finally took her ballot and punched it for her.” Her “eyes welling with tears,” Perez said her “vote was stolen…. They know our eyesight is not good and we are not well. What kind of person would take advantage of the elderly?”45
Karen Branch et al., Dubious Tactics Snared Votes for Suarez, Hernandez, Miami Herald (Feb. 8, 1998).

Although the trial court had ordered a new election due to the widespread fraud, the court of appeals overruled that decision and instead reinstated Carollo as the mayor since he won a majority of the votes once the fraudulent ballots were discounted. The court said that the proper remedy “and the public policy of the State of Florida” in the face of “massive absentee voter fraud” was “to not encourage such fraud” by holding a new election:

Rather, it must be remembered that the sanctity of free and honest elections is the cornerstone of a true democracy…. [W]ere we to approve a new election as the proper remedy following extensive absentee voting fraud, we would be sending out the message that the worst that would happen in the face of voter fraud would be another election…. Further, we refuse to disenfranchise the more than 40,000 voters who, on November 4, 1997, exercised their constitutionally guaranteed right to vote in the polling places of Miami…. [P]ublic policy dictates that we not void those constitutionally protected votes…. [A] candidate who wins an election by virtue of obtaining a majority of the votes cast is entitled to take office as a result thereof, and not be forced into a second election…when the said second election only comes about due to absentee ballot fraud, in the first election, that favored one of his or her opponents.46
In Re the Matter of the Protest of Election Returns and Absentee Ballots in the November 4, 1997 Election for the City of Miami, Florida, 707 So.2d at 1174.

3. Democratic Mayoral Primary Election, East Chicago, Indiana—May 6, 2003
The absentee-ballot fraud that occurred in the 2003 mayoral primary in East Chicago, Indiana, was so pervasive that the U.S. Supreme Court cited it as an example of proven fraud when it upheld Indiana’s new voter ID law in 2008. In Crawford v. Marion County Election Board, the Supreme Court noted that “Indiana’s own experience with fraudulent voting in the 2003 Democratic primary for East Chicago Mayor—though perpetrated using absentee ballots and not in-person fraud—demonstrate [sic] that not only is the risk of voter fraud real but that it could affect the outcome of a close election.”47
Crawford v. Marion County Election Board, 128 S.Ct. 1610, 1619 (2008).

That is certainly what happened in East Chicago, and it is why the Indiana Supreme Court overturned the results of the election.48
Pabey v. Patrick, 816 N.E.2d 1138 (Ind. 2004).

George Pabey was challenging the incumbent mayor, Robert Pastrick. Of the 8,227 votes cast on Election Day, Pabey received 199 more votes than the incumbent mayor. But of the 1,950 absentee ballots cast, the mayor had 477 more votes than Pabey, giving the incumbent a victory with a margin of 278 votes.49
Pabey, 816 N.E.2d at 1140.

However, the trial judge concluded after a week-and-a-half trial, and hearing from 165 witnesses, that the mayor and his cronies had “perverted the absentee voting process and compromised the integrity and results of that election.” The judge found “direct, competent, and convincing evidence that established the pervasive fraud, illegal conduct, and violations of elections law” that proved the “voluminous, widespread and insidious nature of the misconduct.”50
Id.

The fraud “compromised the integrity and results of that election.”51
Id. at 1144.

The “pervasive fraud and illegal conduct” included, but, as the judge noted, was not limited to, the following:

“a predatory pattern” by Pastrick supporters of “inducing voters that were first-time voters or otherwise less informed or lacking in knowledge of the voting process, the infirm, the poor, and those with limited skills in the English language, to engage in absentee voting”;
“providing compensation [bribes] and/or creating the expectation of compensation to induce voters to cast their ballot via the absentee process”;
“assisting” voters in completing their ballots, that is, pressuring people to vote for Pastrick, and directly watching the voters while they “marked and completed their absentee ballots”;
“the use of vacant lots or the former residences of voters on applications for absentee ballots”;
“the possession of unmarked absentee ballots by Pastrick supporters and the delivery of those ballots to absentee voters”;
“the possession of completed and signed ballots” by Pastrick operatives even though they were not authorized by law to have those ballots;
“the routine completion of substantive portions of absentee ballot applications by Pastrick supporters to which applicants simply affixed their signatures,” which were then delivered to Pastrick’s campaign headquarters and photocopied before delivery to election officials; and
votes cast by city employees “who simply did not reside in East Chicago.”52
Id. at 1145–1146.

The trial judge said that this primary provided a “textbook” example of the “chicanery that can attend the absentee vote cast by mail…. [I]nstances where the supervision and monitoring of voting by Pastrick supporters and the subsequent possession of ballots by those malefactors are common.” The judge also determined that Pastrick supporters preyed on “the naïve, the neophytes, the infirm and the needy,” subjecting them to “unscrupulous election tactics.”53
Id. at 1146.

This case illustrates that, all too often, those targeted by absentee-ballot vote thieves are the most vulnerable in society. In 2012, Anthony DeFiglio, a local Democratic committeeman in Troy, New York, pleaded guilty to falsifying business records in a case involving absentee-ballot fraud in a 2009 primary election. Voters’ signatures were forged on absentee-ballot request forms, submitted without their knowledge, and then their absentee ballots were fraudulently completed and submitted without their knowledge.54
Eric Shawn, “Voter Fraud ‘a Normal Political Tactic’ in Upstate NY City,” Fox News (Jan. 17, 2012), https://www.foxnews.com/politics/voter-fraud-a-normal-political-tactic-in-upstate-ny-city.

The voters whose ballots had been stolen lived in low-income housing and, when asked why they had been targeted, DeFiglio told investigators that those voters were “a lot less likely to ask any questions.”55
Id.

Another Democratic operative who admitted to forging absentee-ballot applications said that he had “been present when ‘ballots were voted correctly’ by party operatives. Voted correctly is a term used for a forged application or ballot.”56
Id. For another case in which minority voters were targeted with an absentee-ballot fraud scheme, see Hans A. von Spakovsky, “Absentee Ballot Fraud: A Stolen Election in Greene Country, Alabama,” Heritage Foundation Legal Memorandum No. 31 (Sept. 5, 2008), https://www.heritage.org/election-integrity/report/absentee-ballot-fraud-stolen-election-greene-county-alabama.

The Pabey case also illustrates the difficulty of detecting and investigating election fraud. This fraud occurred right under the noses of local election officials and prosecutors. The only reason it was discovered is because the losing candidate, George Pabey, challenged the outcome, a very expensive and resource-intensive task. The trial judge was “cognizant of the difficulties faced by Pabey in discovering and presenting evidence” of the fraud, stating:

Given the voluminous, widespread and insidious nature of the misconduct, petitioner Pabey, his legal counsel, and amateur investigators faced a herculean task of locating and interviewing absentee voters, visiting multi-family dwellings and housing projects, gathering and combing through voluminous election documents, and analyzing, comparing, sifting and assembling the information necessary to present their case…. In short, the time constraints that govern election contests, primarily designed to serve important interests and needs of election officials and the public interest in finality, simply do not work well in those elections where misconduct is of the dimension and multi-faceted variety present here. 57
Pabey, 816 N.E.2d at 1146–1147.

Moreover, the judge noted another problem in any investigation of absentee-ballot fraud: the “reluctance [of] voters to candidly discuss the circumstance surrounding their absentee vote.” The judge observed that, “It is wholly natural, of course, that voters would be reluctant to expose themselves to potential criminal liability.” Additionally, supporters of the incumbent mayor “were involved in various attempts to influence or prevent witnesses’ testimony…including instructing a witness to ‘feign a lack of knowledge on the witness stand.’”58
Id. at 1147.

This even included a local judge who told “prospective witnesses that they did not have to testify unless they had been paid a $20.00 witness fee.”59
Id., footnote 3.

The Indiana State Supreme Court also discussed the difficulty faced by judges and courts in evaluating “deliberate conduct committed with the express purpose of obscuring the election outcome based on legal votes cast” that is “more invidious and its results difficult to ascertain and quantify.” This includes “schemes that seek to discourage proper and confidential voting or that endeavor to introduce unintended or illegal votes into the outcome [that] will inevitably produce outcome distortions that defy precise quantification.”60
Pabey, 816 N.E.2d at 1150.

The court found that a new election was not only justified, it was “compelled” because “a deliberate series of actions occurred making it impossible to determine the candidate who received the highest number of legal votes cast in the election.”61
Id. at 1151.

4. Congressional Election, Ninth District, North Carolina—November 6, 2018
The only challenged congressional race in the 2018 federal election was in the Ninth Congressional District in North Carolina, a district that spans “eight counties along the State’s central southern border.”62
In the Matter of Investigation of Election Irregularities Affecting Counties Within the 9th Congressional District, Before the State Board of Elections, State of North Carolina, Order (March 13, 2019) (hereafter “North Carolina Order”), p. 3, https://www.democracydocket.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/41/2020/03/North-Carolina-Election-Contest-Order_03132019.pdf (accessed July 9, 2020).

The incumbent, Representative Robert Pittenger (R), had been defeated in the Republican primary by Mark Harris. Harris faced his Democratic opponent, Dan McCready, in the November 6 general election.

After the votes were tallied at the end of Election Day, Harris had apparently defeated McCready by 905 votes, a margin of only 0.3 percent of all the ballots cast in the election.63
Id. at 10. The number of votes received by each candidate was as follows: Harris (139,246); McCready (138,341); and Jeff Scott (5,130).

The “number of returned absentee ballots [10,500] far exceeded the margin between Harris and McCready.”64
Id. at 3.

However, the North Carolina State Board of Elections (“the Board”) refused to certify the results of the election when evidence surfaced of “concerted fraudulent activities related to absentee by-mail ballots,” including illegal vote harvesting by a political consultant and his associates.65
Id. at 4.

In North Carolina, only the voter and “a voter’s near relative or the voter’s verifiable legal guardian” is allowed to return a completed absentee ballot to election officials.66
N.C.G.S.A. §§ 163A-1298 and 1310.

After an intensive investigation that included 142 voter interviews and “30 subject and witness interviews,”67
In the Matter of Investigation of Election Irregularities Affecting Counties Within the 9th Congressional District, Before the State Board of Elections, State of North Carolina, Preview of Evidence, p. 2.

as well as public hearings, the Board overturned the results of both the congressional race and two local contests, ordering a new election. The Board concluded that the election “was corrupted by fraud, improprieties, and irregularities so pervasive that its results are tainted as the fruit of an operation manifestly unfair to the voters and corrosive to our system of representative government.”68
North Carolina Order at 2.

The evidence of a “coordinated, unlawful, and substantially resourced absentee ballot scheme” was “overwhelming.”69
Id. at 9.

The absentee-ballot scheme was “enabled by a well-funded and highly organized criminal operation” run by Leslie McCrae Dowless, Jr., a well-known political gun for hire in North Carolina and convicted felon (for insurance fraud) who had worked for numerous candidates. In this election, he was being funded by the Harris campaign (as well as other candidates, such as Bladen County Sheriff candidate James McVicker) through a consulting firm called Red Dome Group, but he had previously worked for Democratic candidates, too.70
Id. at 10 and 12. See also Dan Kane and Ely Portillo, ‘The Guru of Bladen County’ Is at the Center of NC’s Election Troubles, The News & Observer (April 23, 2019), https://www.newsobserver.com/news/politics-government/article222806255.html (accessed July 9, 2020).

Among the findings of the Board were the following:71
This summary of the evidence is all from the North Carolina Order unless otherwise indicated.

Absentee ballot “requests were fraudulently submitted under forged signatures, including a deceased voter”;
Dowless paid workers he hired “in cash to collect absentee request forms, to collect absentee ballots, and to falsify absentee ballot witness certifications”; their pay depended on how many forms they collected;
In addition to using blank absentee-ballot request forms, Dowless would “pre-fill” the forms using information on voters obtained from prior elections, so that his workers could have the voters simply sign the form—which sometimes included Social Security and driver’s license numbers and birth dates as well;
The absentee-ballot request forms were photocopied before being turned into election officials for later use in other elections or for other purposes;
Because Dowless “maintained photocopies of completed absentee by mail request forms from prior elections—including voters’ signatures and other information used to verify the authenticity of a request—Dowless possessed the capability to submit forged absentee by mail request forms without voters’ knowledge and without detection by elections officials”;
Dowless would withhold the absentee ballot request forms and only submit them “at times strategically advantageous to his ballot operation,” and he would track when “ballots had been mailed by elections officials using publicly available data”;
One of the Dowless staffers even started forging her mother’s name as a witness on absentee-ballot envelopes because “she had witnessed too many” such envelopes under her own name and signature;
During the general elections, “some voters discovered” that absentee-ballot request forms “were submitted on their behalf, but without their knowledge, consent, or signature”;
Dowless and his workers would go to voters’ homes after absentee ballots had been delivered to collect the ballots, often signing as witnesses, even though they had not seen the voter sign the ballots, and pressuring voters by “push[ing] votes for Harris”;
Other absentee ballots were collected uncompleted, and Dowless and his crew “fraudulently voted blank or incomplete” ballots at “Dowless’s home or in his office”;
Dowless took other steps, designed to avoid raising any “red flags” with election officials, that provide a practical playbook for avoiding detection by election officials of large-scale absentee-ballot fraud involving literally hundreds of ballots.72
Some may claim that the fraud did not work since his criminal conduct in this election was discovered, but there is evidence that he had engaged in this same type of absentee-ballot fraud in prior elections, which were not overturned. In fact, North Carolina election officials “sought criminal charges after the 2016 election” against Dowless, “but prosecutors didn’t indict him.” If they had, he would not have been in a position to corrupt the 2018 election, an object lesson in what happens when prosecutors fail to prosecute election fraud. Michael Biesecker, Jonathan Drew, and Gary D. Robertson, “North Carolina Officials Sought to Charge Political Operator,” Associated Press (Dec. 19, 2018), https://apnews.com/58695ada638841e58b8392e3c1d68528 (accessed July 9, 2020).

These included:

Delivering small batches of absentee ballots to the post office;
Ensuring that ballots were mailed from post offices geographically close to where the voter whose ballot had been stolen lived;
Dating the false witness signatures with the same date as the voter’s signature;
Using the same color ink for witness signatures as the voter’s signature, even “tracing over existing signatures to ensure conformity”;
Ensuring that stamps were “not placed in such a way as to raise a red flag for local elections administrators,” such as “affixing the stamp upside-down”;
Taking some “collected ballots back to the voter for hand delivery [by the voter] to the local Board of Elections”; and
Limiting the number of times false witness signatures appeared on ballots.73
North Carolina Order at 20–21.

Dowless would not testify before the Board after it refused to grant him immunity. The Board found that in addition to his election fraud, he engaged in “witness tampering and intimidation” to “obstruct the Board’s investigation.”74
Id. at 24–25, 37.

Even candidate Mark Harris acknowledged to the Board that the testimony he heard before the Board convinced him that “a new election should be called.”75
Id. at 41.

Due to the “coordinated, unlawful, and well-funded absentee ballot scheme” that “perpetrated fraud and corruption upon the election,” the Board ordered a new election, since it was not possible for the Board to “determine the precise number of ballots” that were affected.76
Id. at 42–44. In addition to the absentee-ballot fraud, the board also found two other “irregularities” in the election: (1) disclosure of early voting results in Bladen and Robeson Counties, and (2) a lack of office security in the board of elections office in Bladen County. Id.. at 10.

A special election was held on September 10, 2019, and Dan Bishop (R), who replaced Harris as the Republican nominee after a new election was called, beat Dan McCready, the Democratic candidate who had lost to Mark Harris in the original election.77
Alex Seitz-Wald and Leigh Ann Caldwell, “Republican Dan Bishop wins narrow victory in North Carolina special election,” NBC News (Sept. 10, 2019), https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2020-election/north-carolina-special-election-mccready-bishop-n1052021 (accessed July 9, 2020).

In February 2019, Dowless was indicted by a Wake County grand jury on charges of felony obstruction of justice, conspiracy to obstruct justice, possession of absentee ballots, and perjury in connection to both the 2016 general election and 2018 primary election; and a superseding indictment adding perjury and solicitation of perjury to the charges was returned in July 2019. Six other individuals who worked for Dowless also were charged in the absentee-ballot scheme.78
Carli Brosseau, Josh Shaffer, Dan Kane, and Will Doran, Bladen County Political Operative Faces New Perjury, Obstruction of Justice Charges, The News & Observer (July 30, 2019), www.newsobserver.com/article233308957.html (accessed July 9, 2020).

The charges are still pending, although the legal problems faced by Dowless worsened in April 2020 when he was charged by federal prosecutors with Social Security fraud for receiving disability benefits while he was paid $130,000 in political consulting fees.79
Will Doran, Political Operative McCrae Dowless Accused of Social Security Fraud in New Indictment, The News & Observer (April 21, 2020), www.newsobserver.com/news/politics-government/article242174111.html (accessed July 9, 2020).

Conclusion
All of these cases illustrate the vulnerability of absentee or mail-in voting to fraud, forgery, coercion, and voter intimidation. Many of the elements found in these cases are currently being uncovered in an absentee-ballot fraud case unfolding in Paterson, New Jersey, involving the city’s May 12, 2020, mail-in municipal election; four individuals, including a city councilman, have already been charged by the state attorney general.80
Jonathan Dienst, “Paterson City Council Vice President Among 4 Charged with Voting Fraud in May Special Election: NJAG,” NBC4 New York (June 25, 2020), https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/politics/paterson-city-council-vice-president-among-4-charged-with-voting-fraud-in-may-special-election-nj-ag/2484797/ (accessed July 10, 2020).

Uncovering such schemes is resource-intensive and requires extensive and in-depth investigations. The admissions made by defendants and other witnesses also indicate that such unlawful actions have often occurred in prior elections without detection, investigation, or prosecution.

As Anthony DeFiglio told state police in Troy, New York, such fraud was “a normal political tactic” used by “both sides of the aisle.” Apparently, forging and stealing absentee ballots was commonplace in Troy.81
DeFiglio pleaded guilty to falsifying business records in an absentee-ballot fraud scheme that involved fraudulent absentee-ballot request forms and the submission of fake ballots with forged voter signatures; voters did not even know that ballots had been submitted in their names. Eric Shawn, “Voter Fraud ‘a Normal Tactic’ in Upstate NY City,” Fox News (Dec. 17, 2012), https://www.foxnews.com/politics/voter-fraud-a-normal-political-tactic-in-upstate-ny-city (accessed July 9, 2020); and Eric Shawn, “They Tried to Steal an Election, N.Y. Voter Fraud Scheme Case Heats Up,” Fox News ( Dec. 20, 2009), https://www.foxnews.com/politics/they-tried-to-steal-an-election-n-y-voter-fraud-case-heats-up (accessed July 9, 2020).

DeFiglio’s patronizing statement that low-income voters were targeted because “they are a lot less likely to ask questions” about their ballots82
Eric Shawn, “Officials Plead Guilty in New York Voter Fraud Case,” Fox News (Dec. 21, 2011), https://www.foxnews.com/politics/officials-plead-guilty-in-new-york-voter-fraud-case (accessed July 9, 2020).

illustrates why, all too often, other perpetrators of absentee-ballot fraud target poor, disabled, and minority voters.

Preventing this type of fraud is important to securing the integrity of the election process and ensuring public confidence in election outcomes, which is an essential ingredient of a stable democratic republic. Encouraging even more mail-in voting and relaxing security protocols, such as witness or notarization requirements, is a dangerous policy.

Filed Under: Absentee/mail ballots, Elections, Government, News Tagged With: Absentee, news articles

Doctors muzzled during COVID get green light for revenge on overlords

July 11, 2024 by admin

Coordinated campaigns to ‘censor and chill the speech of physicians’

By Bob Unruh, of WND : Read Full Article on WND

Physicians who were threatened and abused by various tyrannical credentialing boards that sought to suppress anything but the official government story line about COVID-19 have been given the go-ahead by the courts to sue.

The case was brought by the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons Education Foundation against the American Board of Internal Medicine, the American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology, the American Board of Family Medicine and the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security over various situations in which those organizations threatened or actually acted against doctors because of what they said about COVID.

Their medical opinions essentially contradicted the government’s talking points about taking various experimental shots, which evidence now shows have been extremely damaging to thousands of people.

The challenge focused on the coordinated campaigns to “censor and chill the speech of physicians,” with special targeting of those who criticized the unfounded positions taken by White House adviser Anthony Fauci, lockdowns, masks and more.

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A district judge had claimed that the AAPS “lacked standing,” but a decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit has reversed that dismissal.

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It’s headed back to the lower courts for discovery, and potentially a full trial.

A report in the Federalist documented the ruling.

“The AAPS Educational Foundation brought the case because of a series of physicians who were being threatened with loss of their board certification because they had made comments that were either critical of the COVID0 vaccines or that advocated for early treatment with repurposed drugs,” explained AAPS chief Jane Orient.

“Particularly bad were the three defendants of the internal board who were also engaged in threatening physicians who supported the overturning of Roe v. Wade or had anything to say about abortion and its side effects.”

Dr. Ryan Cole, Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wisc., and Dr. Peter McCullough at a roundtable in Washington, D.C., on the COVID-19 vaccines and the link to injuries
The case also cited the egregious censorship schemes that were being developed by Homeland Security’s Disinformation Governance Board which, Orient explained, “was devoted to seeking out and finding ‘disinformation,’ ‘malinformation,’ and, or pressuring people, including those on specialty boards and social media companies, to take action.”

Public outrage that the government would assemble such a force prompted that particular coalition to be disbanded, but that doesn’t mean that scheme has been abandoned.

When physicians made public comments, press comments, testified in hearings – and their statements did not align with the Biden administration’s political agenda – they were threatened with loss of their credentials, which in many cases could mean the loss of their income.

The power structure simply labeled, without evidence, dissenting opinions as “misinformation, disinformation, and malinformation,” the case charged.

One facing punishment was Dr. Peter McCullough, a professor of medicine for decades, who was forced into independent practice over his views after those in “academic practice” refused to allow him free speech.

He questioned, during a state legislative hearing, the experimental shots, and the ABIM later adopted a rule about “misinformation” and retroactively applied it to him, the report said.

McCullough confirmed to The Federalist he provided documentation and evidence regarding his opinions on COVID, but the organization refused to accept it.

The power structure lined up against the dissenting doctors including those credentialing agencies as well as insurance companies that would refuse to provide compensation for treatment if the doctor’s opinion differed from theirs.

Lawyer Andrew Schlafly, litigating for AAPS, said, “Viewpoint-based censorship of freedom of speech is one of the most important issues today, and essential to the future of both our country and the ability of patients to obtain quality medical care. It is vital that we restore freedom of speech and end improper interference with it. Physicians must be able to speak candidly about issues of public concern without fear of retaliation.”

Filed Under: Covid, Government, News Tagged With: news articles

COVID-19 and Federalism: Public Officials’ Accountability and Comparative Performance

May 29, 2024 by admin

Authors: Doug Badger and Robert Moffit
Read the Article on Heritage.org

SUMMARY

Never has a major public health crisis been politicized as much as public officials’ response to COVID-19. The flashpoints of controversy have ranged from the efficacy of masks, therapeutics, and vaccines to business and school closures and comprehensive lockdowns. Large and diverse states such as California, Florida, New York, and Texas took markedly different approaches to lockdowns and mask mandates. The evidence shows that Florida and Texas had health outcomes similar to California’s and better than New York’s while maintaining much lower unemployment rates. As the pandemic subsides, there should be a calm and bipartisan assessment of public officials’ performance—what went right, what went wrong, and what changes should be made.

KEY TAKEAWAYS
As the pandemic subsides, there should be a critical look at how state and federal public officials acted. Federalism helps show the efficacy of various approaches.
While the federal government rightly relaxed regulations and promoted rapid production of vaccines, too many bureaucratic barriers hindered an effective response.
Lawmakers should address the big failures, such as confusing messages to the public, an overreliance on flawed data, and disastrous societal lockdowns.

Article

In the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, public officials—state and federal, elected and non-elected, career and noncareer—must be held accountable for their performance in this national health emergency.

America’s constitutional order facilitates such accountability. The United States is a federal republic, with a division of powers between the general government of the nation, authorized to exercise specified national responsibilities, and state governments, provided with broad authority to exercise powers far beyond those allotted to the national government. In No. 45 of The Federalist, James Madison neatly summarizes that dual allocation: “The powers delegated by the proposed Constitution to the federal government are few and defined. Those which are to remain in the State governments are numerous and indefinite.”

The Founders recognized that federalism accommodates America’s pluralistic political culture while promoting innovation in public policy. Curiously, with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, some commentators have viewed American federalism as a disability rather than a strength. Writing in the JAMA Forum, a group of researchers remark, “During an emergency when the health of the nation depends on acting with coordination and cooperation, the failure of federalism comes into sharp relief, forcing us to reconsider one of the most deeply held American beliefs: that decisions made closer to home are inherently better.”1

Sarah Gordon, Nicole Huberfeld, and David K. Jones, “What Federalism Means for the US Response to Coronavirus Disease 2019,” JAMA Forum, May 8, 2020, doi:10.1001/jamahealthforum.2020.0510 (accessed July 1, 2021).

The JAMA Forum authors point to a lack of efficient coordination, different policies, and inferior outcomes for minorities.2

This is somewhat ironic, given the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC’s) bungling of critical diagnostic testing and effective communication, both essential components of pandemic response. As USA Today notes, “The CDC’s leadership went on to fail Latino, Black and Native American communities and low-income neighborhoods.” Brett Murphy and Letitia Stein, “How the CDC Failed Health Officials Desperate for COVID-19 Help,” USA Today, January 26, 2021, https://www.usatoday.com/in-depth/news/investigations/2020/09/16/how-cdc-failed-local-health​-officials-desperate-covid-help/3435762001/ (accessed July 1, 2021).

In fact, federalism has fostered policy innovation, enabled state officials to avoid misguided measures, and allowed them to secure better public health and economic outcomes. Regarding the COVID-19 pandemic, America’s constitutional order facilitates holding public officials accountable for their performance in this national health emergency.

The Advantages of Federalism
The value of state or local policy decisions is not that they are “inherently better”; substantively, the quality of a decision is independent on its merits, whether made in Washington, a state capitol, or the county council. Rather, as Thomas Jefferson observed, “It is not by the consolidation, or concentration of powers, but by their distribution, that good government is effected. Were not this great country already divided into states, that division must be made, that each might do for itself what concerns itself directly, and what it can so much better do than a distant authority.”3

Frederick C. Prescott, ed., Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson: Representative Selections (New York: American Book Company, 1934), p. 286.

An added value of federalism is that the state or local policymaker is more directly accountable to the people who are directly affected by the policy; policymaking is thus more democratic.

Finally, the fact different states adopt different policies is a feature, not a bug: Policymaking in a democratic society is often a complicated process of balancing competing goods while respecting public opinion. That different jurisdictions strike this balance in different ways should be expected in a country as vast in size as the United States of America. Constitutionally, moreover, state officials have broad powers to regulate intrastate commerce and to exercise “police powers” to protect the health, morals, and safety of their citizens, including, of course, the protection of public health from the ravages of a pandemic and its multiple consequences.4

Over the course of two centuries, federal courts have imposed limitations on state police powers on a case-by-case basis: for example, striking down state intrusions on the congressional power over interstate commerce or violations of persons’ civil liberties.

This is not a responsibility that they legally can (or should) abdicate to the President, Congress, or to some distant and unaccountable bureaucracy in Washington.

The JAMA Forum researchers further argue, “When our collective fate relies on speed, efficiency and unity, federalist ideals fall flat. Divided government creates unnecessary challenges for residents of states that are too slow to act or take up federal policies.”5

Gordon et al., “What Federalism Means for the US Response to Coronavirus Disease 2019.”

Underlying this argument is the tacit assumption that the federal government policies are the correct policies. That merely assumes what is to be proven. In any case, it does not logically follow that centralized government would guarantee efficiency, speed, or unity. Centralized government can just as easily issue authoritarian edicts or mandates based on bad information and poor judgment that can also inhibit speed and efficiency and sow confusion and disunity.6

Alexis de Tocqueville well summarized the disadvantages of centralized government: “Among large, centralized nations, the legislator is forced to give laws a uniform character that does not allow for the diversity of places and mores; never learning about individual cases, he can only proceed by general rules. Men are obliged to bend to the necessity of legislation, for legislation cannot adapt to the needs and mores of men; this is a great cause of trouble and misery.” Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, Vol. I (Indianapolis, IN: Liberty Fund, 2012), p. 260.

Logic aside, the empirical evidence for any assumed superiority of Washington’s governance is thin. Examining the federal government’s performance over 2001 to 2014, Paul C. Light, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, observes, “Federal failures have become so common they are less of a shock to the public than an expectation. The question is no longer if government will fail every few months, but where? And the answer is ‘Anywhere at all.’”7

See Paul C. Light, “A Cascade of Failure: Why Government Fails, and How to Stop It,” Brookings Institution, July 2014, https://www.brookings.edu/wp​-content/uploads/2016/06/Light_Cascade-of-Failures_Why-Govt-Fails.pdf (accessed July 1, 2021).

The federal government’s 2020 COVID-19 response supplies a fresh batch of disturbing examples.

What Americans Have Learned from the COVID-19 Pandemic
Americans are often counseled to “follow the science” and heed the advice of the public health experts. Understandably with a novel coronavirus the science has been evolving with the accumulation of new information; science is not static. Nonetheless, the initial extreme mortality projections8

For example, the Imperial College of London team initially projected 2.2 million American deaths from the coronavirus. Alan Reynolds, “How One Model Simulated 2.2 million U.S. Deaths from COVID-19,” Cato Institute, April 21, 2020, https://www.cato.org/blog/how-one-model-simulated-2.2​-million-us-deaths-covid-19 (accessed July 1, 2021). Such radical projections have made it difficult for policymakers to plan effectively. A key task for any after-action assessment of the COVID-19 pandemic is to examine the assumptions that drove the various epidemiological models.

and contradictory and confusing advice from public health experts, as well as hypocrisy in public health enforcement, has created unnecessary anxiety and anger and weakened public trust.

First, though the coronavirus is highly contagious, dangerous, and deadly, serious illness and death has been highly concentrated among older persons and persons with serious underlying health conditions, including cardiac and respiratory conditions, as well as diabetes and obesity.9

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “People with Certain Medical Conditions,” updated March 29, 2021, https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus​/2019-ncov/need-extra-precautions/people-with-medical-conditions.html (accessed April 20, 2021).

The accumulated data show that younger and healthier persons who have contracted the infection have presented few or mild symptoms and have generally not been threatened with severe illness, hospitalization, and death. For example, most children who are known to have been infected are either asymptomatic or, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), experience “mild” symptoms. About 1.3 percent of children diagnosed with COVID-19 have been hospitalized, and 0.01 percent have died.10

Melissa Jenco, “Covid-19 Cases in Children Surpass 2 Million,” American Academy of Pediatrics, December 29, 2020, https://www.aappublications.org​/news/2020/12/29/covid-2million-children-122920 (accessed July 1, 2021).

According to CDC’s best estimates, a person over 65 who contracts the virus is 4,500 times more likely to die of it than a person under 18.11

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “COVID-19 Planning Scenarios,” updated March 19, 2021 (accessed April 24, 2021). Authors’ calculations based on Table 1, Scenario 5.

Second, as a highly contagious disease the coronavirus has had different impacts demographically and geographically. The metrics of caseloads, hospitalizations, and mortality per million have varied from state to state and within states. Based on the science and the data, therefore, sound policy would accurately reflect these epidemiological and demographic distinctions, targeting intense efforts to protect the most vulnerable and relaxing social and economic restrictions on the least vulnerable.

Federalism, as noted, is a constitutional distribution of political authority and responsibility between the national government and the particular governments of the several states. In coping with a pandemic, Washington has the responsibility of providing accurate data and reliable information and guidance, promoting scientific advances in the development and deployment of vaccines and therapeutics, making federal regulatory changes, and providing emergency supplies and technical and financial assistance. State and local officials can use the federal assistance to make balanced judgments that will secure the best outcomes for public health and the general welfare of their citizens.

Mixed Performance. Federal and state officials alike have both succeeded and failed in battling the virus and its social and economic consequences.

In our initial Heritage Backgrounder on the pandemic, we argued that the actions of state leaders would be pivotal to ensuring a successful response to the pandemic.12

See Robert E. Moffit and Doug Badger, “Defeating COVID-19: What Policymakers Can Do to Change the Conditions on the Ground,” Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 3485, April 9, 2020, https://www.heritage.org/public-health/report/defeating-covid-19-what-policymakers-can-do​-change-the-conditions-the-ground.

Effective responses to COVID-19 have been secured in states and local communities; and it is on the ground, in states and localities, where Americans have also sustained their biggest losses, both in economic decline and in public health.

Some states that deviated from the excessively restrictive advice of federal policymakers, such as Florida, have done well relative to other states that have adopted and adhered more closely to federal guidance.13

Eddie Scarry, “Media Face the Music: Ron De Santis Got It Right,” Washington Examiner, March 17, 2021, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com​/opinion/media-face-the-music-ron-desantis-got-it-right (accessed July 1, 2021).

In combating the virus, certain states have gone beyond federal guidelines for commonsense hygiene and “social distancing” and pursued aggressive and lengthy lockdowns of the social and economic lives of their citizens. California, for example, closed down private schools even though these private and religious institutions had taken “safety and sanitary” measures outlined by the CDC.14

Nicole Russell, “California’s COVID-19 Restrictions Go Too Far,” The Daily Signal, September 4, 2020, https://www.dailysignal.com/2020/09/04​/californias-covid-19-restrictions-go-too-far/.

The economic contraction, business closures and failures, and the resulting unemployment have imposed huge costs on the residents of many states and local communities.

Lengthy school closures, in particular, have harmed children. Prolonged isolation and joblessness have imposed health as well as economic costs. This has been evident in a rise in anxiety, depression, and other mental health problems, opioid-related deaths and substance abuse, and domestic violence.15

See also Megan L. Evans, Margo Lindauer, and Maureen E. Farrell, “A Pandemic Within a Pandemic—Intimate Partner Violence During COVID-19,” New England Journal of Medicine, December 10, 2020, https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp2024046 (accessed July 7, 2021).

Reductions or shutdowns of routine medical services contributed to, among other things, dangerous delays in cancer and heart screenings and surgeries.16

Bruce Alpert, “From Rotten Teeth to Advanced Cancer: Patients Feel the Effects of Treatment Delays,” Kaiser Health News, April 20, 2021, https://khn​.org/news/article/from-rotten-teeth-to-advanced-cancer-patients-feel-the-effects-of-treatment-delays/ (accessed April 20, 2021).

Sound policy would do a better job and balance the protection of public health from the ravages of the pandemic with the need to preserve the personal, social, and economic health of the citizens. In this crisis, some state and local officials have succeeded in striking that balance and others have failed.

Washington’s Pandemic Performance
In coping with a pandemic, leaders of states, cities, and private organizations rely on the information provided by federal officials, specifically the CDC. As investigative reporters for USA Today describe it, “Headquartered in Atlanta, removed from the direct line of politics, the [CDC] employs thousands of public health experts, many embedded in local health departments. Though it’s not primarily a regulatory agency, its science guides national medical practice.”17

Murphy and Stein, “How the CDC Failed Health Officials Desperate for COVID-19 Help.”

Elected officials, from the White House and governor’s mansions to federal and state appointed and non-career employees, thus depend on the institutional knowledge, skills, and experience of the CDC’s career civil servants to provide them with the best, most accurate, and updated scientific information to make and implement public policy. Based on the full record of the CDC over the past year, Americans should indeed be grateful that the agency has not been granted national enforcement power and, thus, the potential of imposing a universal program of policy mismanagement.

The several federal government initiatives that proved successful were outside the CDC.

What Federal Officials Got Right. At the outset of the pandemic, federal government officials took decisive actions. The Trump Administration banned travel to and from infected areas of the globe, launched a comprehensive review of government rules and regulations that might inhibit a rapid response to the national medical emergency, and marshalled the resources of the private sector to combat the coronavirus, including a major public–private partnership to secure the rapid research and production of vaccines and therapeutics to arrest the spread and severity of the disease.

Travel Bans. On January 21, 2020, a U.S. traveler from China to Washington State was the first confirmed COVID-19 case. On January 31, President Trump declared a ban on travel from China.18

National Public Radio (NPR), “Trump Declares Coronavirus a Public Health Emergency and Restricts Travel from China,” January 31, 2020, https://​www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2020/01/31/801686524/trump-declares-coronavirus-a-public-health-emergency-and-restricts-travel-from-c (accessed July 1, 2021).

This was followed by similar bans on travel from Iran and Europe.

Regulatory Reform. The Trump Administration pursued a very different path from previous Administrations faced with national emergencies. Where the historical Washington pattern has been to centralize power and expand regulation under such circumstances, the Trump Administration decentralized regulatory power and encouraged private-sector innovation, ranging from small firms to large corporations.

The Trump Administration’s operating principle was that deregulation would set in motion positive change and innovation, enabling providers and private-sector firms to get business done quickly in meeting the national medical emergency.

Through aggressive regulatory reform, the Administration encouraged the rapid deployment of telemedicine and added 145 new medical services to Medicare’s roster.19

Seema Verma, “CMS Has Made a Lasting Imprint on the Healthcare System,” Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, January 15, 2021, https://​www.wwsg.com/news/cms-has-made-a-lasting-imprint-on-the-healthcare-system/ (accessed July 1, 2021).

The Administration also changed rules to facilitate telemedicine’s reimbursement, stimulating its rapid growth.20

Marie Fishpaw and Stephanie Zawada, “Telehealth in the Pandemic and Beyond: The Policies That Made It Possible, and the Policies That Can Expand Its Potential,” Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 3510, July 20, 2020, https://www.heritage.org/health-care-reform/report/telehealth-the​-pandemic-and-beyond-the-policies-made-it-possible-and-the.

Meanwhile, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) issued over 100 Medicare waivers and over 600 coronavirus-related Medicaid waivers for the states to respond effectively to the pandemic ranging from paperwork reduction and the expansion of medical scope of practice to changes in medical reimbursement.21

Verma, “CMS Has Made a Lasting Imprint on the Healthcare System.”

Vaccines and Therapeutics. The Trump Administration, operating through the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Department of Defense, undertook “Operation Warp Speed,” an aggressive program to remove federal regulatory barriers private companies faced in developing and deploying innovative vaccines to combat the coronavirus. The companies moved with unprecedented speed.22

See Edmund F. Haislmaier, “COVID-19: Getting Ready for the Vaccines,” Heritage Foundation Issue Brief No. 6031, December 9, 2020, https://www​.heritage.org/public-health/report/covid-19-getting-ready-the-vaccines.

The goal was to provide 300 million doses of the vaccine, with initial doses to be available to the public in January 2021.23

Government Accountability Office, Operation Warp Speed: Accelerated COVID-19 Vaccine Development Status and Efforts to Address Manufacturing Challenges, GAO–21–319, February 11, 2021, https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-21-319 (accessed July 1, 2021).

To encourage progress toward that goal, the federal government also entered into pre-purchase agreements with six manufacturers, committing in advance to buy 900 million doses, conditioned on obtaining an emergency use authorization (EUA) for their products.24

Congressional Budget Office, Research and Development in the Pharmaceutical Industry, April 2021, p. 11, https://www.cbo.gov/publication/57126 (accessed April 20, 2021).

Thanks in part to government process changes, Moderna and Pfizer were issued EUAs based on successful testing of their vaccines, which demonstrated an efficacy of approximately 95 percent. Beyond the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines authorized before the end of the year, Johnson and Johnson and AstraZeneca were in advanced testing of their vaccines. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted EUA to the Johnson and Johnson vaccine on February 27, 2021.25

U.S. Food and Drug Administration, “Janssen COVID-19 Vaccine,” updated April 23, 2021. https://www.fda.gov/emergency-preparedness-and​-response/coronavirus-disease-2019-covid-19/janssen-covid-19-vaccine (accessed July 1, 2021).

Altogether, this was an impressive and unprecedented public health achievement: a vaccine developed in months rather than years.

At the same time, the Administration pressed for the quick development and rapid deployment of new therapeutics. The FDA issued numerous new guidelines to private industry as well as many EUAs for diagnostic tests and other medical countermeasures. By October 31, 2020, there were more than 370 active trials of therapeutic agents.26

U.S. Food and Drug Administration, “FDA Combating COVID-19 with Therapeutics,” December 2, 2020, https://www.fda.gov/media/136832/download (accessed July 1, 2021).

Where Federal Officials Got Policy Wrong. For decades, Washington’s office with primary responsibility for periodic pandemics has been established and dis-established in different federal agencies. Today, HHS currently houses the Office of Pandemics and Emerging Threats. Gail Wilensky, former Medicare administrator, argues that such an office should be relocated in the National Security Council:

Whether as cause or effect of the office’s repeated dissolution or sidelining, neither the defense establishment nor the public seems to appreciate that disease threats are as serious to the country’s security as are wars with our traditional enemies.27Gail Wilensky, “Policy Lessons from Our Covid Experience,” New England Journal of Medicine, October 22, 2020, https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10​.1056/NEJMp2023204 (accessed July 1, 2021).

Superseding that office, President Trump’s Coronavirus Task Force took the lead in educating the general public on the COVID-19 pandemic. President Biden instituted a White House reorganization shortly after taking office, naming a Jeffrey Zients as his Coordinator of the COVID-19 Response and creating numerous interagency task forces.28

Doug Badger, “COVID-19: Why President Biden’s Response Strategy Falls Short,” Heritage Foundation Issue Brief No. 6044, January 27, 2021, https://​www.heritage.org/public-health/report/covid-19-why-president-bidens-response-strategy-falls-short.

Despite these bureaucratic reshufflings, the CDC was, and is, Washington’s main source of detailed scientific information and guidance for the public health authorities, as well as the public, during the pandemic. Writing a major report for the New York Times, Eric Lipton and his colleagues observe:

The CDC, long considered the world’s premiere health agency, made early testing mistakes that contributed to a cascade of problems that persist today as the US tries to reopen. It failed to provide timely counts of infection and deaths, hindered by aging technology and a fractured public health reporting system. And it hesitated in absorbing the lessons of other countries, including the perils of silent carriers spreading the infection. The agency struggled to calibrate its own imperative to be cautious and the need to move fast as the coronavirus ravaged the country…. In communicating to the public, its leadership was barely visible, its stream of guidance was often slow, and its messages were sometimes confusing, sowing mistrust.29Eric Lipton et al. “The CDC Waited Its Entire Existence for This Moment,” New York Times, June 3, 2020, https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/03/us​/cdc-coronavirus.html (accessed July 1, 2021).

When speed and clarity were required, instead Americans were too often treated to a CDC response that was sluggish, confusing, and sometimes erroneous. As investigative reporters for USA Today likewise concluded, the CDC was “paralyzed by bureaucracy, failed to consistently perform its basic job—giving public health authorities the guidance needed to save American lives during the pandemic…. Authorities in at least 13 states questioned CDC guidance that contradicted either scientific evidence or information put out by CDC itself, records show.”30

Murphy and Stein, “How the CDC Failed Health Officials Desperate for COVID-19 Help.”

To be fair, from the start of the pandemic, Washington’s initial response was compromised by factors well beyond the control of federal officials. Most importantly, public health authorities in the United States and elsewhere did not understand the novel virus, the course of the disease, or the best clinical response to disease progression.

Initial Response. China, the source of the virus, was uncooperative in providing crucial information about the nature and origins of the virus. When COVID-19 originally surfaced as a public health problem in Wuhan, China (reportedly), in early January 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) took note of its existence but on January 14 issued contradictory declarations, saying that there was “limited transmission” of the novel coronavirus between humans and then tweeting that it was not transmissible from human to human.31

Kieran Corcoran, “An Infamous WHO Tweet Saying There Was No Clear Evidence Covid-19 Could Spread Between Humans Was Posted for ‘Balance’ to Reflect Finding from China,” Business Insider, April 18, 2020, https://www.businessinsider.com/who-no-transmission-coronavirus-tweet-was-to​-appease-china-guardian-2020-4 (accessed July 1, 2021).

Six days later, on January 20, the United States recorded the first American COVID-19 case in Washington State. On January 27, President Trump created the White House Coronavirus Task Force; on January 30, the WHO declared a global public health emergency; on January 31, as noted, the Trump Administration declared a public health emergency and imposed a ban on travel from China.32

Phillip A. Wallach and Justus Myers, “The Federal Government’s Coronavirus Response—a Public Health Timeline,” Brookings Institution, March 31, 2020, https://www.brookings.edu/research/the-federal-governments-coronavirus-actions-and-failures-timeline-and-themes/ (accessed July 1, 2021).

Meanwhile, the viral infection accelerated, but federal authorities were unaware of the extent of the spread, mainly because many of the carriers of COVID-19 were asymptomatic and the United States had not developed the crucial testing capacity to detect the degree of contagion. According to investigative reporters for USA Today, as of late February 2020, the CDC assured public health officials that the virus was “under control.”33

Murphy and Stein, “How the CDC Failed Health Officials Desperate for COVID-19 Help.”

As Brookings scholars note, CDC officials also

reassured state and local officials that testing capacity was adequate in late February, although it was reported that fewer than 500 tests had been conducted at that point. (The CDC’s own count, which includes its own tests plus those of U.S. public health labs, put the total number of tests at the end of February at around 4,000.) Perversely, the failure to test at scale kept the publicly recognized number of cases low, which served as a justification for insisting that the existing testing regime was adequate.34Wallach and Myers, “The Federal Government’s Coronavirus Response,” p. 4.

During this time, there was an exponential growth in COVID-19 caseloads. On March 11, 2020, the WHO declared a global pandemic. On March 13, President Trump declared a national emergency and, as noted, followed up with expanded travel bans, an invocation of the Defense Production Act to secure the procurement of medical supplies and equipment, accelerated approval of commercial testing for the virus, and encouraged Americans to follow social distancing and hygienic guidelines. Working with Congress, Trump signed the first of a series of COVID-19 relief bills, an $8.6 billion package. In March 2020, the prevailing view of the Trump Administration officials, influenced by leading career public health authorities, was that with the proper mitigation measures, the United States could “flatten the curve” and bring the virus under control. They were mistaken.

The CDC’s Defective Test. The federal government’s first major failure was in its inability to rapidly develop and deploy the diagnostic testing necessary to determine the extent of the infection. The reason: multiplicity of pre-existing and outdated rules regulations and guidelines imposed by the FDA, CDC, and CMS. CDC officials insisted that public health authorities use only CDC tests, and the CDC test was only to be administered by public health labs, thus excluding a whole universe of independent and academic institutions from using the tests, including the research team at Johns Hopkins University. Worse, the CDC test for COVID-19 was flawed and had to be recalled. As Brookings scholars have observed, “Nevertheless, for at least two weeks after the problem became clear, alternative paths to testing were either neglected or stymied by existing regulations.”35

Ibid.

Compounding the initial CDC test failure was the FDA rule prohibiting the use of non-CDC tests, thus stopping Americans from getting diagnostic tests from independent laboratories, including from such reputable companies as Roche, a Swiss-based pharmaceutical giant.36

Robert E. Moffit, “Coronavirus Testing Delays Show Why Federal Health Rules Need Thorough Review,” The Daily Signal, March 16, 2020, https://www​.dailysignal.com/2020/03/16/coronavirus-testing-delays-show-why-federal-health-care-rules-need-thorough-review/.

The Trump Administration eliminated this outdated regulatory regime, jettisoning the overly restrictive CDC testing criteria on February 28 and junking the FDA restriction on independent diagnostic tests on February 29, 2020.37

Ibid.

America lost precious time. This initial federal regulatory bungling was the most serious federal government failure, and it inflicted severe damage on the nation’s ability to respond rapidly to what was soon to be a deadly threat. As health care reporter Julie Scharper observed, “Without comprehensive testing, U.S. officials found it difficult to gauge the spread of the virus and identify carriers.”38

Julie Scharper, “5 Ways the U.S. Botched the Response to COVID-19,” Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, April 3, 2020, https://www​.jhsph.edu/covid-19/articles/5-ways-the-us-botched-the-response-to-covid-19.html (accessed July 1, 2021).

Delay of Rapid At-Home Self-Testing. Even as the CDC has bungled its own testing regime in the pandemic’s early days, it later resisted new testing approaches that might have mitigated a surge in cases that occurred during the fall and winter of 2020–2021. One such strategy would have been to make at-home COVID-19 tests that yield rapid results broadly available without a prescription.

By allowing tens of millions of people per day to determine their COVID-19 status, rapid at-home tests could help reduce the contagion’s spread.

Until March 2021, the FDA refused to approve these tests, even as U.S. manufacturers produced them for export to countries such as the United Kingdom, which distributes at-home tests free of charge to enable its populace to test themselves twice weekly.39

BBC News, “Tests to Be Offered Twice-Weekly to All in England,” April 5, 2021, https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-56632084 (accessed April 24, 2021).

The tests appear to be serving as a complement to vaccines. As of April 16, 2021, the U.K. was recording an average of 39 new cases per million people, far lower than its European neighbors France (597 per million), Italy (249), Germany (244) and Spain (182).40

Our World in Data, “COVID Cases,” https://ourworldindata.org/covid-cases (accessed April 17, 2021).

Deaths related to COVID-19 were 0.40 per million population in the U.K. Figures for other European countries ranged from five times that number (Spain, 2.0) to more than 16 times (Italy, 6.5).41

Our World in Data, “COVID Deaths,” https://ourworldindata.org/covid-deaths (accessed April 17, 2021).

The FDA justified its inaction by noting that rapid, home-based tests—which detect antigens produced by the virus rather than the virus itself—are less sensitive than laboratory-based PCR tests. While rapid tests are more likely than PCR tests to return false negatives, that risk is more than offset by their volume (tens of millions of tests per day), frequency (people could test themselves multiple times), and immediacy (they return results in minutes rather than days).42

Paul Romer et al., “Rapid COVID Tests: A Cure for Lockdowns, a Complement to Vaccines,” Heritage Foundation Lecture No. 1319, January 13, 2021, https://www.heritage.org/public-health/report/rapid-covid-tests-cure-lockdowns-complement-vaccines.

The FDA has recently begun to grant emergency use authorization for rapid, at-home tests. As of early April, the agency had greenlighted five at-home, over-the-counter, rapid testing products.43

Michelle Crouch, “New At-Home COVID-19 Tests Promise Results in Minutes,” AARP, updated April 2, 2021, https://www.aarp.org/health/conditions​-treatments/info-2021/at-home-covid-tests.html (accessed April 24, 2021).

It remains unclear how quickly the companies will be able to ramp up production. It will take an ample supply of tests to replicate or even approach the scale of the U.K. program. According to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, Congress has appropriated $53.6 billion for COVID-19 testing, monitoring, and research and development.44

Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, “COVID Money Tracker,” https://www.covidmoneytracker.org/ (accessed April 24, 2021).

As of April 24, 2021, $38.6 billion remained unallocated. The Administration should consider devoting at least some of those available funds to the purchase of rapid, at-home tests, as a supplement to vaccination efforts.45

These tests complement vaccinations for two reasons. At least some portion of Americans are uncomfortable with vaccination for this virus. Dr. Mina makes the point that “[w]e don’t want to find ourselves in June finding a whole new clade of virus—we know how quickly it can spread—with a virus that the vaccines don’t protect from. These tests, at the very least, we should be doing as a contingency plan.” Romer et al., “Rapid COVID Tests.”

Insufficient National Stockpile. The maintenance of a sufficient storehouse of emergency medical equipment and supplies is essential. Nonetheless, as Scharper also reports, federal officials ignored “decades” of warnings of public health experts that the Strategic National Stockpile was woefully short of these vital items, and thus the CDC was once again short of the material assets required to cope with a powerful pandemic.46

Scharper, “5 Ways the US Botched the Response to COVID-19.”

Gail Wilensky, senior fellow at Project Hope and former Medicare administrator, warns that “in planning for unknown future epidemics, federal pandemic-preparedness officials must decide what constitutes a prudent level of supply stockpiling, with an understanding of the inevitable trade-offs between perceived readiness and the cost of equipment and supplies that we hope never to use.”47

Gail Wilensky, “Policy Lessons from Our Covid Experience,” New England Journal of Medicine, August 26, 2020, https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10​.1056/NEJMp2023204 (accessed July 1, 2021).

Outdated CDC Data. Timely, sound, and accurate data are essential to an effective government response to the pandemic. The CDC is still failing on all counts.

The CDC has never established a real-time data collection system for public health reporting.48

Joel White and Doug Badger, “In Order to Defeat COVID-19, the Federal Government Must Modernize Its Public Health Data,” Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 3527, September 3, 2020, https://www.heritage.org/health-care-reform/report/order-defeat-covid-19-the-federal-government​-must-modernize-its-public.

Doctors and state and local health agencies often transmit data to the CDC by phone or fax, antiquated arrangements that slow data collection and subject it to errors in transcription. Once collected, the CDC siloes the data across 100 separate reporting systems, complicating efforts by frontline medical workers to obtain the information they need to coordinate local responses.49

Ibid., p. 2.

The CDC’s data collection and dissemination system are so abysmal that private entities—most notably Johns Hopkins University and The Atlantic—established public-facing databases that, through most of the pandemic, became the source of much of what we know about COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, and deaths.

The agency’s failure is due to its refusal to implement multiple acts of Congress. These laws, dating to 2006, required it to implement a real-time data collection system that would make information available to clinicians and policymakers.50

Pandemic All-Hazards Preparedness Act, Public Law No. 109–417; Pandemic All-Hazards Preparedness Reauthorization Act of 2013, Public Law No. 113–5; Pandemic All-Hazards Preparedness and Advancing Information Act, Public Law No. 116–22; and Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, Public Law No. 116–136.

The Government Accountability Office has repeatedly taken the CDC to task for failing to implement data systems that the law requires.51

Government Accountability Office, Public Health Information Technology: Initial Strategic Planning Needed to Guide HHS’ Efforts to Establish Electronic Situational Awareness Capabilities, GAO–11–99, December 17, 2010, https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-11-99 (accessed August 17, 2020), and Government Accountability Office, Public Health Information Technology: HHS Has Made Little Progress toward Implementing Enhanced Situational Awareness Network Capabilities, GAO–17–377, September 6, 2017, https://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-17-377 (accessed August 17, 2020).

Ironically, the 2006 law directed the CDC to implement such a system precisely because it would be essential to an effective response to “potentially catastrophic infectious disease outbreaks and other public health emergencies that originate domestically or abroad.”52

Pandemic All-Hazards Preparedness Act, Public Law No. 109–417 (emphasis added).

The law gave the CDC until 2008 to establish the system. When the pandemic struck in 2020, that system did not exist. It still does not—despite subsequent congressional mandates passed in 2013, 2019, and 2020.53

Paul Davidson, “Still Hunting for Clorox Wipes? Shortages Now Likely to Last Until Mid-2021, Company Says,” USA Today, December 12, 2020, https://​www.usatoday.com/story/money/2020/12/10/clorox-wipes-shortages-likely-last-until-mid-2021/3886716001/ (accessed July 1, 2021).

The fragmentary and dated information the agency does collect is often not available to those who need it most. The CDC’s reporting is, for the most part, a one-way street—from health care workers to public health officials, but not the other way. This failure adversely affects patients by denying clinicians access to clinical knowledge and best practices that would improve their capacity to provide better care.

The CDC’s Confusing Guidance on Surface Transmission. Early in the pandemic, the CDC warned that SARS-CoV-2 was commonly transmitted from surfaces. That theory underlay advice on frequent hand-washing and warnings against face-touching, both of which are sensible whether or not there is a pandemic. It is also why public health authorities called on people to wear gloves during the pandemic’s early weeks and months, a time during which public health officials discouraged mask-wearing.

The CDC’s—ultimately flawed—theory was plausible initially. Officials worried that fomites—objects or materials thought to harbor the virus—were a significant infection vector. Scientists released studies measuring how long the coronavirus could “survive” on various surfaces. The CDC called for disinfecting surfaces in homes, helping create a long-running shortage of Clorox Wipes.54

Ben Guarino and Joel Achenbach, “Virus ‘Does Not Spread Easily’ from Contaminated Surfaces or Animals, Revised CDC Website States,” Washington Post, May 21, 2020, https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2020/05/21/virus-does-not-spread-easily-contaminated-surfaces-or-animals-revised​-cdc-website-states/ (accessed July 1, 2021).

The CDC learned early on that the risk of fomite infection was low but was reluctant to alter its advice on disinfecting surfaces. The agency threw a head feint on May 21, 2020. The Washington Post reported that the CDC had changed its guidance on the risks of contracting the disease from surfaces.55

The archived page that the original Washington Post article cited can be found at https://web.archive.org/web/20200520114538/https://www.cdc.gov​/coronavirus/2019-ncov/prevent-getting-sick/how-covid-spreads.html (accessed April 24, 2021).

The story linked to a revised CDC publication that warned in large, bold-faced type that the virus “spread easily between people.”56

The archived version of the revised document that the NPR article cited can be found at https://web.archive.org/web/20200523123538/https://www​.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/prevent-getting-sick/how-covid-spreads.html (accessed April 24, 2021).

It also contained a similarly large and bold-faced heading stating that “the virus does not spread easily in other ways.” Under this heading, the agency listed “touching surfaces and objects” along with transmission between people and animals.

The next day, NPR posted a story entitled, “CDC Advice on Spread of COVID-19 ‘Has Not Changed,’ Agency Says.” The account linked to the same URL as the Washington Post’s May 21 article, but the document on that site had changed. While it continued to say that surface transmission “is not thought to be the main way the virus spreads,” the CDC removed the heading saying that “the virus does not spread easily in other ways.” Instead, the newly revised document grouped surface spread under the heading “the virus may spread in other ways.”57

U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “Science Brief: SARS-CoV-2 and Surface (Fomite) Transmission for Indoor Community Environments,” updated April 5, 2021, https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/more/science-and-research/surface-transmission.html (accessed April 24, 2021).

It also separated its guidance on surfaces from its assessment of the risk of transmission between people and animals, grouping the latter under the heading “spread between animals and people.”

The agency’s officials clearly thought the change was significant enough to modify the document a second time in the space of 24 hours. And they continued to advise the public to “routinely clean and disinfect frequently touched surfaces,” despite being unable to establish that surface transmission was a major source of the pandemic’s spread.

In April 2021, the CDC revised its scientific guidance on the subject.58

U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “Guidance for Cleaning and Disinfecting: Public Spaces, Workplaces, Businesses, Schools and Homes,” September 16, 2020, https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/community/pdf/reopening_america_guidance.pdf (accessed April 18, 2021).

Citing studies of “quantitative microbial risk assessments” that had been published months before, the agency declared that the “risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection via the fomite transmission route is low, and generally less than 1 in 10,000.”

Nevertheless, the CDC’s public-facing document continues to advise Americans to sterilize surfaces in their homes.59

American School and University, “22 States Have Closed Schools Statewide Because of the Coronavirus,” March 16, 2020, https://www.asumag.com​/facilities-management/article/21126265/22-states-have-closed-school-statewide-because-of-the-coronavirus (accessed April 24, 2021).

The September 2020 document, still extant as of June 24, 2021, casts its guidance on disinfecting surfaces in the home and public places in quasi-patriotic terms:

This guidance is intended for all Americans, whether you own a business, run a school, or want to ensure the cleanliness and safety of your home. Reopening America requires all of us to move forward together by practicing social distancing and other daily habits to reduce our risk of exposure to the virus that causes COVID-19. Reopening the country also strongly relies on public health strategies, including increased testing of people for the virus, social distancing, isolation, and keeping track of how someone infected might have infected other people. This plan is part of the larger United States Government plan and focuses on cleaning and disinfecting public spaces, workplaces, businesses, schools, and can also be applied to your home.
This pattern of clinging to policies and guidances long after they have been shown to be misguided is a central characteristic of the government’s public health communications regime. These public health officials have been reluctant to follow the science when it conflicted with their earlier pronouncements. They seem equally unwilling to admit error or acknowledge that they sometimes base their advice on unproven or disproven hypotheses, not conclusory scientific evidence.

CDC Guidance on Schools. School systems in many states discontinued or greatly restricted in-person instruction for lengthy periods. By the middle of March 2020, 22 states had enacted statewide K–12 closures, affecting 26.1 million students, or just less than half the school-aged population.60

Education Week, “Where Are Schools Required to Be Open?,” updated April 23, 2021, https://www.edweek.org/leadership/map-where-are-schools​-closed/2020/07 (accessed April 24, 2021).

As of April 5, 2021, 12 states required in-person instruction to be available in all or some grades either full- or part-time, with most of the rest letting school boards decide whether to allow children to return to their classrooms.61

“Los Angeles United School District Announces Plan to Fully Reopen Schools for In-Person Learning in the Fall,” City News Service, May 24, 2021, https://www.nbclosangeles.com/education/k-12-education/lausd-fully-reopen-schools-classrooms-coronavirus-pandemic-covid-19-vaccines​/2602405/ (accessed July 7, 2021).

Some of the nation’s largest school districts still have not returned to five-day-per-week in-person instruction. Students in Los Angeles, the country’s second largest school district, are not expected to fully reopen for in-person instruction until the fall.62

Howard Blume, “Newsom Expects K-12 Schools to Be Open Full Time in Fall,” Los Angeles Times, April 6, 2021, https://www.latimes.com/california​/story/2021-04-06/newsom-expects-k-12-schools-to-be-open-full-time-in-fall (accessed April 24, 2021).

The May 24 announcement by the Los Angeles School superintendent is consistent with an earlier statement by California Governor Gavin Newsom, who said in April that he does not expect all schools in his state to implement a five-day in-person school week until the fall. He stopped short of saying whether he would mandate a statewide September reopening.63

Michele Poletti and Andrea Raballo, “Coronavirus Disease 2019 and Effects of School Closure for Children and Their Families,” JAMA Pediatrics, November 23, 2020, https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapediatrics/fullarticle/2773295 (accessed April 24, 2021).

The cognitive, social, medical, and emotional consequences of keeping millions of children out of classrooms for extended periods are severe. A November 2020 letter to the editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association noted:

Mental health of children and adolescents undergoes a sudden stress test during quarantine that causes a complete, sudden, and unprepared loss of direct social relationships with peers, representing a significant human need and stimulus for well-being, socioemotional development, and self-identity in this age range. Direct social relationships are limited to family members, with increased risks of loneliness; especially in the absence of home outdoor spaces, school closure significantly increases the risks for (1) physical health; (2) addiction to video games and binge watching (clearly exceeding daily time limits of screen exposure indicated by pediatric guidelines); and (3) alteration of circadian rhythms.… Finally, school closure may have a profound effect on academic achievement, especially in the youngest children and in children of families with low socioeconomic status. If school closure will be confirmed for the remaining months and also summer camps will be impeded, the well-known summer learning gap will be amplified, especially for children of families at low socioeconomic status and for children with preexisting neurodevelopmental or mental health conditions of vulnerability. Families with low socioeconomic status have less available possibilities in terms of suitable places to do homework, electronic devices, internet access, and owned books; parents themselves in the case of low socioeconomic status, exemplified by the immigrant parent-child acculturation gap, may be less able to motivate and help them in this new experience of online schooling.64Francesco Agostinelli et al., “When the Great Equalizer Shuts Down: Schools, Peers and Parents in Pandemic Times,” National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper No. 28264, December 2020, p. 33, https://www.nber.org/papers/w28264 (accessed April 24, 2021).

The detrimental effects of such closures are long-term and fall most heavily on children from the poorest households. Francesco Antonelli of Yale University and his colleagues measured the “human capital deficit”—the extent to which school closures impaired children’s cognitive and social development—and estimated that:

At the end of high school, the average human capital deficit is about 12 percent, ranging from 5 percent in the most affluent communities to 30 percent in the poorest ones. These are large long-run differences in a society already troubled by dramatic gaps in opportunities.65U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “Operational Strategy for K-12 Schools Through Phased Prevention,” updated April 23, 2021, updates as of March 19, 2021, https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/community/schools-childcare/operation-strategy.html (accessed April 24, 2021).

The CDC’s recommendations on school closures have influenced decisions by governors, mayors, and school boards to limit in-person learning. Adhering to the agency’s guidance that desks remain at least six feet apart creates difficulties in reopening classrooms, particularly to all students on a five-day-per-week basis.

After leaving the recommendation in place since early in the pandemic, the CDC abruptly rescinded it on March 19, 2021, saying that desks need only be separated by three feet rather than six.66

U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “Science Brief: Transmission of SARS-CoV-2 in K-12 Schools,” updated March 19, 2021, https://www​.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/science/science-briefs/transmission_k_12_schools.html (accessed April 24, 2021).

The agency’s revised “science brief” on the subject did not cite a single classroom-based study that found desks should remain six feet apart.67

World Health Organization, “Considerations for School-Related Public Health Measures in the Context of COVID-19: Annex to Considerations in Adjusting Public Health and Social Measures in the Context of COVID-19, 14 September 2020,” https://apps.who.int/iris/handle/10665/334294 (accessed April 24, 2021).

It did, however, list numerous studies supporting the one-meter (three-feet) standard long favored by the WHO68

American Academy of Pediatrics, “COVID-19 Guidance for Safe Schools,” last updated March 25, 2021, https://services.aap.org/en/pages/2019-novel​-coronavirus-covid-19-infections/clinical-guidance/covid-19-planning-considerations-return-to-in-person-education-in-schools/ (accessed April 24, 2021).

and the American Academy of Pediatrics.69

Polly van den Berg et al., “Effectiveness of Three versus Six Feet of Physical Distancing for Controlling Spread of COVID-19 Among Primary and Secondary Students and Staff: A Retrospective, Statewide Cohort Study,” Clinical Infectious Diseases, March 10, 2021, https://academic.oup.com/cid​/advance-article/doi/10.1093/cid/ciab230/6167856 (accessed April 24, 2021). The CDC also differs from the WHO and other public health agencies in recommending that people maintain a distance of six feet (1.83 meters) rather than one meter (3.28 feet). The CDC relies largely on a June 2020 metanalysis of studies of a variety of communicable viral diseases, including COVID-19. That study concluded: “A physical distance of more than 1 m probably results in a large reduction in virus infection; for every 1 m further away in distancing, the relative effect might increase 2.02 times.” The WHO and other bodies used that as the basis for the one-meter recommendation. The CDC recommended 1.83 meters. The question is whether the trade-off, which imposes large social and economic costs, is worth the additional distance. Clearly, the answer is no when it comes to schools, but that question should also be addressed with regard to physical distancing requirements more generally. It is interesting to note that the WHO, which funded the study published in the Lancet, adopted the one-meter standard. Derek K. Chu et al., “Physical Distancing, Face Masks, and Eye Protection to Prevent Person-to-Person Transmission of SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis,” The Lancet, June 27, 2020, https://​www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(20)31142-9/fulltext (accessed April 24, 2021).

The agency brief omitted reference to a highly relevant study published in Clinical Infectious Diseases earlier in March that, based on a comprehensive review of scientific literature on classroom transmission, found “no significant difference in student or staff case rates between schools with ≥3 versus ≥6 feet of distancing with a large sample size.”70

Cited by Quentin Fottrell, “5 Critical Mistakes That Created the Biggest Public Health Crisis in a Generation,” Marketwatch, July 4, 2020, https://www​.marketwatch.com/story/100-days-of-the-covid-19-pandemic-5-critical-mistakes-that-created-the-biggest-public-health-crisis-in-a-generation-2020​-06-18 (accessed July 1, 2021).

The CDC ultimately changed its policy but without admitting error, much less acknowledging the damage to which its earlier unsubstantiated pronouncement contributed. Its recommendation to space desks six feet apart was never scientifically supported by classroom studies. The CDC abandoned it only after a flood of evidence from around the world soundly refuted it.

Mixed Mask Messages. The value and effectiveness of masks in arresting the spread of infection has been a flash point throughout the COVID-19 crisis. Federal public health officials garbled their message in the early days of the pandemic, have not produced solid scientific evidence for the protective value of masks, and have overstated the value of government mask mandates in preventing waves of infections.

Federal officials undermined their credibility by at first downplaying the value of masks in reducing the risk of transmission then abruptly shifting to messages that exaggerate their importance. For example:

On January 30, 2020, Dr. Nancy Messionier, director of the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Disease, declared: “We don’t routinely recommend the use of face masks by the public to prevent respiratory illness. And we are not recommending that at this time for this new virus.”71Fadel Allasson, “Surgeon General Defends Reversal on Face Mask Policy,” Axios, July 12, 2020, https://www.axios.com/surgeon-general-reversal-face​-mask-d385e2d5-42b7-433e-89a6-3584f3e61bf3.html (accessed April 24, 2021).

Dr. Jerome Adams, then-Surgeon General of the United States, echoed Dr. Messionier’s message when he tweeted in February 2020: “Seriously people- STOP BUYING MASKS! They are NOT effective in preventing general public from catching #Coronavirus.”72Norah O’Donnell, “Dr. Fauci Says, ‘With All Due Modesty, I Think I’m Pretty Effective,’” InStyle, July 15, 2020, https://www.instyle.com/news/dr-fauci​-says-with-all-due-modesty-i-think-im-pretty-effective (accessed April 24, 2021).

Adams later reversed himself.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, medical advisor to former President Trump and also President Biden, also discouraged the public from wearing masks in the pandemic’s early days. And like Adams, Fauci later advocated fervently in favor of mask-wearing.
As with the separation of desks in classrooms, Dr. Fauci and others abruptly changed their positions without admitting error. Asked by CBS News reporter Nora O’Donnell whether he regretted at first opposing mask-wearing outside the clinical setting, Fauci said:

No. I don’t regret anything I said then because in the context of the time in which I said it, it was correct. We were told in our task force meetings that we have a serious problem with the lack of [personal protective equipment] and masks for the health providers who are putting themselves in harm’s way every day to take care of sick people.73In fact, in May 2020, the CDC published a study summarizing 14 randomized studies of face masks and hygiene. According to the authors, “We did not find evidence that surgical-type face masks are effective in reducing laboratory-confirmed influenza transmission, either when worn by infected persons (source control) or by persons in the general community to reduce their susceptibility…. However, as with hand hygiene, face masks might be able to reduce the transmission of other infections and therefore have value in an influenza pandemic when healthcare resources are stretched.” Jingyi Xiao et al., “Nonpharmaceutical Measures for Pandemic Influenza in Nonhealthcare Settings—Personal Protective and Environmental Measures,” Emerging Infectious Diseases, Vol. 26, No. 5, May 2020, p. 972, https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/26/5/19-0994_article (accessed July 1, 2021).

It may be true that Dr. Fauci and other public health leaders initially recommended against widespread mask-wearing because they prioritized the health of frontline medical workers over the health of the broader public.74

Fauci also noted in the interview that he and his colleagues declared masks to be ineffective in protecting people against COVID-19 before they appreciated the risk of asymptomatic transmission. That, however, is arguably inconsistent with his first reason, which suggested the need for rationing masks, not determining them to be ineffective in protecting the general public from the contagion.

If so, it would have been reasonable for them to say at the time that while masks could help control the pathogen’s spread, people should refrain from wearing them because those caring for the sick needed them more. Stories about the exposure of frontline workers to the disease were prominent at the time, and the shortage of personal protective equipment was widely reported.75

Noah Higgins-Dunn, “Coronavirus: CDC Director Says Face Masks May Provide More Protection Than Coronavirus Vaccine,” CNBC, September 16, 2020, https://www.cnbc.com/2020/09/16/cdc-director-says-face-masks-may-provide-more-protection-than-coronavirus-vaccine-.html (accessed April 24, 2021).

However, their early declarations went much further, suggesting that masks would not be of value against the coronavirus.

Dr. Fauci and others may see no contradiction in their conflicting advice on masks, but it inarguably damaged their credibility with millions of people.

The Value of Masks. That credibility further eroded when public health officials began making improvident claims about masks that had no basis in science. Testifying before a U.S. Senate Committee in September 2020, then-CDC Director Robert Redfield declared masks to be “the most powerful public health tool.”76

Ibid.

Holding a face mask aloft, he added, “I might go as far as to say that this face mask is more guaranteed to protect me against COVID than when I take a COVID vaccine.”77

Colin Dwyer and Allison Aubrey, “CDC Now Recommends Americans Consider Wearing Cloth Face Coverings in Public,” NPR, April 3, 2020, https://​www.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2020/04/03/826219824/president-trump-says-cdc-now-recommends-americans-wear-cloth​-masks-in-public (accessed April 24, 2021).

The scientific evidence about the relative value of masks and vaccines does not support Dr. Redfield’s declaration. Masks offer two possible benefits in inhibiting the spread of infection. The first is “source control”—the extent to which wearing a mask prevents an infected individual from spreading the virus. The second is “protection”—the extent to which wearing a mask protects an uninfected individual from contracting the virus.

The CDC first recommended the wearing of masks for source control in April 2020.78

U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “Science Brief: Community of Cloth Masks to Control the Spread of SARS-CoV-2,” updated November 20, 2020, https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/science/science-briefs/masking-science-sars-cov2.html (accessed April 24, 2021).

It has since cited studies showing that “[m]ulti-layer cloth masks can both block up to 50–70 percent of these fine droplets and particles79

Paul Davidson, “Still Hunting for Clorox Wipes? Shortages Now Likely to Last Until Mid-2021, Company Says,” USA Today, December 12, 2020, https://​www.usatoday.com/story/money/2020/12/10/clorox-wipes-shortages-likely-last-until-mid-2021/3886716001/ (accessed July 1, 2021).

and limit the forward spread of those that are not captured.”80

 

The source control value of masks is well attested and comports with common sense. SARS-CoV-2 is a respiratory virus.81

“The existing scientific evidence challenges the safety and efficacy of wearing facemasks as preventive intervention for COVID-19. The data suggests that both medical and non-medical facemasks are ineffective to block human to human transmission of viral and infectious disease such as SARS-COV-2 and COVID-19, supporting against the usage of facemasks.” Baruch Vainshelboim, “Facemasks in the COVID-19 Era: A Health Hypothesis,” Medical Hypotheses, Vol. 146, November 22, 2020, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7680614/ (accessed July 1, 2021).

People transmit it by exhaling droplets and particles. Masks block some or most of those droplets and particles and shorten the distance they travel. Consequently, face coverings should make it less likely that a person with the disease will infect others.

Unlike with the protective value of masks, it would be unethical to test this hypothesis on a human population. Sending infected people—an experimental group wearing masks and a control group without them—into public spaces and comparing the number of people they infect would violate federal protocols on the protection of human subjects.

Thus, the source control value of masks rests on a combination of laboratory measurements, case studies, prudence, and common sense.

The CDC did not endorse the protective value of masks until November 2020. In its “science brief,” providing background on its revised recommendations, the CDC cites several studies that it says “demonstrate that cloth mask materials can also reduce wearers’ exposure to infectious droplets through filtration.”82

Henning Bundgaard et al., “Effectiveness of Adding a Mask Recommendation to Other Public Health Measures to Prevent SARS-CoV-2 Infection in Danish Mask Wearers,” Annals of Internal Medicine, posted November 18, 2020, https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/M20-6817 (accessed April 24, 2021).

These laboratory studies generally test how well various fabrics work in filtering out droplets and particles. They are not controlled experiments and do not test whether masks protect people against infection in real-world settings. In that sense, they are similar to studies on fomites, which showed how long they could survive on various surfaces but did not support conclusions that they were a significant vector of infection.

The effectiveness of masks to prevent COVID-19 transmission is not supported by a review of the professional literature.83

The November 18, 2020, release was cited in Doug Badger and Norbert Michel, “Mask Mandates: Do They Work? Are There Better Ways to Control COVID-19 Outbreaks?,” Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 3578, December 27, 2020, https://www.heritage.org/public-health/report/mask​-mandates-do-they-work-are-there-better-ways-control-covid-19-outbreaks. The study was included in the March 2021 Annals of Internal Medicine.

There has been just one controlled study that tested whether masks protect uninfected people against COVID-19.84

On May 7, 2021, the CDC amended its science brief to mention the Danish study. It characterized the study’s results as “inconclusive.”

The Danish study, conducted during the spring of 2020, included 6,000 participants. The control group did not wear masks; the experimental group did. All were instructed to spend at least three hours daily outside the home and observe social distancing guidelines. Participants were tested for COVID-19 over a one-month period. The study found no statistically significant difference in infection rates between those who wore masks and those who did not.

The Annals of Internal Medicine originally posted the study, which concluded that masks do not protect uninfected people against COVID-19 on November 18, 2020, two days before the CDC announced that masks do offer such protection.85

A recent flashpoint is over the degree of immunity provided by the COVID-19 vaccines and the continued utility of masking. In a March 29, 2021, MSNBC interview, CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky stated that vaccinated people “don’t carry the virus, don’t get sick.” She cited the CDC’s “clinical trials” and “real world data.” CDC officials subsequently walked backed her statement. See Amy Anderson, “Two Masks Versus Vaccinated Freedom,” Washington Examiner, April 11, 2011, https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/two-masks-versus-vaccinated-freedom (accessed April 24, 2021).

The agency’s science brief did not mention the study.86

Although the CDC did not address the Danish study until May 2021, there is one blog post that questions the researchers’ analysis of the Danish data. The Danish researchers concluded that there was no statistically significant difference in infection rates between the control group and the experimental group, The blog post’s author, James M. Brophy, a professor of medicine and epidemiology at McGill University, argues against statistical methodology that relies on null hypothesis significance testing. Applying Bayesian analysis to the Danish data, Brophy finds “an 81% probability of fewer infections among those encouraged to wear a mask and a 35% probability that mask wearers will avoid more than five infections per one thousand individuals.” Brophy believes that his probabilistic assessment means that his findings are “good enough” to support mask mandates. “While the current evidence is imperfect, it appears ‘good enough’ to make policy decisions today, given the absence of any severe downside to the intervention…. In decision theory terms, the expected value of perfect information for mask effectiveness may be sufficiently low that further research into this intervention is perhaps not worth the extra value returned.” James M. Brophy, “COVID-19: Controversial Trial May Actually Show That Masks Protect the Wearer,” The BMJ Opinion, November 24, 2020, https://blogs.bmj.com/bmj/2020/11/24/covid-19-controversial-trial-may-actually-show​-that-masks-protect-the-wearer/ (accessed April 24, 2021).

Public health officials’ mixed messages over masks have carried over from the Trump Administration into the Biden Administration.87

“The new guidelines are rigid and binary and aren’t accompanied by explanations or a link to an accessible version of the underlying science, which would empower people to both understand them better and figure things out for themselves.” Zeynepp Tufekci, “The CDC Is Still Repeating Its Mistakes,” The Atlantic, April 28, 2021, https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2021/04/cdc-outdoor-mask-pandemic/618739/ (accessed July 1, 2021).

The CDC continues to say that masks have protective value, although the findings of the only controlled study on the subject conflict with this recommendation.88

 

In April 2021, the CDC released new mask guidelines for vaccinated and unvaccinated persons, specifying indoor and outdoor use, which have generated further confusion.89

Kevin Dayaratna and Norbert Michel, “A Statistical Analysis of Mandates and Mask Usage in Kansas,” Heritage Foundation Special Report No. 246, April 15, 2021, p. 6, https://www.heritage.org/government-regulation/report/statistical-analysis-mandates-and-mask-usage-kansas.

Mask Mandates. In addition to endorsing the value of mask-wearing in reducing transmission of the pathogen, the CDC has supported mask mandates, government requirements that individuals wear masks when outside their homes.

The value of these mandates is of some dispute. A November 2020 CDC study concluded that Kansas’s mandates “appear to have contributed to the mitigation of COVID-19 transmission in mandated counties.”90

Ibid., p. 6 (emphasis in original).

In an erratum published January 1, 2021, the CDC acknowledged that its study did not reflect updates to the data.91

The CDC has since published at least two additional studies suggesting the jurisdictions with mask mandates have outperformed those without them. Heesoo Joo et al., “Decline in COVID-19 Hospitalization Growth Rates Associated with Statewide Mask Mandates – 10 States, March – October, 2020,” Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, February 12, 2021, pp. 212–216, https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33571176/ (accessed July 11, 2021), and Gery P. Guy et al., “Association of State-Issued Mask Mandates and Allowing On-Premises Restaurant Dining with County-Level COVID-19 Case and Death Growth Rates – United States, March 1 – December 31, 2020,” Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, March 12, 2021, pp. 350–354. https://www.cdc​.gov/mmwr/volumes/70/wr/mm7010e3.htm (accessed July 11, 2021).

The agency did not, however, acknowledge that the updated data affected the CDC’s conclusion that mandates helped mitigate the spread of COVID-19. Heritage Foundation authors Norbert Michel and Kevin Dayaratna write:

Closer examination shows that this conclusion is incorrect because the authors used data available from USAFacts.org that was later updated. In other words, the updated version of the data does not show that the COVID-19 incidence trend reversed in the counties with mask mandates.92Badger and Michel, “Mask Mandates: Do They Work?”

Extending their analysis into November, Michel and Dayaratna found sharp increases in COVID-19 cases both in counties that had mask mandates and those that did not. That increase was especially high from mid-October through mid-November.

Kansas counties with mask mandates experienced larger increases in new cases than those without mask mandates.93

Stephanie Soucheray, “Great Influenza Author Talks COVID-19, 1918 Flu,” Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy, April 10, 2020, https://www​.cidrap.umn.edu/news-perspective/2020/04/great-influenza-author-talks-covid-19-1918-flu (accessed July 1, 2021).

These findings are broadly consistent with well-documented patterns: Mask mandates have not withstood waves of infection either in the U.S. or in other countries that have imposed them.94

Dan Mangan, “Trump Issues ‘Coronavirus Guidelines’ for Next 15 Days to Slow Pandemic,” CNBC, March 26, 2020, https://www.cnbc.com/2020/03/16​/trumps-coronavirus-guidelines-for-next-15-days-to-slow-pandemic.html (accessed July 1, 2021).

Cases have surged in cities, counties, states, and countries that have imposed mask mandates as well as in those that have not.

This does not suggest that mask-wearing is without value. As elsewhere noted, masks appear to reduce the risk that people who do not know they are infected will transmit the disease to others, providing a public health benefit that involves relatively little social cost.

State Lockdowns and the Politicization of the Pandemic
The COVID-19 pandemic was the first time in American history that public officials have responded to a virus with such a comprehensive lockdown of the social and economic life of their citizens.

Even during the horrific 1918 flu—which disproportionately impacted young adults and claimed 675,000 American lives—public health authorities, without the benefit of vaccines or antibiotics, did not resort to the kinds of comprehensive lockdowns that became a costly feature of the COVID-19 pandemic. According to John Barry, the 1918 pandemic’s most prominent historian, “There were no general lockdowns, the way we have today. Most cities closed saloons, theaters, places of public gathering, but no general closing.”95

Ballotpedia, “States That Issued Lockdown and Stay-At-Home Orders in Response to the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic, 2020,” https://ballotpedia​.org/States_that_issued_lockdown_and_stay-at-home_orders_in_response_to_the_coronavirus_(COVID-19)_pandemic,_2020 (accessed April 24, 2021).

By March 2020, it was evident that the early bungling by federal health officials had contributed to a public health crisis. On March 16, 2020, President Trump called on the country to engage in a 15-day effort to slow the contagion’s spread.96

Bobby Allyn, “To Fight Virus, Trump Extends Social Distancing Guidelines for 30 More Days,” NPR, March 29, 2020, https://www.npr.org/2020/03/29​/821976925/coronavirus-cases-soar-across-the-u-s-and-officials-say-worse-is-yet-to-come (accessed July 1, 2021).

The CDC urged the elderly and those with chronic medical conditions to remain at home, encouraged remote work and learning, and warned against frequenting public places and gathering in groups of more than 10. By the end of the 15 days on March 30, 29 states and the District of Columbia had instituted lockdown orders.97

Ibid. The seven states were Arkansas, Iowa, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming.

On March 29, Trump called on the nation to curtail activities for an additional 30 days.98

Justin Boggs, “Drs. Birx and Fauci Credit Americans for Flattening the Coronavirus Curve,” Denver Channel, April 8, 2020, https://www​.thedenverchannel.com/news/coronavirus/drs-birx-and-fauci-credit-americans-for-flattening-the-coronavirus-curve (accessed July 1, 2021).

By early April, all but seven states and the District of Columbia had issued lockdown orders.99

Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Unemployment Rate Rises to Record High 14.7 Percent in April 2020,” May 13, 2020, https://www.bls​.gov/opub/ted/2020/unemployment-rate-rises-to-record-high-14-point-7-percent-in-april-2020.htm.

The rationale behind the Trump Administration guidelines and the state orders was to “flatten the curve” or slow the disease’s rate of spread. Lockdowns were viewed as temporary measures and were at first characterized by senior public health officials as being successful.

Dr. Deborah Birx, who at the time served as coordinator of the White House Coronavirus Task Force, and Dr. Anthony Fauci of the National Institutes of Health said on April 8 that Americans had begun to flatten the curve:

I think what has been so remarkable to those of us who have been in the fields for so long is how important behavioral change is and how amazing Americans are adapting to the behavioral changes and that is what is changing the cases and that is what will change the mortality going forward.100John Tierney, “Death and Lockdowns,” City Journal, March 21, 2021, https://www.city-journal.org/death-and-lockdowns (accessed July 1, 2021).

The policy disrupted society and “flattened” the national economy. In April 2020, the national unemployment rate skyrocketed to a stunning 14.7 percent.101

Atlas, “Science, Politics, and COVID: Will Truth Prevail?”

State lockdowns have disproportionately affected low-income and minority workers and minority businesses: 40 percent of low-income workers lost their jobs, and 32 percent of Hispanic businesses and 41 percent of black businesses were closed.102

California, Kentucky, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania.

But what began as a time-limited expedient intended to reduce burdens on hospitals and contain the pandemic was recast as ways to achieve a new, different goal. Lockdowns were no longer viewed as temporary measures but as longer-term restrictions that would be tightened and relaxed but not entirely removed. As Dr. Scott Atlas, senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University and former White House advisor, has observed, “Almost every state and major city in the US, with a handful of exceptions, have implemented severe restrictions for many months, including closures of businesses and in-person schools, mobility restrictions and curfews, quarantines, limits on group gatherings, and mask mandates dating back to at least last summer.”103

Kevin Liptak, “Trump and Florida’s DeSantis Talk Reopening Plans and Share Mutual Congratulations,” CNN, April 28, 2020, https://www.cnn.com​/2020/04/28/politics/donald-trump-ron-desantis-florida/index.html (accessed July 1, 2021).

By May 6, governors in 16 states had either withdrawn their orders or allowed them to lapse. By early June, only eight states and the District of Columbia still had lockdown orders in effect.104

We choose to examine population-adjusted deaths rather than cases, because confirmed cases provide a distorted picture of the extent of the pandemic’s spread. Confirmed cases—those diagnosed by test and reported to public health authorities—overlook asymptomatic and mildly symptomatic infections that went undiagnosed. Testing is uneven between states, meaning states that test more extensively might record higher case rates than those that do less testing, producing an inconsistent means of comparison. There are undoubtedly errors in the COVID-19 mortality data. Still, the counts are far more precise and more indicative of serious infections, a more urgent public health concern than mild or symptom-free cases.

States, however, differed in their approaches. While some reopened schools and businesses and permitted in-person dining, others kept some restrictions in place, and many imposed mask mandates.

Politicization. That division among states carried a strong political tinge, with Republican governors, especially Florida’s Ron DeSantis (R), portrayed as Trump allies who put their populace at risk by rejecting science.105

 

They were unfavorably compared to their blue state counterparts, particularly New York Governor Andrew Cuomo (D) and California Governor Gavin Newsom (D), whose long-term restrictions, school closures, mask mandates, and shuttering of public places closely aligned with the views of federal public health officials.

A portion of the public began to regard these officials’ increasingly dire warnings against reopening in partisan terms. Many rejected these warnings and their seeming indifference to the human consequences of social isolation, school closures, business failures, and lost jobs. Supporters of lockdowns saw their critics as “anti-science” and believed that they were putting the country at risk of mounting infections, hospitalizations and deaths.

Actions by state and local governments largely aligned with the prevailing political views of their respective constituencies. Stringent restrictions, occasionally relaxed and then reinstated, were common in “blue” states and cities, while “red” states and localities tended to embrace more permissive policies.

Federalism may have facilitated this divergence, but its cause lay in the failure of public health officials to articulate and defend a coherent strategy.

Did States That Followed CDC Guidelines Fare Better Than Those That Did Not?
The JAMA Forum researchers, as noted in the introduction, editorialized that America’s federalist response was inherently deficient. The authors assume the country would have been better off with a centrally imposed response to the pandemic. According to this line of argument, if the federal government theoretically had the power to compel every state in the Union to adopt policies that California and New York did, the medical and economic consequences of the pandemic would have been less severe.

In point of fact, federalism permits a natural experiment to test this hypothesis. We can reasonably ask whether states that most closely adhered to the recommendations of federal public health officials had fewer COVID-19 cases and deaths. We can also ask whether those states suffered worse economic outcomes than did states that adopted less restrictive policies.

A high-level review of pandemic and economic outcomes in the four largest states (California, Texas, Florida, and New York)—two of which deviated from the policies recommended by federal health officials and two of which most closely followed them—offers one way of testing how different states that took divergent approaches to the pandemic fared.

Chart 1 compares the number of deaths related to COVID-19 per million population, as of April 23, 2021, among the four states and the U.S. average.106

 

 

As the chart shows, although California has the lowest rate, both Florida and Texas are below the national average and well below the COVID-19 mortality rate reported for New York. Florida’s rate, for example, is only about 4 percent higher than California’s; New York’s rate is 65 percent higher than Florida’s.

Florida’s performance is quite remarkable given the makeup of its population. As of April 21, 2021, the CDC reported a total of 551,728 deaths linked to COVID-19. Of those, more than 80 percent were among people ages 65 and older. In 2018, Florida had the second-highest proportion of people in this age demographic among all 50 states. Proportionately, Florida’s senior population is 43 percent higher than that of California. Yet in a disease that causes death predominantly among those over 65, Florida’s death rate is, as noted above, only 4.3 percent higher than California’s.

Economic indicators offer another way to compare the impact of adherence to federal public health guidelines. Chart 2 assesses the economic performance of the four states as measured by changes in gross domestic product (GDP).

 

As the chart shows, seasonally adjusted real GDP contracted by 3.5 percent from 2019 to 2020. As with deaths per million population, California and Florida outperformed the national average and had relatively equivalent results. Texas tracked with the national average, while New York suffered far more severe economic contraction.

The fact that California and Florida experienced downturns of roughly equal size is in part due to the differing nature of their economies. Florida outperformed California in 12 of the 21 GDP components measured by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. The most consequential differences were in two areas that reflect structural differences between the states’ respective economies: accommodation/food services and information.

The biggest drag on Florida’s economy by far was in the area of accommodation and food services, which shrank by 0.99 points between 2019 and 2020, accounting for more than one-third of its overall 2.9 percent GDP reduction. Florida’s economy relies heavily on national and international tourism. That industry, which depends on the policies set by other states and countries at least as much as it does on the host state, delivered the most substantial blow to Florida’s economy.

California, by contrast, was buoyed by continued growth in the information industry, seeing a 0.40 percent growth, compared with Florida’s 0.08 percent contraction. That industry was one of five GDP components that improved in California between 2019 and 2020 and was by far the state’s best performer.

In short, growth in California’s information industry dampened the effect of lockdowns and school closures on the state’s economy. That single component and the downturn in Florida’s tourist industry best explains why the two states experienced contractions of similar size.

While GDP provides an economic snapshot, other indicators are relevant to this comparison among the four states. One such indicator is the unemployment rate. Chart 3 compares the unemployment rate in February 2020, the month before lockdowns began, and February 2021.

 

Here, the contrast between the two states that implemented CDC guidelines and the two that departed from those guidelines is most pronounced. At the two extremes, Florida’s unemployment rate rose by just 1.4 percent between February 2020 and February 2021, while New York’s increased by 5.0 percent. California also saw a significant increase (4.2 percent), while Texas’s rise in joblessness was smaller, though still worse than the national average.

California’s unemployment rate nearly doubled over that period (4.3 percent to 8.5 percent), and New York’s rose by 128 percent (3.9 percent to 8.9 percent). Texas unemployment rose from 3.7 percent to 6.9 percent, while Florida saw the most modest rise (3.3 percent to 4.7 percent).

In February 2021, New York and California logged the second- and third-highest unemployment rates among the 50 states and the District of Columbia, outperforming only Hawaii. Thus, whether measured in relative or absolute terms, joblessness in New York and California was far worse than the national average and among the worst in the nation.

One way to compare the public health and economic outcomes on a single map is to display COVID-19-related deaths per million in the four states along with their unemployment rates. Chart 4 presents that comparison.

 

The horizontal axis (x-axis) shows COVID-19-related deaths per million population. The vertical line near the middle of the chart shows the national average as of April 23, 2021 (1,767 deaths per million population). The vertical axis (y-axis) shows the unemployment rate in February 2021. The horizontal line shows the national unemployment rate in that month (6.2 percent).

Of the four states, three lie to the left of the vertical line, indicating that their deaths associated with COVID-19 per million residents are below the national average. Florida and Texas, as discussed above, deviated significantly from the advice of federal public health experts. New York lies to the right of that axis, showing that its COVID-19-related deaths per million population exceeded the national average.

Only one of the four states—Florida—recorded a February 2021 unemployment rate that was below the national average. Florida and Texas performed best of the four states, with joblessness in New York and California performing far worse than the national average.

Overall, Florida was the only state in the quadrant on the lower left, indicating that it had the best combined performance on COVID-19-related deaths and unemployment rates. New York was the worst performer in both categories, as shown by its place in the quadrant on the upper right.

Thus, in the four largest states, those that adhered most closely to federal public health guidelines did not significantly mitigate public health outcomes but did experience worse economic outcomes, at least according to these metrics. Far from yielding superior results, close adherence to federal public health recommendations appears to have resulted in poorer health and economic outcomes among the four states examined.

Conclusion
Never has a major public health crisis been politicized as much as public officials’ response to COVID-19. This was profoundly regrettable and a disservice to the country. While it is true that initial responses to the pandemic were based on incomplete information or data that were not initially available, it is also true that policies were maintained even after the alleged scientific basis for them had eroded.

The flashpoints of controversy have ranged from the efficacy of masks, therapeutics and vaccines to business, and school closures and comprehensive lockdowns. For over a year, public health officials at every level of government have compiled a public record. Large and diverse states such as California, Florida, New York, and Texas provide empirical data on their performance coping with the pandemic, protecting public health, and mitigating its social and economic consequences.

The evidence is available and accumulating; the consequences of policy are increasingly clear. As the novel coronavirus pandemic subsides, there should be a calm and bipartisan assessment of public officials’ performance: what went right, what went wrong, and what changes can be made that will enable Americans to do better when confronted with the next pandemic.

Doug Badger is Senior Fellow in Domestic Policy Studies, of the Institute for Family, Community, and Opportunity, at The Heritage Foundation. Robert E. Moffit, PhD, is Senior Fellow in Domestic Policy Studies, of the Institute for Family, Community, and Opportunity, at The Heritage Foundation.

Filed Under: Covid, News Tagged With: news articles

Locals Outraged as Pennsylvania Men Remain Jailed for Providing Livestock Ultrasounds

May 2, 2024 by admin

The Epoch Times

Matthew Lysiak

A source told The Epoch Times they believe the arrests are meant to send a message to anyone who dares to compete with the larger animal care service providers.

The two Pennsylvania men charged and detained earlier in April for conducting ultrasounds on cows and horses without proper credentials remain behind bars 18 days after their initial arrest, provoking outrage from family members and the local farming community who are all demanding their immediate release.

Attorney Robert Barnes, who is representing both men, announced on social media that the Commonwealth Court denied an emergency petition for the men’s release after a hearing on April 29.

“Pennsylvania is out of control. The @PAStateDept demanded these two men remain illegally imprisoned, and the Commonwealth Court judge (who issued the first illegal imprisonment order) continues their illegal imprisonment. To the Supreme Court next!” Mr. Barnes wrote.

Rusty Herr, 43, of Christiana, Pennsylvania, was booked at the Lancaster County Prison on April 11, while Ethan Wentworth, 33, of Airville, Pennsylvania, was sent to the York County Prison on April 10, following a complaint of practicing veterinary medicine without a license.

Mr. Herr and Mr. Wentworth are listed as operating partners of NoBull Solutions LLC, “an all encompassing reproductive management business dedicated to dairy farmers to help them meet and exceed the reproduction goals within their herd,” according to the company’s Facebook page.

Dairy farmer Ben Masemore, who is acting as a spokesman for Mr. Herr and Mr. Wentworth, told The Epoch Times that both men were serving 30-day sentences without bail for using ultrasound for reproductive services such as pregnancy checks, which he said was business as usual on dairy farms.

“I’ve talked to several farmers and professionals here and not a single one thinks what they do is veterinary care,” said Mr. Masemore. “This whole thing is just ridiculous.”

Local Farmers on Their Side

A source who has done business with the company told The Epoch Times that they believe the arrests were intended to send a message to anyone who dares to compete with the larger animal care service providers.
“Look, they were very good at what they did and could do so at an affordable, fair price,” said the source, who would only speak on the condition of anonymity out of fear of retribution from state authorities. “A lot of the so-called competitors who have become accustomed to overcharging weren’t so pleased about that and they made that clear, so this is what you get and now everyone knows what it is all about.”

“The community is firmly behind them,” the source said, referring to Mr. Herr and Mr. Wentworth, “but this is a sensitive issue because if they could come after these two guys who had a great reputation, they can go after any one of us.”

Kevin Robbins, who has a working relationship with the company, told The Epoch Times that the arrest came as a “shock to everyone” and that he could personally testify to the character of both men, calling them “stand-up people.”

Anger over the duo’s plight even inspired what appeared to be an artificial intelligence-generated song titled “The Ballad of Ethan and Rusty,“ which purports to tell ”the true story of two men from Pennsylvania, USA, who found themselves in an extraordinary situation.”

The song’s lyrics read in part, “Just simple farmers loving the land, but now they are in prison…Helping farms near and far but the law came knocking and their dreams fell hard.”

A GiveSendGo page set up to help pay for their legal costs says the two men were detained illegally “without due process, and being denied bail” for performing ultrasound scans on dairy cows and horses without a veterinary license.

The page, which had raised $18,855 by Monday afternoon, added that Mr. Wentworth was allegedly misled by authorities ahead of his arrest.

After being instructed by authorities to go to a courthouse to pay a fine, Mr. Wentworth was instead “kidnapped, denied the right to speak to an attorney or to call his family, and seven days later has still not seen a judge,” the fundraising page claimed. “Ethan’s pregnant wife and three young children are distraught and desperate to reach their husband and father, who is the sole breadwinner for their family.”

“Ethan and Rusty’s families need them to come home, and small dairy and horse farms throughout Lancaster, York and Berks counties depend on these men to help them breed their herds,” the fundraising page said. “Without their services, many of these farmers will not be able to afford the expensive veterinary services that the huge corporate farms can buy, causing even more of our small dairy farms to go out of business.”

Big Ag Versus Small Farms

Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) told The Epoch Times in a previous report that an alliance between “Big Ag” and the U.S. Department of Agriculture has created a monopoly and brought small, independent farmers to the brink of extinction.
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“The deck is definitely stacked,” Mr. Massie previously told the publication. “Eighty-five percent of meat comes from four companies, and this monopoly exists as a result of government regulatory policy. There is an incestuous relationship between these large companies and the Department of Agriculture.”

In January, the alleged failures to adhere to the government’s regulatory policy led to Miller’s Organic Farm, a popular Amish farm in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, being the subject of an armed raid by officials on suspicion of selling “illegal milk,” among other products. The Pennsylvania Office of the Attorney General and the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture filed a lawsuit on April 9 against the farm’s owner, Amos Miller, alleging that he had violated Pennsylvania’s Milk Sanitation Law by operating without government-mandated permits.

The farm had initially been ordered to halt all sales of its dairy products until a court ruling on April 12 permitted Mr. Miller to sell his goods anywhere in the world except in the state where he resides.

The Pennsylvania state authorities refused to comment on the detention of Mr. Herr and Mr. Wentworth, claiming they couldn’t confirm or deny an investigation due to confidentiality statutes.

Filed Under: Agriculture, Judicial Tyranny, News Tagged With: news articles

Conservative Lawyers Reveal Retaliation They Faced Over Politics

May 2, 2024 by admin

theepochtimes.com
Conservative Lawyers Reveal Retaliation They Faced Over Politics
Jacob Burg

The State Bar Court of California ruled in late March that John Eastman should be disbarred for helping then-President Donald Trump challenge the outcome of the 2020 election.

Mr. Eastman requested that a judge, before the California Supreme Court reviews the case, pause the order prohibiting him from practicing law so he could fund his defense in the criminal case brought against President Trump and his attorneys in Georgia.

Jeffrey Clark, who also tried to help President Trump, is facing a similar disbarment hearing in Washington. The focal point is a “proof of concept” letter he drafted for President Trump in December 2020 that would have asked top Georgia officials to investigate alleged voter fraud in the state.

Mr. Clark and Mr. Eastman are the latest attorneys to face backlash from the bar over their actions. Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani’s license was suspended in June 2021 after a court ruled that he made demonstrably false statements while challenging the election results.

Sidney Powell, Kenneth Chesebro, and Jenna Ellis have all been sentenced in the Georgia case after making plea deals. Lawrence Joseph, Julia Haller, and Brandon Johnson, who worked on President Trump’s post-election challenges in battleground states, are also facing disciplinary proceedings in Washington.

Other conservative attorneys have faced their own forms of professional repercussions and threats.

Christopher Crowley, a former prosecutor from Fort Myers, Florida, could be suspended by the Florida Bar after an ethics complaint was filed in 2020 for political statements he made about an opponent in a Republican primary for a state attorney election.

William Brown was fired from a prominent law firm in New Jersey for making political remarks about the glorification of violence in hip hop and militant forms of Islam in a December 2023 LinkedIn post.

James Bopp Jr. was subject to an ethics complaint after he asked a judge to recuse himself while representing Michael Gableman in an investigation into Wisconsin’s election commission.

Patrick Leduc was harassed and criticized for representing one of the first defendants to go before a judge in the indictments related to the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol breach.

And Timothy Parlatore faced public outcry for briefly representing President Trump in his Florida classified documents case and the one brought by Department of Justice Special Counsel Jack Smith in Washington.

These attorneys have expressed to The Epoch Times a fear that legal proceedings and the legal profession as a whole are increasingly used to pursue lawyers on the right more than lawyers on the left.

Ty Clevenger, a civil rights attorney from Texas, said the alleged politicization of disciplinary actions against lawyers sends the wrong signals.

“The message that’s going out to lawyers is that if you represent the wrong clients, you can pay for it personally,” he told The Epoch Times. “And so it’s not just lawyers who are being intimidated. It’s all the defendants or potential defendants out there who are going to have or are having more difficulty getting lawyers because lawyers don’t want to have to deal with repercussions.”

John Malcolm, a senior legal fellow with The Heritage Foundation, agreed.

“There is no question that there is a political bias in the legal profession that skews dramatically to the left, and it is getting worse,” he told The Epoch Times.
Free Speech and Bar Rules

Indiana University law professor Margaret Tarkington told The Epoch Times that two model rules from the American Bar Association (ABA) have the potential to disproportionately affect conservative attorneys.

Rule 8.2 says, “A lawyer shall not make a statement that the lawyer knows to be false or with reckless disregard as to its truth or falsity concerning the qualifications or integrity of a judge, adjudicatory officer or public legal officer, or of a candidate for election or appointment to judicial or legal office.”

Ms. Tarkington said that although she believes that the rule as it is written seemingly complies with the U.S. Constitution, “the way 8.2 is applied by most states in the United States is absolutely unconstitutional and violates lawyers’ First Amendment rights.”

She said the rule usually targets comments about judges, including judicial candidates, as a means of preserving the “perception of integrity” within the judiciary as a whole.

However, Ms. Tarkington said she believes that it shields judges from “all effective criticism,” including from the very people who know what judges should and shouldn’t be doing: lawyers.

The Florida Bar’s version of this rule was applied to Mr. Crowley when he ran in 2018 for 20th Judicial Circuit state attorney against Amira Fox.

The Florida Bar stated that he “publicly disparaged his opponent through various political campaign materials, advertisements, and social media postings” and violated other rules, including promoting an unlawful raffle lottery, which Mr. Crowley said was settled with a diversion agreement.

He criticized Ms. Fox’s conviction record, called her “corrupt” and “swampy,” and referenced her uncle’s association with the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). He shared an article on Facebook that referred to Ms. Fox as a “Muslim candidate,” and the Florida Bar stated that he was attacking her religion.

However, Mr. Crowley said he never knew, nor cared, about Ms. Fox’s religion and was merely sharing an article that he didn’t author that discussed her family’s relationship with the PLO, which he sees as a terrorist group.

“So basically, and factually, the Florida Bar is regulating political speech,” he told The Epoch Times.

Mr. Crowley said that, in calling Ms. Fox “corrupt,” he cited “facts, figures, and news articles.”

“Now the Florida Bar is saying I cannot do that,” he said.

Ms. Tarkington said rule 8.2 is usually applied to judicial candidates and not state attorney races.

“That is an absolutely bizarre application of that. That is not commonly done,” she said of Mr. Crowley’s Florida Bar ethics complaint.

Mr. Clevenger also took issue with the way ABA rules were applied in the ethics complaints against Mr. Crowley.

“If a lawyer cannot speak frankly and freely during a political campaign, then we just don’t have First Amendment rights anymore,” Mr. Clevenger said.

The ABA creates rule guidelines for state bar associations throughout the country but does not directly “license or discipline lawyers,” an ABA spokesperson told The Epoch Times.

“Each state licenses lawyers and investigates complaints of ethical violations by lawyers licensed in their state,” the spokesperson said. “Usually, it’s the state supreme court or state bar—under the authority of the state supreme court—that does that.”

Still, when state bar associations discipline lawyers such as Mr. Crowley and Mr. Eastman, they refer to rules enacted by the ABA, including 8.2.

There’s also ABA rule 8.4(g), which states that a lawyer shall not “engage in conduct that the lawyer knows or reasonably should know is harassment or discrimination on the basis of race, sex, religion, national origin, ethnicity, disability, age, sexual orientation, gender identity, marital status or socioeconomic status in conduct related to the practice of law.”

This rule is not “narrowly tailored,” Ms. Tarkington said, and it covers comments that could be considered “derogatory or demeaning on a very long list of bases.”

“The problem is a number of conservative viewpoints, whether it be on abortion or on immigration or on traditional marriage, are things that because of the way [8.4(g) is] written, they would have a greater tendency to be problematic,” she said.

Ms. Tarkington said the way the rule is written also creates the “potential for greater restriction and greater discipline of conservative lawyers.”

The Epoch Times contacted the Florida Bar but didn’t receive a reply before publication.
Election Litigation

Some of the highest-profile disciplinary proceedings against conservative attorneys in recent years have been against the group that helped President Trump dispute the 2020 election results.

Beyond Mr. Eastman and Mr. Clark, the District of Columbia Bar Discipline Committee recommended disbarring Rudy Giuliani in July 2023, and the final decision will be made by the District of Columbia Court of Appeals.

Sidney Powell and her lawyer, Lawrence Joseph, are also facing various repercussions from advancing claims and lawsuits related to the 2020 election results. Ms. Powell was sued by voting machine companies over accusations she made that the 2020 election was rigged against President Trump and was also indicted in the Georgia RICO case along with the former president, Mr. Eastman, Mr. Clark, Mr. Giuliani, lawyer Kenneth Cheseboro, lawyer Jenna Ellis, former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, and others.

Mr. Joseph, like Mr. Clark, received disciplinary charges from the District of Columbia Bar’s Office of Disciplinary Counsel earlier this year.

“[The rules] need to be clarified as to the obligations for when you’re advising or assisting government,” Ms. Tarkington said.

She argued that the rules used to discipline these lawyers are “really broad and amorphous” and that it’s “really hard to know in advance whether whatever you’re doing would violate them.”

Ms. Tarkington said that although she takes issue with those who allegedly helped submit a second slate of electors, she doesn’t believe that disciplinary proceedings should be brought against everyone who represented President Trump or “everyone who filed litigation on his behalf” to challenge the 2020 election results.

The former president had a First Amendment right to challenge the election in court, she said, and “his lawyers had a corresponding First Amendment right to petition on his behalf to associate with him.”

Filed Under: Judicial Tyranny, News, Trump Tagged With: news articles

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