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In the old days, the frauds were audacious. Once in the 1970s, said Recktenwald, who investigated election abuses for years, one candidate's nominating petitions looked like the residents of a large public housing project "had come in (and signed) in alphabetical order, and every fourth name was in the same handwriting." "The fact that everyone in a particular precinct would vote for the same candidate and then you flip down (the ballot) and everyone in the precinct would vote for the same judge. that doesn't happen anymore," said Recktenwald, who now teaches journalism at Southern Illinois University. However, the problems with the latest petitions seem to involve at least one homeless man, who told the Chicago Sun-Times that he was paid to gather more than 3,000 voter signatures for each of two rival candidates. The safeguards put in place in recent years have made it tougher to vote after death. The city's board of election now sends a notice to every voter address. If it is returned to the post office, the name is taken off the voter rolls, and the only way back on is through a sworn affidavit. Another factor is technology. Voting rolls are computerized and watched a lot closer. In the 1970s, a private group, Legal Elections in All Precincts, or LEAP, was authorized to appoint independent election judges to man precincts on election day, replacing politically aligned judges who routinely turned a blind eye to vote tampering. But every once in a while there are reminders of the old "four-legged voting," in which ward bosses accompanied voters into the booths to give them a hand. In August, two former ward operatives were sentenced to nearly a year in jail after being convicted of steering absentee votes to Alderman Bernard Stone, in some cases by filling out others' ballots themselves. The nominating petitions for city office will help keep fraud alive, said Rose. "If you have to hire people to get your signatures and pay them per signature, those people are going to cheat," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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