This is part of an ongoing series about voter registration at college residence halls.
Florida State University has ~ 33k students. Of those, 1,609 are associated with residence hall address. The street address are public information listed on the FSU webs site and google maps.
Analysis
Let’s compare the actual address in Chart 1 versus the address as listed in the roll. The ONLY address that matches are 20 at Azalea Hall. The rest use a wrong address.
Here is a sample of the second portion of the address associated with the those above. 1,106 of them have no reference to a room number.
Let’s look at the mailing address in Chart 4.
Of the 381 using 75 N Woodward Ave as the mailing address, 379 do not have a mailbox associated with the address, which appears to be a student center.
Given all of the above, how are absentee ballots supposed to mailed to the correct person? Does this sounds like a prime opportunity for vote harvesting?
Chart 5 indicates that there are 322 “students” 25 years or older using a residence hall address. Chart 6 indicates that, for example, 180 of the Active registrations are for “students” 25 years or older using the residence hall as an address. Make sense?
The oldest Active voter is a 40 year old female who registered to vote in 2007 living at Azalea Hall with a bad residential address and no mailing address. Yea right!
We have students who registered to vote as early as 1968. Assuming they were 18 years old at the time, that would mean they are now 74 years old! I am all for older folks going back to school but living at an undergrad dorm? Really?
Chart 8 would indicate that this is a good store of potential “phantom voters” for DEMs. Surprise? Not really….
Finally, if you want to know what halls are really popular for 30+ year olds to live with your young adult college students, here they are. Sound like a good idea?
Another bingo. Thanks for the spotlight on another slice of election fraud!
Geez...How many of these "Institutions of (higher?) Learning" have business schools and teach accounting and about business systems? I wonder how they account for athletic scholarships and so many other things if this is an example of their administration of records. Can they present the 70 year old on a tennis scholarship who lives in a residence hall and is majoring in Electronic Business Systems? "Electronic Records" are the stuff of fantasy when they are institutionalized or industrialized. So, the institutions and SOSs tell us it is about "personal responsibility" to update our addresses. That gets tossed out the window with the invention of electronic identity theft. Thank you! Your work is always high quality.