Hat tip to Lowering The Bar.
In a story that seems like it came straight out of a Monty Python movie, a Texas judge has at least temporarily halted Texas officials' plan to purge 77,000 "presumably dead voters" from voting rolls after finding that four of the plaintiffs rebutted this presumption by being – in fact – alive.
At least one county official refused to comply with the instruction to delete thousands from voter registration rolls because hundreds of the "presumably" dead contacted the official to complain.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p53kJX64ieQ
"Bring Out Your Dead" – Monty Python and the Holy Grail
Read More:
- "We're Not Dead," Says Texas Voters Informed They Were Dead [Lowering the Bar]
- Texas Court Halts State Attempt to Purge Voters as Dead [Kelley Shannon, Margaret Cronin Fisk and Laurel Calkins at Bloomberg BusinessWeek]
(c) Copyright 2012 Brett A. Emison
Follow @BrettEmison on Twitter.
Brett Emison is currently a partner at Langdon & Emison, a firm dedicated to helping injured victims across the country from their primary office near Kansas City. Mainly focusing on catastrophic injury and death cases as well as complex mass tort and dangerous drug cases, Mr. Emison often deals with automotive defects, automobile crashes, railroad crossing accidents (train accidents), trucking accidents, dangerous and defective drugs, defective medical devices.
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