Over the past month, the Pigpen Project has submitted 34,222 “challenges” of Nevada voters who appear to have moved from the residence where they are registered to vote but remain on the “Active” voter list…
Even AFTER the “routine list maintenance” clean-up announced on August 7.
On August 27, 2024, Nevada Secretary of State Cisco Aguilar sent a private message to the state’s 17 county clerks/registrars directing them to REJECT our challenges without even giving us so much as the courtesy of a heads up that he was doing so.
Why is Secretary Aguilar so intent on keeping voters on Nevada’s voter rolls who no longer live in Nevada?
And why is Secretary Aguilar working clandestinely to prevent us from assisting the county clerks/registrars in cleaning up our “dirty” voter rolls?
I asked these questions and more in a formal response to the Secretary this morning.
Click here to read it
On another matter…
One year ago, a flash flood completely wiped out the north wall of my front yard (click here) thanks to Clark County redirecting flood waters down my street by installing a set of concrete barriers a block from my home.
Naturally, the county claimed “immunity” and refused to pay for that and all the other property damage their flood caused.
Meanwhile, as reported by the LVRJ last March…
“Several Clark County government officials were among the nation’s top 5 percent of wage earners in 2022, records show. Former County Manager Yolanda King was paid $728,300, former Chief Public Defender Curtis Brown $457,600 and Director of Aviation Rosemary Vassiliadis $369,200, according to county pay data.”
Lovely.
Anyway, this weekend I finally was able to build a new wall…
Now if I can just figure out how to make MEXICO pay for it!
Oh, yeah…and the concrete barriers are STILL there. But if we get hit AGAIN, the county won’t be immune this time since it now knows about the problem and has had MORE than enough time to fix it.