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Battered N.J. tries to ensure right to vote

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Penny M. Venetis, a Rutgers-Newark law professor who is co-director of the school’s constitutional litigation clinic, said it was unclear whether Secretary of State and Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno had the authority to order the changes.

Venetis said the moves could be the basis to challenge election results in court. She and others also raised concerns over possible security lapses in email and fax voting.

“Internet voting is inherently insecure because it’s difficult for the parties to witness what’s going on,” said Princeton University computer science Professor Andrew Appel, who like Venetis has been involved in long-running litigation seeking to force the state to upgrade election security measures.

Appel said email messages can be altered without the sender’s knowledge and are vulnerable to fraud.

New York rejected email voting, and Doug Kellner, co-chairman of that state’s elections board, called it “completely insecure.”

Military personnel and overseas voters voting by email or fax have to mail in paper copies of their ballots as verification, but Venetis said Guadagno’s directive on electronic voting makes no mention of paper verification.

Guadagno said in an interview that it would be required.

“The process is exactly the same,” she said.

New Jersey is one of the few states, along with Alaska, that allows limited electronic voting, according to Pam Smith, the president of the Verified Voting Foundation, a national advocacy group that opposes the practice.

Christie said anyone planning to sue over the state’s voting procedures should “get in line.”

“This is extraordinary circumstances, and this is what we’re doing,” he said.

One election-related storm response the Christie administration envisioned won’t be needed on Election Day. Guadagno said that no polling place will be run out of National Guard trucks — something the state discussed for areas with widespread power loss.

The move, however, concerned some Democrats, who feared the sight of armed guardsmen at polling places could scare off minority and urban voters.

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