After Philadelphia sees voting machine controls stolen, reporter finds lax security at warehouse
After Philadelphia sees voting machine controls stolen, reporter finds lax security at warehouse

By Michael Ruiz | Fox News

Investigative journalist Max Marin said he walked right in without encountering security.

A Philadelphia reporter said he walked right into an elections warehouse Thursday, a day after reports that someone had stolen USB drives used to program the city’s voting machines from the same facility.

There were no security guards at the door or surveillance cameras visible, according to Max Marin, an investigative journalist at WHYY’s Billy Penn news site, who shared video and photographs from his adventure to Twitter Thursday afternoon.

“I’m here in this warehouse where all of the voting machines are stored,” he says in a minute-long video as he pans his cellphone camera over the machines. “I just walked in that door, I’ve been announcing my name, trying to see if anyone was here. Quite easily could take any number of things with this level of access.”

He walks across the warehouse floor and appears to encounter someone off camera in an office on the other side before the video ends.

In a separate tweet, he posted an image of the exterior and wrote that he did not see any security cameras.

PHILADELPHIA VOTING MACHINE CONTROLS STOLEN FROM CITY WAREHOUSE: REPORTS

After publishing his story, Marin said Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney told him the city would ramp up security at the warehouse with more guards and a police presence around the clock as well as a logging procedure for people entering and exiting the facility.

The thumb drives and a laptop went missing sometime this week, but exactly when remains unclear, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported Wednesday.

“We are confident that this incident will not in any way compromise the integrity of the election,” a spokesman for City Commissioner Lisa Deeley told the paper.

Each of the drives is matched to a single voting machine, according to the Inquirer, and inserting the wrong device will result in an error.

Since the machines are sealed after being programmed, a torn seal would indicated someone had tampered with them after the fact. Any machines at risk of having been tampered with would be wiped clean and re-tested.

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