“Even though our system is not well known, it is the most secure voting system available in the world,” Smartmatic CEO Antonio Mugica tells the Miami Herald.

Source:
Richard Brand, “Untried Fla. vote device to be tried in Venezuela,” Miami Herald, April 20, 2004, as part of package from Rep. Carolyn Maloney to Treasury Secretary John Snow, May 4, 2006.
1.www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/world
2.Letter_to_Sec_Dep_Treasury_CarolynMaloney.pdf. (PAGE 3)
3.http://maloney.house.gov/sites/documents

1. How could an inexperienced, not well-known company declare and sell itself with such confidence, and be taken seriously by so many electoral jurisdictions, regulatory entities, and political leaders?

2. How could a voting system be credible and secure when the main investor in the software company is the the world’s largest cartel?

3. Why were international election observers not more skeptical of the claims to integrity and security of Venezuela’s electronic voting system and its vendors?