Diebold
Diebold employed 5 convicted felons as senior managers and developers to help write the central compiler computer code
that counted 50% of the votes in 30 states. http://www.wired.com/news/evote/0,2645,61640,00.html
Jeff Dean, Diebold's Senior Vice-President and senior programmer on Diebold's central compiler code, was convicted of 23 counts of felony theft in the first degree. http://www.chuckherrin.com/HackthevoteFAQ.htm#how
http://www.blackboxvoting.org/bbv_chapter-8.pdf
Diebold Senior Vice-President Jeff Dean was convicted of planting back doors in his software and using a "high degree of
sophistication" to evade detection over a period of 2 years. http://www.chuckherrin.com/HackthevoteFAQ.htm#how
http://www.blackboxvoting.org/bbv_chapter-8.pdf
During the Ohio recount in 2004, Catherine Buchanan says she was told Diebold reprogrammed voting machines while present at her local Board of Elections. "They told us that Diebolt [sic] was coming to reprogram the computer, which doesn't make any sense. I mean, if you're going to calibrate a machine, you calibrate it before you're going to do testing to make sure it's going to be okay," Buchanan asserts.
ES&S
Tom Eschenberger, vice president of ES&S, was fingered by charges of bribery and kickbacks.
Sequoia
Phil Foster and Pasquale Ricci of Sequoia were indicted for paying a large bribe to the Louisiana Commissioner of Elections.
The owner of this same company once tried to bribe a sitting Supreme Court justice.
Sequoia has even been linked to one member of the Gambino crime family.