
We have no way to verify citizenship status. “There were no procedures in state Election Law in 2005 to verify citizenship and that remains true today. “Just incompetence,” said the city Board of Elections staffer who pulled Kargbo’s voter files for The Post, adding that he’s “seen it before.” Reps for the city Board of Elections told The Post that responsibility for verifying voter information fell to the state Board of Elections.īut the state Board of Elections shrugged off the mistake, instead blaming the lack of vetting laws. He enrolled in the Democratic Party and voted in nine general and primary elections between 20, the records show.Ī copy of Kargbo’s original voter registration form obtained by The Post shows he clearly and honestly marked that he was not a US citizen, yet the clueless agency registered him anyway. according to records from the New York City Board of Elections.

The moon usually rises an average of 50 minutes later each day as it moves through its cycle, but during the harvest moon, the timing changes by a smaller interval each night, closer to 15 or 20 minutes depending on where you live, according to the Farmer’s Almanac, which would have given farmers those extra few minutes in the days before the advent of artificial lighting.Ī non-citizen green card-holder in Manhattan may have been illegally voting in city elections for the past 13 years - possibly one of “thousands” of similarly bogus voters, a city Board of Elections whistleblower told The Post.Ībdul Rahman Kargbo, 63, first registered to vote in November 2005. “Anywhere with clear skies, you should have a great view,” he said. the next morning.įull moons always rise close to sunset opposite the sun, which can give them a reddish orange tinge, said Kevin Lewis, an associate professor of planetary geophysics at Johns Hopkins University.

And in San Francisco, the moon will rise around 8:01 p.m. In Houston, the moon will rise around 8:07 p.m. Eastern it will be visible there until about 6:30 a.m. In New York City, Saturday night’s moon will rise at about 7:45 p.m. Jupiter will shine its brightest this year on Sept. Jupiter, Saturn and the stars will appear to shift westward each night of the full moon, according to NASA.
