Freeman is co-author of Was
the 2004 Presidential Election Stolen? Exit Polls, Election Fraud, and the
Official Count (New York: Seven Stories Press). He has published papers
and presented findings demonstrating mass-scale election fraud to the American
Association for the Advancement of Science, American Association of Public
Opinion Research, and American Statistical Association as well as the National
Hispanic Congreso, the Free Press National Media Reform Conference, and the
United States Congress.
He holds a Ph.D. from
MIT’s Sloan School of Management and an M.S. in Social System Science from the University of Pennsylvania’s
Wharton School. Since 2000, he has held several
academic positions at the University
of Pennsylvania, where he currently
serves as Senior Lecturer and Resident Scholar for the Graduate Program of
Organizational Dynamics in the School
of Arts and Sciences. In
addition to his regular courses on innovation and resilience, he teaches
workshops for graduate students on research methods and survey design. He has
also taught on the faculty at the Wharton
School, and at the Universidad de San
Andreas in Argentina and the
Central American Institute of Business Administration (INCAE) in Costa Rica,
where he has conducted management courses for private and public sector leaders
and faculty workshops on research methods. He has won four national research
awards for outstanding scholarship from the Academy
of Management; and received an award
from Sonoma (California)
State University’s
Project Censored for his analyses documenting evidence of US election fraud.