Imperial Valley Press

New state voter fraud units finding few cases from midterms

- BY GARY FIELDS, ANTHONY IZAGUIRRE AND SUDHIN THANAWALA

WASHINGTON – State-level law enforcemen­t units created after the 2020 presidenti­al election to investigat­e voter fraud are looking into scattered complaints more than two weeks after the midterms but have provided no indication of systemic problems.

That’s just what election experts had expected and led critics to suggest that the new units were more about politics than rooting out widespread abuses. Most election-related fraud cases already are investigat­ed and prosecuted at the local level.

Florida, Georgia and Virginia created special state-level units after the 2020 election, all pushed by Republican governors, attorneys general or legislatur­es.

“I am not aware of any significan­t detection of fraud on Election Day, but that’s not surprising,” said Paul Smith, senior vice president of the Campaign Legal Center. “The whole concept of voter impersonat­ion fraud is such a horribly exaggerate­d problem. It doesn’t change the outcome of the election, it’s a felony, you risk getting put in jail and you have a high possibilit­y of getting caught. It’s a rare phenomena.”

The absence of widespread fraud is important because the lies surroundin­g the 2020 presidenti­al election spread by former President Donald Trump and his allies have penetrated deeply into the Republican Party and eroded trust in elections. In the run-up to this year’s elections, 45% of Republican­s had little to no confidence that votes would be counted accurately.

An Associated Press investigat­ion found there was no widespread fraud in Georgia or the five other battlegrou­nd states where Trump disputed his 2020 loss, and so far there is no indication of that in this year’s elections. Certificat­ion of the results is going smoothly in most states, with few complaints.

In Georgia, where Trump tried to pressure state officials to “find” enough votes to overturn his loss, a new law gives the state’s top law enforcemen­t agency, the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion, authority to initiate investigat­ions of alleged election fraud without a request from election officials. The alleged violation would have to be significan­t enough to change or create doubt about the outcome of an election.

GBI spokespers­on Nelly Miles said the agency has not initiated any investigat­ions under the statute.

The agency is assisting the secretary of state’s office in an investigat­ion of a breach of voting equipment in Coffee County in 2021, but that is its only recent election fraud investigat­ion, she said in an email.

That breach, which came to light earlier this year, involved local officials in a county that voted for Trump by nearly 40 percentage points in 2020 and some high-profile supporters of the former president.

State Rep. Jasmine Clark, a Democrat who opposed the additional authority for the bureau, said the lack of investigat­ions validates the criticism that the law was unnecessar­y. But she said just the prospect of a GBI investigat­ion could intimidate people who want to serve as poll workers or take on some other role in the voting process.

“In this situation, there was no actual problem to be solved,” Clark said. “This

was a solution looking for a problem, and that’s never the way that we should legislate.”

Florida has been the most visible state, creating its Office of Election Crimes and Security amid much fanfare this year and keeping a pledge that Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis made in 2021 to combat unspecifie­d election fraud.

The office is under the Florida Department of State. It reviews allegation­s and then tasks state law enforcemen­t with pursuing violations.

DeSantis this summer announced the election unit had arrested 20 people for illegally voting in the 2020 election, when the state had 14.4 million registered voters. That was the first major election since a state constituti­onal amendment restored voting rights for felons, except for those convicted of murder or felony sex crimes or

those who still owe fines, fees or restitutio­n.

Court records show the 20 people were able to register to vote despite prior felony conviction­s, apparently leading them to believe they could legally cast ballots. At least part of the confusion stems from language in the voter registrati­on forms that requires applicants to swear they are not a felon – or if they are, that they have had their rights restored. The forms do not inquire specifical­ly about past conviction­s for murder and felony sexual assault.

One of the people charged, 56-year-old Robert Lee Wood, had his home surrounded early one morning by law enforcemen­t officers who banged on his door and arrested him. He spent two days in jail. Wood’s lawyer, Larry Davis, said his client did not think he was breaking the law because he was able to register to vote without issue. Davis called the law enforcemen­t reaction “over the top” in this case.

Wood’s case was dismissed by a Miami judge in late October on jurisdicti­onal grounds, because it was brought by the Office of the Statewide Prosecutor rather than local prosecutor­s in Miami. The state is appealing the ruling.

Andrea Mercado, executive director of Florida Rising, an independen­t political activist organizati­on focused on economic and racial justice in the state, said the disproport­ionate targeting of such wouldbe voters was sending a “chilling message to all returning citizens who want to register to vote.” She said her group found that many of them were confused about the requiremen­ts.

“You have to go to 67 counties’ websites and find their individual county processes to see if you have a fine or fee,” she said. “It’s a labyrinthi­an ordeal.”

Weeks before the Nov. 8 election, the Office of Election Crimes and Security began notifying Florida counties of hundreds of registered voters who potentiall­y were ineligible to vote because of prior conviction­s. In letters to the counties, state officials asked that election officials verify the informatio­n and then take action to prevent ineligible voters from casting ballots.

“We’ve heard stories about voters who are eligible to vote but have a criminal conviction in their past, and they are now scared to register and vote,” said Michael Pernick, a voting rights attorney with the NAACP Legal Defense Fund. He called it “deeply concerning.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/AMY BETH BENNETT ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks during a news conference at the Broward County Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., on Aug. 18.
AP PHOTO/AMY BETH BENNETT Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks during a news conference at the Broward County Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., on Aug. 18.

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