Morning Sun

AG to probe group seeking to repeal governor powers

- By David Eggert

“My office will investigat­e these allegation­s, and if there is aviolation­of law, we will prosecute those responsibl­e.”

— Dana Nessel, Michigan’s attorney general

LANSING » Michigan’s attorney general opened an investigat­ion Monday into allegation­s that a ballot groupmay have committed crimes while gathering signatures to repeal a lawthat gives Gov. Gretchen Whitmer broad powers to manage the coronaviru­s crisis.

Dananessel, a Democrat, said her office will probe Unlock Michigan, a Republican-affiliated committee that plans to submit its signatures Friday. If the group turns in enough — it needs 340,000 valid signatures — the initiative will go to the Legislatur­e.

Majority Republican­s could enact the measure into law, and it could not be vetoed by the Democratic governor. Whitmer has used the 1945 law to continuall­y extend a state of emergency, the underpinni­ng of her sweeping orders that restrict business operations, limit gathering sizes and requiremas­ks in public.

The Detroit Free Press has reported on deceptive, potentiall­y illegal tactics engaged by people who were hired to gather signatures. The League of Women Voters and John Pirich, a retired election lawyer, subsequent­ly wrote letters seeking an investigat­ion.

“Our ballot initiative process allows efforts with strong public support to be presented to the Legislatur­e. But that process becomes tainted when petition circulator­smanipulat­e and cheat to serve their own agendas,” Nessel, who has supported Whitmer’s use of emergency powers, said in a statement. “My office will investigat­e these allegation­s, and if there is a violation of law, we will prosecute those responsibl­e.”

Fred Wszolek, spokesman for Unlock Michigan, called the probe “a partisan political farce, which is to be expected from this partisan political attorney general.”

The Free Press, citing a secretly recorded video, reported lastweek that a company coached paid petition circulator­s on giving voters false informatio­n, illegally collecting signatures without witnessing them, trespassin­g on private property and even lying under oath.

 ?? MATTHEWDAE SMITH— LANSING STATE JOURNAL VIA AP, FILE ?? Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel addresses the media during a news conference, March 5in Lansing.
MATTHEWDAE SMITH— LANSING STATE JOURNAL VIA AP, FILE Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel addresses the media during a news conference, March 5in Lansing.

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