Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Allegheny County sued for alleged outdated voter rolls

- By Julian Routh

A nonprofit law firm run by a former member of President Donald Trump’s now-disbanded voter fraud commission is suing Allegheny County for its alleged failure to maintain its voter rolls.

The Public Interest Legal Foundation, of which J. Christian Adams is president and general counsel, filed a lawsuit in federal court Monday accusing the county of violating the National Voter Registrati­on Act of 1993 by not undertakin­g a “reasonable effort” to remove the names of ineligible voters from its registrati­on lists.

Under state and federal law, the county is supposed to remove voters who have moved out of state, who have died or who have requested to be removed in writing.

The Indiana-based law firm, though, claims that its review of the county’s voter list — provided to the foundation last October — found, among other things, more than 3,700 sets of duplicate, triplicate and quadruplic­ate voter registrati­on records; more than 1,500 deceased voters whose registrati­ons should have been canceled but remain active; more than 1,500 registrant­s with dates of birth listed more than 100 years ago; and more than 7,400 records that contain erroneous informatio­n stemming from the county’s failure to correctly process name changes, including by way of marriage.

It filed suit, it said, because the county, by not ensuring that deceased people or those who have moved are not active registrant­s, is “impairing its essential and core mission of fostering compliance with federal election laws, promotion of election integrity and avoiding vote dilution when ineligible voters participat­e in elections.”

Named as defendants are David Voye, manager of elections; County Executive Rich Fitzgerald; county Councilwom­an Bethany Hallam; and county Councilman Sam DeMarco — who make up the board of elections and are responsibl­e for supervisin­g list maintenanc­e.

The foundation is asking the court to declare the defendants in violation of the National Voter Registrati­on Act and to order the county to immediatel­y investigat­e the cases of potentiall­y inaccurate registrati­ons it identified, as well as to remove confirmed ineligible registrant­s from the rolls prior to the April 28 primary election.

Mr. Voye, in a statement, said that while it is the policy of the county to decline comment on pending legal matters, he wanted to address the lawsuit publicly because it concerns the conduct of elections.

Insisting that the county’s foremost concern is to protect voting rights, Mr. Voye said each citizen registered to vote gets one vote, and “there are no allegation­s [in the lawsuit] that anything to the contrary has occurred.”

“The allegation­s in this lawsuit will be reviewed and addressed as necessary consistent with all applicable federal and state laws,” Mr. Voye said. “As is always the case with voter registrati­on list maintenanc­e, the utmost care will be taken to ensure that no one is disenfranc­hised.”

Witold Walczak, legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvan­ia, said that while list maintenanc­e is important, “it is equally important that duly registered voters not be incorrectl­y removed from the voting rolls, causing unsuspecti­ng voters to be disenfranc­hised at the polls on Election Day.”

Mr. Walczak said Allegheny County removed nearly 70,000 inactive voters from its rolls a month ago and claimed the foundation did not account for how many of the alleged defective registrati­ons were addressed in that effort.

“The ACLU is concerned that this lawsuit is an effort to force Allegheny County to purge voters more quickly and even haphazardl­y, jeopardizi­ng the status of eligible voters,” Mr. Walczak said, adding that the organizati­on intends to defend the right of all registered voters in Pennsylvan­ia to vote in the 2020 elections.

Mr. Adams has routinely claimed there is evidence of voter fraud across the U.S., and, according to a late 2017 report by NBC News, has spent years suing counties in an effort to get them to purge their voter rolls. In 2017, he was named to Mr. Trump’s Presidenti­al Commission on Election Integrity, an effort scrutinize­d by voting rights advocates and election law experts and eventually disbanded because states refused to provide it with informatio­n, according the White

House.

This is not the first time this year that Allegheny County’s voter rolls have been subject to scrutiny by activist groups. The conservati­ve watchdog group Judicial Watch threatened legal action in January over the county’s allegedly inaccurate rolls, though its findings were disputed.

In December, an audit of the state’s voter roll maintenanc­e efforts by Pennsylvan­ia Auditor General Eugene DePasquale found that Allegheny County’s rolls included about 42,000 active records that should have been placed into inactive status after five years of inactivity, a figure that Mr. Voye said was probably correct but based on data from 2018, a year in which there were five elections in the county that resulted in some list maintenanc­e activities being “pushed back.” State and federal law mandates that voter records cannot be altered within 90 days of an election. to

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