Royal Oak Tribune

Bond set at $100K for 2 activists charged in robocall case

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DETROIT » A judge on Thursday set bond at $100,000 for two conservati­ve political activists who are accused of using false robocalls to dissuade Black residents in Detroit and other Democratic-leaning U.S. cities from voting by mail.

The magistrate entered not-guilty pleas on behalf of Jack Burkman, 54, of Arlington, Virginia, and Jacob Wohl, 22, of Los Angeles.

The men didn’t speak during a brief court hearing that was held by video conference. But their attorneys sparred with a state prosecutor over a request for $1 million cash bond.

“Is this a CSC 1?” asked Scott Grabel, the lawyer for Burkman, using shorthand for a sexual assault charge. “It involves a 20-second call that involved no threats. It did not deter any voting.”

Grabel said the charges were an “absolute atrocity” and a “publicity stunt” by Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel, a Democrat.

“The chance of conviction here, in my opinion, is zero, absolutely zero. It’s involving a robocall, which is protected speech,” Grabel said.

The calls falsely warned residents in majority-Black Detroit and cities in New York, Pennsylvan­ia, Ohio and Illinois that if they vote by mail in the Nov. 3 election they could be subjected to arrest, debt collection and forced vaccinatio­n, investigat­ors said.

The charges against Burkman and Wohl include conspiring to intimidate voters and using a computer to commit crimes. An estimated 85,000 robocalls were made nationwide, according to the attorney general’s office.

Assistant Attorney General Richard Cunningham asked for a $1 million bond, saying it would protect the public from efforts to discourage voting, “one of the fundamenta­l rights we have.”

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