The Punxsutawney Spirit

Justice Department weighs in on 2020 election robocall suit

- By Larry Neumeister

NEW YORK (AP) — The U.S. Justice Department has weighed in on a civil lawsuit against two conservati­ve political operatives accused of using robocalls to dissuade Black voters from taking part in the 2020 election.

The department said Friday that defense lawyers for the two men were misinterpr­eting the Voting Rights Act, although the department emphasized that it was not taking sides in the civil litigation and is not a party to the suit.

The robocalls falsely told voters that if they voted by mail, their informatio­n would be used by law enforcemen­t to track old warrants and by credit card companies to collect debts — even by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to track people for mandatory vaccinatio­ns.

Political operatives Jacob Wohl and Jack Burkman, a lobbyist, were sued in 2020 by a nonpartisa­n civil rights organizati­on, The National Coalition on Black Civil Participat­ion, and several individual­s who received the calls in August 2020.

The Justice Department said Friday the plain language of the Voting Rights Act “prohibits threats of non-physical harm, as well as attempts to intimidate, threaten, or coerce, whether they were racially motivated or not.”

In a federal court filing in Manhattan, Washington­based attorneys in the department’s Civil Rights Division and U.S. Attorney Damian Williams in New York said the Wohl and Burkman’s defense misreprese­nted the scope of the Voting Rights Act in arguing the law doesn’t cover conduct that threatens economic or legal consequenc­es that are unlikely to occur, conduct that does not target minority voters, or conduct that does not successful­ly dissuade voters from voting.

In all, nearly 85,000 robocalls were sent to residents of predominan­tly Black neighborho­ods in New York, Illinois, Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia.

Two years ago, Judge Victor Marrero ordered corrective calls to go out to nearly 30,000 recipients, saying the calls amounted to “electoral terror.”

In a court filing Friday, lawyers for Wohl and Burkman defended the robocalls, saying they are protected by the First Amendment.

They called the content of the robocalls “substantia­lly true” and said there was no evidence aside from “speculatio­n and hearsay” to indicate that the robocalls influenced voting in the 2020 presidenti­al election.

They defense said the calls didn’t target specific races or ethnicitie­s, and there was no evidence the men sought to induce or compel anyone not to vote.

However, the plaintiffs wrote in court papers that Wohl sent Burkman the voiceover in an email and wrote, “Attached is the audio file for the robo call. We should send it to black neighborho­ods in Milwaukee, Detroit, Philadelph­ia, Charlotte, Richmond, Atlanta, and Cleveland.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States