The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Delco judge rips GOP’s ‘emergency’ election petition

- Arose@21st-centurymed­ia.com @arosedelco on Twitter

Common Pleas Court Judge John Capuzzi issued a scathing opinion Wednesday denying with prejudice two petitions that sought to sanction the Delaware County Board of Elections with fines and prison time, and enjoin U.S. Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon, D-5 of Swarthmore, from executing the duties of her office.

“While the petitioner­s seek sanctions against the Board of Elections, they come before this court with unclean hands and they themselves are the ones whose conduct is contemptib­le,” Capuzzi wrote.

The opinion stems from an emergency petition filed by the Delaware County Republican Executive Committee Nov. 4 seeking increased access to ballot counting operations at a Chester facility where the votes for the 2020 Presidenti­al Election were being tabulated.

Capuzzi issued an order that same day allowing representa­tives from the Republican and Democratic parties to observe “the resolution area at all hours while ballots are being resolved,” as well as a ballot sorting machine area while the machine was in use. Two observers – one from each party – were also allowed to enter the ballot room in five-minute intervals every two hours, under the order.

Capuzzi notes in Wednesday’s opinion that the Delaware County Republican Executive Committee has not raised any issue with the way the Board of Elections handled his Nov. 4 order. There was no response to that order at all in court filings until the proposed intervener­s here – Republican 5th District Candidate Dasha Pruett and observers Gregory Stenstrom and Leah Hoopes – filed an emergency petition Dec. 22, and no response from the executive committee to that petition.

The proposed intervener­s, represente­d by Upper Darby attorney Deborah Silver, alleged observers were only allowed access to the “back room” beginning at 11 a.m. Nov. 5, and were placed in a “pen” 25 feet from where the ballots and envelopes were being counted. They additional­ly claimed the board failed to abide by the two-hour timetable, with observers only first gaining access to that area at 1:30 p.m. Nov. 5.

The petition also alleged that intervener­s had witnessed ballots being scanned numerous times before they were counted, that a “shocking number” of mail-in ballots appeared in counties after Nov. 4 (mailin ballots were allowed to be received and counted three days after the Nov. 3 election) and that there was no opportunit­y to observe the uploading of votes using machine USB drives.

The petitioner­s sought sanctions of $1,000 against election board members with one year in prison for allegedly violating the election code and Capuzzi’s Nov. 4 order. They also sought access to computer event logs, the USB machine cards, chain of custody documents and outer envelopes of mail-in votes so that a forensic investigat­ion could be completed.

“By this filing, petitioner­s are making a baseless attempt to cast doubt on the outcome of an election that was properly and lawfully conducted by the board under the watchful eye of the Delaware County Republican Executive Committee and the supervisio­n of this court,” said Board of Elections Solicitor J. Manly Parks in a response.

Two board of election members testified at a previous, unrelated hearing that a review board made up of nine Republican­s and nine Democrats had found some discrepanc­ies during 11 days of work on the results, but no evidence of fraud or manifest error in any election. All election results in the county were certified Nov. 24.

Parks provided images of observatio­n areas and observers in the response that directly contradict­ed some of the claims in the emergency petition, and argued that the petitioner­s lacked legal standing because none of the proposed intervener­s had a legally cognizable claim for relief.

Parks argued that the petitioner­s had no expectatio­n of personal rights to observe the canvassing procedures, only that one or two members of each party be granted access. Regardless, he said the board had not only complied with the Nov. 4 order, it went above and beyond by providing additional observatio­n points and live-streaming all canvassing at the Chester facility using 11 different cameras.

Parks added that this filing for emergency relief was “untimely in the extreme,” coming some two months after the events in question – a point Capuzzi picked up on in his opinion as well.

The judge initially denied an “emergency” certificat­ion, and noted in Wednesday’s opinion that the petitioner­s could have challenged the manner with which the BOE complied with the Nov. 4 order at any point in the following 30-day period or filed

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