Orlando Sentinel

Officials: No charges in state vote fraud probe

- By Ana Ceballos

TALLAHASSE­E — State law-enforcemen­t officials found “no evidence of fraudulent intent” by the Florida Democratic Party after more than a yearlong investigat­ion into alleged vote-by-mail fraud, records show.

The Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t on Wednesday released records tied to an investigat­ion into Democratic Party members altering election forms at the tail end of the 2018 election cycle, which was dominated by three statewide recounts.

Investigat­ors found “no evidence of fraudulent intent to use the altered forms” on April 20 and handed the case over to the Florida Office of Statewide Prosecutio­n to determine if there was enough evidence and informatio­n to file charges.

“It is closed now, so prosecutor­s have determined no charges,” Jessica Cary, a spokeswoma­n for FDLE, wrote in an email Wednesday to the News Service of Florida.

Florida Statewide Prosecutor Nick Cox said Wednesday there was a “lack of sufficient evidence to support prosecutio­n” in the case.

The voter

fraud

complaints against Democrats came at the end of the 2018 elections as counties completed required recounts in the races for governor, U.S. Senate and state agricultur­e commission­er.

Investigat­ors found that three people associated with the Florida Democratic Party changed the submission deadline dates in an election form, known as a “cure affidavit,” which is designed to fix signature problems on vote-by-mail ballots.

The investigat­ion found the people “had no intent of circulatin­g” the altered cure affidavits until there was a favorable court ruling in a lawsuit filed by the Democratic Executive Committee of Florida and former U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson.

Nelson, who narrowly lost the Senate race to Republican Rick Scott, wanted the Florida Department of State and people under its supervisio­n to count any vote-by-mail or provisiona­l ballots rejected based on signature matching, records show.

“Per the FDP (Florida Democratic Party) informatio­n, the deadline date in the vote-by-mail ballot cure affidavits were altered in anticipati­on that the USDC (U.S. District Court) would rule in their favor, and they could immediatel­y act to contact affected voters,” the investigat­ion found.

The altered forms surfaced in Broward, Santa Rosa, Citrus and Okaloosa counties and were reported to federal and state authoritie­s to review for possible election fraud, as the recounts prompted thousands of votes to face additional scrutiny.

The forms were modified to include an inaccurate Nov. 8 deadline to fix signature problems on ballots, according to state law enforcemen­t officials. The unaltered affidavits instructed voters to meet a Nov. 5 deadline.

But Jennifer Kim, the party’s Central Florida deputy field director, instructed party volunteers on Nov. 8 to “only use the unaltered original version of the voteby-mail ballot cure affidavit,” the investigat­ion found.

Chief U.S. District Judge Mark Walker ruled on Nov. 15 that voters would have until Nov. 17 to correct signatures on their ballots.

Investigat­ors also noted that, according to the party, “it was not certain whether top Democratic officials were aware that the voteby-mail ballot cure affidavits were altered and/or instructed them to be altered.”

As part of the investigat­ion, which started in November 2018, FDLE conducted sworn interviews and reviewed documentat­ion provided by the Department of State, which reported “irregulari­ties” in the vote-by-mail process during the elections.

 ?? WILFREDO LEE/AP ?? An observer looks at a ballot during a recount in 2018 at the Broward County Supervisor of Elections office in Lauderhill.
WILFREDO LEE/AP An observer looks at a ballot during a recount in 2018 at the Broward County Supervisor of Elections office in Lauderhill.

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