Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

‘Unlawful’ ballot scheme in N. Carolina election, official says

- By Emery P. Dalesio

RALEIGH, N.C. — A Republican operative, who last year rounded up votes for a GOP candidate running for Congress, conducted an illegal and well-funded ballotharv­esting operation, North Carolina’s elections director said Monday.

The director’s testimony came on the first day of a hearing into whether mailin ballots were tampered with a in race for the state’s 9th congressio­nal district seat that saw Republican Mark Harris narrowly defeat Democrat Dan McCready.

The race wasn’t certified, leaving the country’s only congressio­nal election without a declared winner. The elections board is expected to either declare a winner or order a new election after the hearing.

“The evidence that we will provide today will show that a coordinate­d, unlawful and substantia­lly resourced absentee ballot scheme operated in the 2018 general election” in rural Bladen and Robeson counties, which are part of North Carolina’s 9th congressio­nal district, state elections director Kim Strach said at the start of a state elections board hearing.

Harris held a slim lead over McCready in unofficial results following November’s election, but the state elections board refused to certify the contest after allegation­s of potential ballot manipulati­on surfaced.

An investigat­ion targeted a political operative working for Harris’ campaign named Leslie McCrae Dowless Jr . He paid people $125 for every 50 mail-in ballots they collected in Bladen and Robeson counties and turned in to him, Strach said. That means they could have been altered before being counted.

The operation’s scope allowed Dowless to collect nearly $84,000 in consulting fees over five months leading into last year’s general election, said Strach, adding that in addition to reviewing financial and phone records, investigat­ors questioned 142 voters in the south-central North Carolina counties.

Dowless was hired to produce votes for Harris and Bladen County Sheriff Jim McVickers, but his methods last year included paying people to visit potential voters who had received absentee ballots and getting them to hand over those ballots, whether completed or not, Dowless worker Lisa Britt testified.

Britt testified she sometimes completed unfinished ballots and handed them to Dowless, who kept them at his home and office for days or longer before they were turned in, said Britt, whose mother was formerly married to Dowless.

While Dowless and Harris’ main campaign consultant were in constant contact, she didn’t have any indication Harris knew about the operation, Britt said.

“I think Mr. Harris was completely clueless as to what was going on.”

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