Fake Voter Card Registration Investigation
By The Associated Press
During the 2008 presidential election, law enforcement agencies in about a dozen states including Nevada, Ohio and Wisconsin investigated fake voter registration cards submitted by the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, known as ACORN. No criminal charges were filed against the nonprofit organization, which collected 1.3 million registrations in a nationwide get-out-the-vote effort.
The agency said the bogus cards represented less than 1 percent of those collected. The problem forms — some bearing names such as “Mickey Mouse” and “Donald Duck” — were completed by lazy workers trying to get out of canvassing neighborhoods, ACORN officials said. Since the 2004 presidential election, ex-employees have been convicted of submitting false registrations in states including Florida and Missouri.
Deborah Hastings
Associated Press National Writer
New York
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.
Judge tosses Wis. AG’s suit demanding voter checks
By TODD RICHMOND
Associated Press Writer
MADISON, Wis. (AP) _ A judge on Thursday threw out a lawsuit by Wisconsin’s attorney general demanding that state elections officials confirm hundreds of thousands of voters’ identities before Election Day.
Dane County Circuit Judge Maryann Sumi ruled that neither federal nor state law makes the checks Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen seeks a condition for voting. She said Van Hollen has no standing to sue and should have made a complaint to the state Government Accountability Board rather than going to court.
Van Hollen spokesman Kevin St. John said the state Department of Justice plans to appeal, perhaps directly to the state Supreme Court. The agency will continue to pursue the case beyond Election Day if it must because an accurate list of registered voters is crucial to future elections, he said.
“The attorney general believes that he has the ability and the authority, even the duty, to enforce state election law in state court,” St. John said.
Van Hollen, a Republican and co-chair of GOP presidential candidate John McCain’s Wisconsin campaign, argued that the federal Help America Vote Act requires the accountability board to check the names of everyone registered to vote since Jan. 1, 2006, against driver’s license and Social Security data and remove any ineligible voters from the rolls.
The state Republican Party joined the lawsuit, asking that any non-matches be red-flagged as needing identification at the polls.
The board says it couldn’t get its cross-check software online until August, when preliminary runs revealed a 22 percent non-match rate. Most of those non-matches resulted from typos or other innocuous differences between the databases, board staff said.
The board ordered local election clerks to cross-check only voters who register from Aug. 6 onward and let non-matches vote without consequence.
The board argued, and the judge agreed, that the Help America Vote Act doesn’t say what states should do with anyone whose information doesn’t match.
Sumi said the board used the discretionary power it was granted by the Legislature when it decided to impose checks on only new registrants. She said only the U.S. attorney general can bring a court order to enforce HAVA, and that anyone else with a complaint, including Van Hollen and the state GOP, must make an administrative appeal directly to state elections officials.
Government Accountability Board attorney Lester Pines said Sumi was “exactly correct on every single point.”
Wisconsin Republican Party chairman Reince Priebus called the ruling disappointing. He said it raises the possibility that Wisconsin won’t have a fair election.
“It’s looking worse by the minute, I guess,” Priebus said.
State Democratic Party Chairman Joe Wineke called Sumi’s decision strong.
“What are you going to appeal?” he said. “Appeal to the Republican base, I guess.”
Democrats have accused Van Hollen and Republicans of trying to disenfranchise voters and keep turnout low. St. John has repeatedly denied any partisan motivation, saying the attorney general wants only to enforce the law. Republicans have said they are trying to protect the integrity of the election.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.