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Felony charges related to election fraud have touched the 2008 race for the highest office in the land.
Prosecutors
in South Bend, Ind., filed charges Monday against four St. Joseph
County Democratic officials and deputies as part of a multiple-felony
case involving the alleged forging of Democratic presidential primary
petitions in the 2008 election, which put then-candidates Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton on the Indiana ballot.
The
officials are accused of taking part in a scheme to fake signatures and
names on the primary petitions needed to run for president. Court
papers say the plan was hatched by local Democratic Party officials inside the local party headquarters.
Among
those charged is the former long-time chairman of the St. Joseph County
Democratic Party, Butch Morgan, who allegedly ordered the forgeries. He
was forced to resign when the allegations were first made public last
October, even though his lawyer, Shaw Friedman, told Fox News at the
time that Morgan did not do anything wrong.
The St. Joseph County
Board of Voter Registration's Democratic board member, Pam Brunette,
Board of Voter Registration worker Beverly Shelton and Democratic
volunteer and former board worker Dustin Blythe also face charges.
According
to affidavits, St. Joseph County Voter Registration Office worker Lucas
Burkett told investigators that he was part of the plan that started in
January 2008 "to forge signatures on presidential candidate petitions
instead of collecting actual signatures from citizens."
The
documents state that Burkett told investigators that “he was heavily
involved in St. Joseph County political activities with the local
Democratic party," and that "he had, in fact, personally forged several
such signatures," and had attended meetings at the local Democratic
party headquarters, where it was agreed to forge the petitions. Morgan,
the County Democratic Chairman, allegedly "instructed Mr. Burkett,
Pamela Brunette, Beverly Shelton, and Dustin Blythe to forge ballot
petitions for presidential candidates," and that "all of them agreed to
follow these instructions" by copying names and signatures from old
election petitions.
According to affidavits, Burkett told
investigators it was his job to "forge petitions for candidate Barack
Obama," Shelton "was assigned to forge petitions for candidate Hillary
Clinton" and Blythe "was assigned to forge petitions for candidate John Edwards."
When Edwards dropped out of the race at the end of January 2008 and
Burkett refused to continue the forgeries, Morgan allegedly ordered
Blythe to then forge petitions for Barack Obama.
Indiana State
Police investigators identified a total of 22 petitions that appeared to
be faked, yet sailed through the Voter Registration Board as legitimate
documents. The signature of the board's Republican supervisor, Linda
Silcott, which is required for legal certification, appeared to be
rubber stamped on the documents. She told investigators that she did not
remember signing or authorizing her rubber stamp to be used.
Silcott also told investigators that she recognized the handwriting on the alleged forged Obama petitions as that of Blythe's.
The
South Bend Tribune and independent political newsletter Howey Politics
Indiana have reported that a handwriting analyst concluded last fall
that Blythe's handwriting matched some of the alleged Obama fakes. When
Fox News caught up to Blythe as he left the Voter Registration Board
last November and asked him if he forged any signatures or faked any
petitions, he repeatedly replied, "I don't have anything to say."
The
case raises the possibility that the president's campaign and that of
Clinton’s, could have been legally challenged in Indiana if the alleged
forgeries were discovered during the race.
Under state law,
presidential candidates need to qualify with 500 signatures from each of
Indiana's nine congressional districts. Indiana elections officials say
that in St. Joseph County, which is the 2nd Congressional District, the
Obama campaign qualified with 534 signatures; Clinton's camp had 704.
But
the signatures, which were certified by the elections board, were never
challenged. If the number of legitimate signatures for Obama or Clinton
fell below the legal requirement of 500, they could have been bounced
from the state ballot. Reports have previously put the number of phony
signatures for both candidates at about 150, but state investigators
plucked names from the petitions at random and cited only 20 individual
alleged forgeries as part of their case. They say their investigation of
the petitions continues.
Multiple voters, including Indiana's
former Democratic Gov. Joe Kernan, told Fox News that their names and
signatures were phonies.
"That's not my signature," Charity Rorie
told Fox News as she sat in her kitchen in Mishawaka, Ind.. The mother
of four was stunned that her name and signature, and those of her
husband, appeared on one of the Obama petitions. She said they
"absolutely" were fakes and was troubled that personal details such as
their address and birthdays were also included.
"It was shocking," she said. "Why did they do that, and where did they get it from?"
"I
did not sign for Barack Obama," Democratic voter Robert Hunter told Fox
News as he stared at the Obama petition that included his name and
purported signature supporting the candidate. While he observed that the
scrawl looked "very close" to his real one, it was not.
"I always
put 'Junior' after my name, every time... there's no 'Junior' there,"
Hunter told us. "I don't like anybody using my name for anything other
than myself."
"It's scary," Charity said. "A lot of people have
already lost faith in politics and the realm of politics and that
solidifies our worries and concerns."
As for Burkett, a 26-year-old lifelong Democrat, "he is the whistle-blower in this," his lawyer, Andrew B. Jones, told Fox News.
"Lucas
really is the hero in this situation. He is someone who stood up for
good government, and has cooperated with the state police and will
continue to do so."
If you suspect voter or election fraud where you live, tell the Fox
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/04/02/4-indiana-dems-charged-with-election-fraud-in-2008/#ixzz2WVTtaFKl
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