Official cites 'unlawful' balloting in
U.S. congressional vote
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[February 19, 2019]
By Marti Maguire
RALEIGH, N.C. (Reuters) - A Republican
operative directed an unlawful absentee ballot scheme in North
Carolina's 9th congressional district and tried to hide the evidence, an
election official said on Monday at a hearing that could lead to a new
vote in the disputed contest.
Republican candidate Mark Harris leads Democratic rival Dan McCready by
905 votes out of 282,717 ballots cast in the November 2018 congressional
election.
But the U.S. House of Representatives seat has remained vacant, with
state officials refusing to certify Harris as the winner due to
accusations of election fraud in two counties in the district.
Kim Strach, executive director of the state election board, on Monday
said investigators had uncovered a "coordinated, unlawful and
substantially resourced absentee ballot scheme" orchestrated by a
political operative working for Harris.
Strach said operative Leslie McCrae Dowless hired workers to collect
absentee ballot requests from voters and then return to retrieve the
ballots, in violation of state law.
In some instances, the paid workers falsely signed as witnesses and
filled in votes for races left blank at Dowless's home or office, Strach
said.
Dowless attended the hearing in Raleigh but declined to testify
voluntarily after the board said it would deny him immunity.
Dowless's lawyer, Cynthia Adams Singletary, said afterward that "he
hasn't done anything wrong." Harris has said he was unaware of any
wrongdoing.
Lisa Britt, who worked for Dowless on the absentee ballots, testified
that he instructed his workers to fill in responses for races left blank
to avoid “red flags” with the local elections board. She said she was
not told how to vote in those races.
“What I would do is vote for whoever was the Republican,” she said.
Britt also said Dowless tried to prevent her from testifying at Monday's
hearing by asking her to invoke her Fifth Amendment right against
self-incrimination.
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Mark Harris, Republican candidate from North Carolina's 9th
Congressional district speaks as U.S. President Donald Trump looks
on during a campaign rally in Charlotte, North Carolina U.S.,
October 26, 2018. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
Investigators found Dowless sought to avoid detection by instructing
those who worked for him to deliver ballots in small batches to a
post office close to the voters and to ensure the same color ink was
used for the voter and false witness signatures, Strach said.
Dowless and his workers handled at least 788 ballot requests in
Bladen County and 231 in Robeson County, the two counties at the
center of the state probe, Strach said.
Voter Kimberly Sue Robinson testified that she returned a blank,
unsealed ballot to Dowless representatives.
"I was told if I didn’t fill it out, it would get filled out for
me,” Robinson said.
Under state law, the five-member elections board can call a new
election if the number of contested votes would sway the original
election or if the “irregularities or improprieties occurred to such
an extent that they taint the results of the entire election and
cast doubt on its fairness.”
Alternatively, the board could certify Harris as the district's
congressional representative.
Republicans have pushed for that outcome, while Democrats want a new
election. The hearing resumes on Tuesday.
If the Democrats pick up the seat, they would widen their 235-197
majority in the House after taking control of the chamber from
President Donald Trump's fellow Republicans in the Nov. 6 election.
(Reporting by Marti Maguire; Additional reporting by Gabriella
Borter in New York; Writing by Colleen Jenkins)
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