Lying Democrats have been outed again following a strong inquiry in North Carolina into illegal voting.
That's just in ONE STATE. If you consider all 50 then the totals are SHOCKING. The numbers just keep on getting higher and higher which is why we spend so much money investigating voter fraud in this country and tightening the noose around people with suspicious names.
[F]oreign nationals ranging from age 26 to 71 have been charged with illegally voting in the November 2016 election in North Carolina, the Justice Department said Friday. Nine of the 19 were also charged with falsely claiming American citizenship to get on voter rolls.
Ortega has voted in five elections since 2004, each time casting only a single ballot. Ortega voted for Mitt Romney in the 2012 presidential election and then — somewhat ironically — for Ken Paxton for Texas attorney general in a 2014 Republican primary runoff. Paxton would go on to win and, less than three years later, deal the eight-year sentence to Ortega.
“There was one case I (reviewed) where a person, immediately after they voted, did a lot of different things to notify the election board and said, ‘Hey, I misunderstood the absentee ballot’ and said immediately that they didn’t intend to vote twice,” Kunzweiler said.
Many of the other cases were similar. For instance, a Canadian County man with dementia voted once by mail and then attempted to vote again in person, while an elderly Delaware County man voted absentee, then tried to vote again in person. Other examples given by district attorneys across the state included a Garfield County man who “changed addresses and had some confusion over where he was supposed to vote,” and a Delaware County man who was traveling during the presidential election and mistakenly tried to cast two ballots.
“That individual appears to have just gotten mixed up with too much going on,” Delaware County District Attorney Kenny Wright said. “This individual was extremely embarrassed. I do not believe (he) acted with any criminal intent.”
Many of the other cases were similar. For instance, a Canadian County man with dementia voted once by mail and then attempted to vote again in person, while an elderly Delaware County man voted absentee, then tried to vote again in person. Other examples given by district attorneys across the state included a Garfield County man who “changed addresses and had some confusion over where he was supposed to vote,” and a Delaware County man who was traveling during the presidential election and mistakenly tried to cast two ballots.
“That individual appears to have just gotten mixed up with too much going on,” Delaware County District Attorney Kenny Wright said. “This individual was extremely embarrassed. I do not believe (he) acted with any criminal intent.”
Comment