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A Minnesota woman is accused of casting a ballot on behalf of her deceased mother. It was discovered during a routine inspection – Albert Lea Tribune

A Minnesota woman is accused of casting a ballot on behalf of her deceased mother. It was discovered during a routine inspection – Albert Lea Tribune

A Minnesota woman is accused of casting a ballot on behalf of her deceased mother. This was discovered by a routine inspection

Published 15:35 Tuesday, October 29, 2024

A northern Minnesota woman accused of trying to submit an absentee ballot on behalf of her recently deceased mother has been charged with three felonies, showing how routine election security thwarts rare cases of attempted voter fraud.

Officials in Itasca County, about 200 miles (322 km) north of Minneapolis, said Monday that improper voting was detected because the state provides a monthly list of people who have died to election officials, who then check off those names in the state’s voter registration database. The woman returned ballots for herself and her mother in early October, and the auditor’s office, which oversees municipal elections, quickly confirmed that the mother had died in late August, almost three weeks before mail-in ballots began to be mailed out.

The criminal case was filed last week in state District Court in Grand Rapids after former President Donald Trump continued to suggest that he would only lose the Nov. 5 election if his political opponents cheated. There was no evidence of significant voter fraud in the 2020 election, which Trump lost, and no evidence that Trump’s opponents could or intend to steal this year’s election.

The woman told a sheriff’s deputy in an interview that she filled out her mother’s ballot after her death, according to a probable cause affidavit filed in district court. The statement said the woman was a “staunch” Trump supporter and wanted to vote for him before her death.

Itasca County Attorney Jake Fauchald said the case shows that election officials can spot problems and that even rural counties have the resources and willingness to pursue voter fraud. Itasca County has a population of approximately 45,000.

“It was reported almost immediately,” Fauchald said. “We have ways of catching and flagging fraudulent ballots, and we’re going to do something about it to make sure these ballots don’t get through.”

The woman will appear in court for the first time on December 4. She was charged with one count of illegal voting and two counts of preparing or signing a false certificate, and is accused of forging her mother’s signature both on the mother’s envelope and as a witness on her own. Each charge carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a fine of up to $10,000.

It was unclear whether the woman had a lawyer, and 10 online telephone listings for her were inactive. She did not immediately respond to a Facebook message seeking comment on Monday.

Fauchald said this is the county’s first case of voter fraud during the current election cycle.

An Associated Press investigation of the 2020 election examined every potential case of voter fraud in six battleground states contested by Trump and found that out of millions of votes cast, fewer than 475 votes were cast, which was not enough to determine the outcome. Democrat Joe Biden won six states with a total of 311,257 votes.

In Minnesota, Itasca County Auditor Austin Rohling said that in his nearly two years in office he has not seen a “nefarious” case in which someone cast a ballot on behalf of a deceased person. Sometimes, he said, someone fills out a ballot, returns it and dies before Election Day. In this case, it is not counted under Minnesota law.

Sixteen other states prohibit counting votes cast by someone who then dies before the election, but 10 states explicitly allow it. According to research by the National Conference of State Legislatures, the law is silent in the rest of the country.

Rohling said “weird things happen” in elections “at an extremely small level,” but very few of those incidents involve intentional fraud.

“The system works as it should,” Rohling said.