June 20 9:33 PM ET
Grand jury cites KJ vote fraud
By Chris McKenna, The Times Herald-Record
reporter
Kiryat Joel, NY (TTHR) -- An Orange County grand
jury says irregularities took place in two Kiryas Joel elections
last year and has recommended changes in state law to reduce
voting fraud statewide.
The jury met for six months to investigate the village's June and November
elections, hearing testimony from 25 witnesses on 12 dates. No one was charged.
The jury instead issued a report that was released yesterday by District Attorney
Frank Phillips.
"I support the findings in the report," Phillips said. "I feel they were well-reasoned."
In its strongest statement, the jury concluded that registration and voting
irregularities in the two elections "may have had a serious and deleterious
impact on the integrity of the election system within the Village of Kiryas
Joel."
Village leaders reacted angrily to the statement, saying the report showed
only minimal cases of improper voting."I don't know how they came up with such
a conclusion," Mayor Abraham Wieder said.
The jury found that 32 underage students were registered to vote with false
birth dates and that eight then voted in the June 6 election before turning
18 – as reported last year in the Times Herald-Record. It also heard testimony
from a witness who said some people voted more than once or cast ballots under
names given to them by poll workers. The testimony was uncorroborated and didn't
name culprits, according to the report.
Wieder, who was re-elected in that tumultuous election, questioned the value
of such statements. "Maybe that witness had an agenda," he said.
The hotly contested election was unprecedented in the Hasidic village, where
candidates usually run without opposition. In a bitter court battle before
the election, supporters of Wieder's challenger – village trustee Mendel Schwimmer
–warned of fraud and listed hundreds of people they said were illegally registered
to vote.
The Record later investigated the election results and confirmed that at least
12 people voted illegally and 28 others cast questionable ballots. Those votes
would not have changed the outcome.
The grand jury – which was assembled in October to investigate the election
– recommended that New York require voters to show identification before they
can register and before voting. Under current election law, they don't have
to. And election officials can't ask them for proof of identity, age, address
or citizenship. It also suggested creating a statewide voter-registration database
to enable county election boards to update their voting rolls more easily.
At least eight states already have such databases, and legislation is pending
in Congress that would require all states to have them.
The identification issue is more troublesome. About a dozen states now require
voters to prove who they are before voting, but critics say it could discourage
some people from voting and delay voting.
Susan Bahren, an Orange County elections commissioner, disagrees: "You have
to show ID to do other things; I don't see why you shouldn't have to show ID
to vote."
"People wait on line for hours in other countries to vote," she said. "This is
a right and privilege that Americans take very lightly, and we need to take it
a little more seriously."
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