The Voter Integrity
Project compiled the list after obtaining death records from the state
Department of Public Health from 2002 to March 31 and comparing them to the
voter rolls.
“Mainly, what we’re
concerned about is the potential [for fraud],” said project director Jay
DeLancy. “Since there is no voter ID law in North Carolina, anybody can walk in
and claim to be anyone else.”
DeLancy said his group has found evidence to suggest voter fraud in these numbers, but will not quantify how much until he is able to do more analysis. Most cases of what look like a dead person voting are likely just administrative errors, such as a son named Junior voting in his father’s name instead of his own.
DeLancy said his group has found evidence to suggest voter fraud in these numbers, but will not quantify how much until he is able to do more analysis. Most cases of what look like a dead person voting are likely just administrative errors, such as a son named Junior voting in his father’s name instead of his own.
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