PropertyValue
?:author
?:datePublished
  • 2017-08-25 (xsd:date)
?:headline
  • Was a North Carolina Elections Official Indicted for 'Rigging' the 2016 Election? (en)
?:inLanguage
?:itemReviewed
?:mentions
?:reviewBody
  • On 22 August 2017, the left-leaning web site Raw Progressive reported that an elections official in North Carolina had been indicted for rigging the 2016 presidential election in favor of Donald Trump.: The article accurately reports that Richard Robert Rawling has been indicted on charges of obstruction of justice for his alleged actions during the March 2016 primary elections. However, Raw Progressive also incorrectly claims that Rawling is accused of having skewed the election outcome in favor of Trump (and other Republican candidates). The indictment was announced in a press release on 21 August 2017 by North Carolina's Bipartisan State Board of Elections and Ethics Enforcement, which was known until recently as simply the State Board of Elections: The Board of Elections noted, however, that the purported action had no effect on the outcome of any election, and did not appear intended to favor any particular candidate or party: What Rawling is accused of, and will now stand trial for, is far less grandiose than rigging the 2016 election for Donald Trump: Provisional ballots are used when there is uncertainty at the polling place about whether a voter is eligible to vote, for example, or if a voter casts their ballot at the wrong location. They are not supposed to be counted at the polling place, but instead are supposed to be brought to the local county board of elections, which then decides whether they should be counted. Rawling is accused of having repeatedly run provisional paper ballots through electronic vote tabulators (which using scanning technology to recognize marks made on ballots by voters), which he was not supposed to do. He is accused of then having manually altered the total number of provisional ballots in order to erase a discrepancy between the number of provisional ballots counted on Election Day and the number of provisional ballots approved for counting by the state Board of Elections. Rawling — who resigned from his position in the Durham County Board of Elections in March 2016 — is accused of having mishandled and altered ballot totals and is charged with obstruction of justice, a felony. However, based on the statement released by the state Board of Elections, he is accused of what essentially appears to be improperly avoiding an administrative headache for himself rather than attempting to rig a national election. (en)
?:reviewRating
rdf:type
?:url