Hearne also has shown up as a background figure in the Bush
administration’s scandal that erupted over the firing of nine federal
prosecutors, some of whom came under White House criticism for not
seeking pre-election voter fraud indictments in 2006.
More recently, Hearne has been instrumental in pushing state lawmakers
to pass strict voter identification laws in Missouri, New Mexico,
Indiana and other states. The Indiana voter-ID law recently was upheld
by the conservative majority on the U.S. Supreme Court.
Hearne conducted much of this work through his now defunct
organization, the American Center for Voting Rights (ACVR), which
called itself a non-partisan group defending voter rights and seeking
to enhance public confidence in the fairness and outcome of elections.
However, an
investigation into
ACVR by blogger Brad Friedman reported that it concentrated on stricter
voter-ID laws. “Thor Hearne helped to write that Indiana law, then Thor
Hearne submitted an amicus brief to the Supreme Court on behalf of
Republican U.S. Congress members in support of it.”
GOP Strategy
Rather than an epidemic of illegal voters casting ballots, some
election experts point to a nationwide Republican strategy of
exploiting those concerns to depress the voting of low-income and
minority citizens and thus boost the chances of GOP candidates.
Joseph Rich, formerly chief of the voting section in the Justice
Department's Civil Rights Division, said that under the Bush
administration the department “shirked its legal responsibility to
protect voting rights.”
“Over the last six years, this Justice Department has ignored the
advice of its staff and skewed aspects of law enforcement in ways that
clearly were intended to influence the outcome of elections,”
Rich wrote in a March 29, 2007, op-ed in The Los Angeles Times.
“From 2001 to 2006, no voting discrimination cases were brought on
behalf of African American or Native American voters. U.S. attorneys
were told instead to give priority to voter fraud cases, which, when
coupled with the strong support for voter ID laws, indicated an intent
to depress voter turnout in minority and poor communities.”
One of the chief advocates for tilting the Justice Departments scales
in the direction of voter fraud was Hearne, who has testified widely
urging that voter fraud, not voter suppression, should be the
government’s priority.
However, Justin Levitt, an attorney and an expert on voting issues who
teaches at the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School
of Law, wrote
last year that
"the notion of widespread voter fraud ... is itself a fraud. Evidence
of actual fraud by individual voters is painfully skimpy."
The numbers are fairly small. From October 2002 to September 2005, 95
people were indicted for federal election related crimes,
according to figures compiled by the New York Times last year. Seventy resulted in convictions. Only eighteen of those were for ineligible voting.
Voting Fraud Myth?
In March, the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration held a
hearing to determine whether voter fraud is a “myth” and if voter
identification laws actually disenfranchise legitimate voters.
Former New Mexico U.S. Attorney David Iglesias, who was one of nine
prosecutors fired around the 2006 election, told the panel that he
established an election fraud task force in September 2004 and spent
more than two months probing claims of voter fraud in his state.
"After examining the evidence, and in conjunction with the Justice
Department Election Crimes Unit and the FBI, I could not find any cases
I could prosecute beyond a reasonable doubt," Iglesias said.
"Accordingly, I did not authorize any voter fraud related prosecutions."
Iglesias said he is certain that his firing was due, in part, to the
fact that he would not file criminal charges of voter fraud in New
Mexico.
Iglesias added that, based on "Karl Rove's obsession with voter fraud
issues throughout the country," he now believes GOP operatives wanted
him to go after pro-Democratic organizations in an attempt to swing the
2006 midterm elections to Republicans.
Iglesias said in an interview that Hearne’s associate, Pat Rogers, a
Republican attorney in Albuquerque, and Mickey Barnett, a Republican
lobbyist, pressured him to bring charges of voter fraud. Iglesias also
came under pressure from Sen. Pete Domenici, R-New Mexico.
After Iglesias was fired, Rogers, the former chief counsel to the New
Mexico Republican Party, emerged as Domenici’s favorite to be the new
U.S. Attorney for New Mexico.
In previous e-mails exchanges, Rogers insisted that he did not play a
role in Iglesias's firing and categorically denied that he pressured
Iglesias to bring charges of voter fraud against Democrats.
Shortly after details of Iglesias’s firing surfaced, Hearne’s ACVR Web site was dismantled.
The Justice Department's Office of Professional Responsibility, which
is still investigating the U.S. Attorney firings, interviewed Rumaldo
Armijo, Iglesias's former executive assistant, to find out whether he
was pressured by Rogers, Barnett or Hearne to file criminal charges of
voter fraud in the state in 2004.
During his tenure in the U.S. Attorney's office, Armijo was in charge
of voter issues and worked with Iglesias's task force to probe the
matter, Iglesias confirmed.
Missouri Cases
In Missouri, U.S. Attorney Todd Graves was another federal prosecutor
who fell into disfavor with the Bush administration because of alleged
inaction on voter fraud issues.
Graves would not file criminal charges of voter fraud against four
employees of ACORN, a group that registers low-income individuals who
tend to cast votes for Democrats, according to documents later released
by the Justice Department in connection with the fired-prosecutors
probe.
Graves also resisted pressure from Justice Department official Bradley
Scholzman to file a civil suit against Robin Carnahan, Missouri's
Democratic Secretary of State, on charges that Carnahan failed to take
action on cases of voter fraud, Graves testified last year before the
Senate Judiciary Committee.
Graves was forced to resign in March 2006 and was replaced by
Schlozman, who as head of the Justice Department's Civil Rights
Division's voting-rights section had clashed with Graves.
John McKay, the U.S. Attorney from Washington State who also was ousted
in the purge, said "many U.S. attorneys were concerned when Mr.
Schlozman was appointed" to replace Graves.
Schlozman “was the deputy in the [Justice Department's] civil rights
division, but I don't think he had the sort of background and
experience we would have expected as a United States Attorney,” McKay
told me in an interview last year.
"So I would say it would be true that many eyebrows were raised when he
was first appointed. Of course, we didn't know that Todd Graves had
been forced to resign ... and it appears that he was forced to resign
at least in part because Mr. Schlozman himself was trying to push the
prosecution of voter fraud cases."
Schlozman filed federal criminal charges of voter fraud against
members of ACORN only days
before the November 2006 mid-term elections. The case was later
dismissed and Schlozman came under criticism for breaking with
longstanding Justice Department policy against bringing voter fraud
charges close to an election.
Schlozman testified before a Senate committee last year that he
received approval to file the voter fraud charges from a Justice
Department official who was instrumental in drafting the guidelines
urging that U.S. Attorneys avoid filing charges claiming voter fraud at
the height of an election.
At the time, Iglesias stated that he had worked with the same Election
Crimes Unit attorney and simply did "not believe" Schlozman's testimony.
The Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division also filed a civil suit
against Missouri’s Secretary of State Carnahan but it was dismissed by
a federal court judge who ruled, "The United States has not shown that
any Missouri resident was denied his or her right to vote as a result
of deficiencies alleged by the United States. Nor has the United States
shown that any voter fraud has occurred."
Campaign 2004
Hearne took part in a conference call during the 2004 presidential
campaign with several high-ranking Bush administration officials who
discussed strategies for suppressing votes in battleground states, such
as Ohio, Florida and Pennsylvania, where Bush was in tight races with
Democratic nominee John Kerry.
An e-mail dated Sept. 30, 2004, and sent to about a dozen staffers on
the Bush-Cheney campaign and the RNC, under the subject line "voter reg
[sic] fraud strategy conference call," describes how campaign staffers
planned to challenge the veracity of votes in a handful of battleground
states, such as Ohio, in the event of a Democratic victory.
E-mails among Ohio Republican Party official Michael Magan, national
field director of the Bush-Cheney 2004 campaign Coddy Johnson, and
close Rove associate Timothy Griffin reveal the men were given
documents that could be used as evidence to justify widespread voter
challenges if the Bush campaign needed to contest the election results.
The documents, which Hearne and his counterparts had obtained, were
lists of registered voters who did not return address confirmation
forms to the Ohio Board of Elections. The Republican operatives
compared this list with lists of voters who requested absentee ballots.
In the opinion of one strategist, the fact that many names appeared on both lists was evidence of voter fraud.
"A bad registration card can be an accident or fraud. A bad card AND an
Absentee Ballot request is a clear case of fraud," former Bush-Cheney
campaign staffer Robert Paduchik wrote in a 2004 e-mail.
Bush-Cheney field director Johnson called the documents a “goldmine.”
But Christopher McInerney, a RNC researcher, warned his colleagues at
the time that if "other states ... don't have flagged voter rolls, we
run the risk of having GOP fingerprints."
As it turned out, the Ohio documents were not needed since the official
tally put George W. Bush narrowly ahead and – despite allegations of
Republican misconduct – Kerry chose not to demand a statewide recount.
In mid-2006, Griffin expressed an interest in becoming the U.S.
attorney in Arkansas. The Justice Department then forced out Bud
Cummins, the state's US. attorney, to make room for Griffin, who
subsequently resigned amid the fired-prosecutors scandal.
Campaign 2008
Since the 2006 elections, the Republican strategy has focused more on
passing legislation that forces voters to produce photo IDs or even
proof of citizenship in order to cast a ballot.
Already, there are signs that legitimate voters are being turned away
in the face of such laws. In the May 6 Indiana primary, 12 nuns in
their 80s and 90s were prevented from voting because they lacked
acceptable IDs.
Now, Missouri and about 19 other states are considering passing laws that require proof of citizenship to vote.
Missouri’s Secretary of State Carnahan estimates that the amendment
could disenfranchise some 300,000 voters this November – because they
would have trouble acquiring the required documentation – in order to
weed out possibly a few dozen ineligible voters.
Cox, the amendment’s sponsor, argues that it would block illegal
immigrants from voting and combat voter fraud. The proposed amendment
reads:
“This proposed constitutional amendment authorizes the General Assembly
to require any person seeking to vote in a public election to provide
election officials a form of identification that may be prescribed by
law, including a government-issued photo identification, in order to
show that he or she is a United States citizen lawfully residing in
this state.”
It adds that “the State of Missouri will provide at no cost at least
one form of the identification required to vote to any otherwise
qualified citizen without proper identification who desires to vote.”
While evidence of systemic voter fraud in the United States has not
surfaced, many election integrity experts believe Republicans have used
the suspicion of voter fraud as a ploy to suppress minorities and poor
people from voting. Historically, those groups have tended to vote for
Democratic candidates
Hearne declined to comment for this article.
Jason Leopold has launched a new Web site, The Public Record, at www.pubrecord.org