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Alleged voter fraud in Little Armenia being investigated

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  • Alleged voter fraud in Little Armenia being investigated

    Los Angeles Times, CA
    May 10 2013


    Alleged voter fraud in Little Armenia being investigated


    Backers of L.A. City Council candidate Mitch O'Farrell are accused of
    illegally filling out ballots. The O'Farrell campaign counters that
    workers for rival John Choi improperly filled out ballots.

    By Alene Tchekmedyian and Kate Linthicum, Los Angeles Times
    May 9, 2013, 11:47 p.m.

    Prosecutors are investigating allegations of voter fraud in Little
    Armenia, part of a Los Angeles City Council district where two
    candidates are waging a bitter battle for an open seat.

    According to a spokeswoman for L.A. County Dist. Atty. Jackie Lacey,
    prosecutors are trying to determine whether backers of one candidate
    illegally filled out mail-in ballots for dozens of voters in the
    Armenian enclave in East Hollywood. The May 21 election will decide
    who succeeds Eric Garcetti, who is running for mayor.

    In a complaint sent to Lacey's office, an attorney for candidate John
    Choi accused backers of Choi's opponent, Mitch O'Farrell, of
    "widespread voter fraud and illegal electioneering activities."

    The complaint alleges that O'Farrell campaign workers filled out
    voters' ballots for their candidate while telling them they were
    voting for Sam Kbushyan, a candidate of Armenian descent who ran and
    lost during the primary election.

    Kbushyan and many of his former campaign volunteers are now working on
    behalf of O'Farrell.

    The O'Farrell campaign rebuts the allegations, saying it was Choi
    workers who filled out and took ballots from voters. "These are Choi
    people who are doing this," O'Farrell spokeswoman Renee Nahum said.

    Nahum said the campaign plans to file its own complaint with the
    district attorney that will include testimony from voters who said
    they gave their ballots to Choi campaign workers who claimed that they
    were representing Kbushyan.

    The vote-fraud allegations are the latest in a string of accusations
    to emerge from Little Armenia in recent weeks. In April, a sidewalk
    altercation between vote canvassers from the two campaigns resulted in
    a police investigation.

    Interviews with several voters listed in the Choi complaint suggest
    improper activity occurred, although it was unclear who was
    responsible.

    Eighty-two-year-old Raffik Hambardzumyan told the Los Angeles Times
    that an Armenian-speaking woman came to his house and helped him and
    his wife fill out their vote-by-mail ballots about a week ago.
    Hambardzumyan, who doesn't speak English, said the woman told them
    they were voting for Kbushyan.

    He was surprised when a reporter told him Kbushyan wasn't on the
    ballot. "Why, what happened that he can't get elected?" said
    Hambardzumyan.

    He said he didn't know which campaign the worker represented, and
    complained about a deluge of election-related calls from multiple
    groups. "Daily, 4, 5 times they call, different people saying
    different things," he said.

    Both campaigns are looking for votes in Little Armenia, in large part
    because Kbushyan and his supporters registered nearly 3,000 new voters
    there in the March 5 primary.

    Kbushyan surprised many in the political establishment when he came in
    third, placing higher than several other contenders with more money
    and City Hall support.

    Galust Khachatryan, 65, said he was recently visited by two campaign
    workers who didn't help him vote but did take his ballot. He said they
    were the same workers who appeared at his home during the primary
    campaign on behalf of Kbushyan, but said he didn't know which campaign
    they were supporting now.

    Star Prasamyan, who directs about two dozen O'Farrell vote canvassers
    in Little Armenia, said her workers hand out fliers, tell voters about
    Kbushyan's endorsement of O'Farrell, and then leave.

    She accused Choi supporters of lying about Kbushyan's endorsement.

    One woman whose name was provided to The Times by the O'Farrell
    campaign corroborated that claim. In an interview, Nune Begnazaryan
    said Choi supporters have come to her home on three separate occasions
    over the last week.

    The first and last visits were from non-Armenians who simply handed
    her fliers with a picture of Choi and his ballot number, "99."

    The second visit was from two Armenian women who told her to vote for
    Choi by punching "99" on the ballot because Kbushyan had endorsed him,
    she said. She could not recall the names of the visitors.

    Choi spokesman Mike Shimpock rebutted those claims, saying his
    candidate does not want to be associated with Kbushyan. He accused the
    O'Farrell campaign of "trying to cloud the water" with counterattacks.

    http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-vote-fraud-20130510,0,286181.story




    From: A. Papazian
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