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  • DA To Examine Absentee Ballots

    DA TO EXAMINE ABSENTEE BALLOTS
    By Fred Ortega, News-Press and Leader
    Dan Watson / News-Press

    Burbank Leader, CA
    May 25 2006

    Signatures on forms allegedly collected by Assembly candidate's
    campaign do not match the voters' signatures, county officials say.

    Meri Keshishian holds up an absentee ballot she said she did not
    request at the Quintero campaign news conference.

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    Committee reveals recommendations
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    GLENDALE -- The Los Angeles District Attorney's office will look into
    allegations that the campaign for 43rd Assembly District candidate
    Paul Krekorian submitted absentee ballot requests with fraudulent
    signatures, a county official said Tuesday.

    The campaign of Glendale Councilman Frank Quintero, who is also
    vying for the Democratic nomination to the 43rd District seat,
    accused Krekorian's campaign of engaging in voter fraud at a press
    conference Tuesday.

    "This is about signature forgeries on absentee ballot applications,"
    said Stephen Kaufman, an attorney for Quintero's campaign.

    Several voters contacted Quintero's campaign offices last week about
    letters they had received from the registrar's office, in which they
    were asked to confirm absentee ballot applications they had never
    requested, Kaufman said. All of the applications in question were
    submitted by the Committee to Elect Paul Krekorian, he added.

    The allegations that his campaign would tolerate any unethical behavior
    are "despicable and disgusting," said Krekorian in a statement to
    the media, adding that Tuesday's press conference was an attempt by
    Quintero to save his failing campaign.

    "I call upon the county registrar to investigate these allegations
    thoroughly, carefully and immediately," Krekorian said. "There is
    simply no basis whatsoever for Frank Quintero's false implication
    that my campaign has done anything inappropriate."

    Quintero chose not to comment on the matter, leaving it to his attorney
    and campaign to handle.

    Quintero's staff produced two voters Tuesday who received letters
    from the registrar's office asking if they had requested absentee
    ballots. In both cases, the signatures on the absenteeballot requests,
    which stated they were provided by the Committee to Elect Paul
    Krekorian, did not match those of the voters.

    "I don't speak English and I didn't know what the letter was about
    but when I saw the signature next to my name, I knew it wasn't mine,"
    Boghos Nouradian said through a translator. "I sign my name in Arabic,
    and this signature was in English."

    Another Glendale voter, Mari Keshishian, said she considered herself
    a victim of voter fraud.

    "I was shocked and angered because for this election I have not
    requested an absentee ballot; someone has signed my name on a ballot
    application, and it was not me," said Keshishian, who has volunteered
    as a poll worker for the past two years. "This is just wrong."

    At the very least, the alleged ballot tampering could result in voter
    disenfranchisement, Kaufman said.

    "If the voter arrives at the polls and are unaware that there was
    already a request for an absentee ballot, they may not be able to vote,
    unless they get a poll worker who knows what they are doing and they
    get a provisional ballot," Kaufman said, adding that county officials
    told him they sent out 1,000 letters regarding questionable absentee
    ballot applications that had all come from the same bundle from the
    Krekorian campaign.

    Judy Whitehurst, a senior deputy county counsel representing the L.A.

    County Registrar' office, would not confirm the number of questionable
    applications examined. But she did say that there were "some
    questionable absentee ballot applications" among the forms submitted
    by the Krekorian campaign.

    Whitehurst added that the matter had been referred to the district
    attorney and that the investigation would proceed from there.

    District attorney spokeswoman Sandi Gibbons said her office had yet to
    receive any documents from the registrar, but that she was expecting
    something to be sent soon.

    "They did say they would be sending something over," said Gibbons.

    "When they send stuff like that, we review it first and then make a
    decision on whether a criminal investigation will be opened, or if
    charges will be filed if what is sent is sufficient."

    Neither Gibbons nor Whitehurst would comment further on the nature
    of the irregularities.

    Some think there could be a more sinister reason behind the alleged
    ballot tampering than keeping voters from the polls on June 6, said
    Harry Sarafian of the Armenian Council of America.

    "Many Armenians who have received these ballots have just become
    citizens and these people are not too keen on election laws," Sarafian
    said. "I think some people have been trying to take advantage of
    this by sending them the absentee ballots when they didn't request
    them and then offering them to help fill them out, to the benefit of
    one candidate."

    But Zanku Armenian, spokesman for the Armenian National Committee,
    which supports Krekorian, cautioned that no illegal ballot tampering
    has been proven, and accused Quintero of using the situation to
    fracture the Armenian community, which he said is squarely behind
    Krekorian.

    "This does fit the Quintero campaign's tactic to divide the community,
    and this is not the kind of representative we want in our assembly
    seat," he said.
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