Kobach files voter fraud charges in Kansas after national panel dissolves

by Jim McLean, Kansas News Service

The White House may have scrapped the controversial national election integrity commission that he was helping to lead, but Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach is still rooting out alleged voter fraud in his home state.

Armed with powers not usually assigned to a secretary of state, Kobach filed a pair of criminal complaints Thursday against two people he said voted when, and more, than they had the right to.

In 2016, Kobach contends, one person voted in both Hamilton County, Kansas, and in Colorado. He charged another person with voting twice in the same election, in Finney County, Kansas, and Colorado. Both Hamilton and Finney counties sit in western Kansas.

“These prosecutions will help deter voter fraud in the future,” Kobach said.

Kobach, a likely frontrunner among Republicans running for governor, has marked much of his career battling voter fraud. He insists it’s far more common than most experts believe.

Legislators gave Kobach’s office the power to file criminal charges in election fraud cases in 2015. He’s the country’s only top election official with that authority.

While he warns of illegal voting by non-citizens — immigration control is another signature issue for him — all of the dozen-plus people he’s charged with election fraud in Kansas are U.S. citizens.

Twelve of the 14 voter fraud cases that he’s filed have been for double voting, which Kobach contends is a serious crime.

“The consequences of double voting are the same as the consequences of voting by a non-citizen,” he said. “You still have an illegal vote cast and that illegal vote might tip the election.”

The day before the charges, Kobach saw a federal judge rule on a pending case on his efforts to demand more reliable proof of citizenship for voter registration. That lawsuit goes to trial in March.

The court ruling excluded some testimony for Kobach’s cause because the judge said it lacked the necessary expertise to back it up.

Republicans typically argue it’s too easy to register to vote, that officials should insist on birth certificates and other documents to screen out non-citizens and that states need to compare their lists with each other to stop people from voting in two places.

Democrats commonly respond that voter fraud is rare and tougher I.D. demands make it unreasonably hard for the poor or the elderly to cast ballots. They also think that programs such as Crosscheck designed to identify people registered in multiple states could exclude citizens who simply have the same name as another voter.

Kobach has an ally for his cause in President Donald Trump, who installed the Kansas Republican as the key player on a national commission created to document how much voter cheating takes place.

That panel quickly ran into trouble when many of Kobach’s fellow secretaries of state across the country refused to turn over voter records, often state citing laws that barred them from sharing the information.

So when Trump scrapped the voting commission, Kobach’s rivals in Kansas leapt to declare it a failure of the man they need to beat in the governor’s race.

“We see that the only thing Kris Kobach accomplished was wasting taxpayer money,” said Ed O’Malley, a former state representative and another candidate in the GOP field. “If voter fraud is a major problem and Kris Kobach spearheaded this effort, he failed to bring the commission together to produce meaningful and measurable outcomes, which means the problem will continue.”

Kobach said the work scuttled by opposition from left-leaning organizations will now be done by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, where he will continue to play a role.
“Absolutely I’ll be involved,” he said. “Now that we are doing the investigation through the Department of Homeland Security things will happen a lot faster.”

Jim McLean is managing director of the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio covering health, education and politics. You can reach him on Twitter @jmcleanks. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to kcur.org.

See more at http://kcur.org/post/kobach-files-voter-fraud-charges-kansas-after-national-panel-dissolves.

Piper results

Piper High School – boys swimming at Blue Valley West

– 200 Medley Relay A placed 6th with a new school record time of 2:07.65 (Jonny Moon, Kyle Chambers, Drew Englis, Jack Roland)
– 200 Medley Relay B placed 9th (Chase Bundy, Carson Gardner, Hunter Calovich, Ben Rehm)
– 200 free: Obinna Okoye (11th)
– 200 IM: Drew Englis (10th)
– 50 free: Jack Roland (15th and new school record of 25.83), Ben Rehm (20th), Ari Butler (26th), Abraham Marquez (27th)
– 100 fly: Jack Roland (10th)
– 100 free: Jonny Moon (11th), Ari Butler (22nd), Ben Rehm (23rd), Abraham Marquez (27th), Dalton White (28th), Zane Howell (29th), Obinna Okoye (30th)
– 200 free relay A placed 5th with a new school record of 1:51.08 (Jack Roland, Drew Englis, Kyle Chambers, Jonny Moon)
– 200 free relay B placed 10th (Ben Rehm, Jakob Hein, Ari Butler, Dalton White)
– 200 free relay C placed 11th (Takeshi Pollard, Nikolaj Konradsen, Sam Traynham, Abraham Marquez)
– 100 back: Chase Bundy (12th), Jonny Moon (14th)
– 100 breast: Nikolaj Konradsen (12th), Chase Bundy (14th)
– 400 free relay A placed 9th (Zane Howell, Hunter Calovich, Ari Butler, Chase Bundy)

– From Doug Key, Piper High School activities director

Rockhurst University announces fall dean’s list

Kansas City, Kansas, students were named to the dean’s list for the fall 2017 semester at Rockhurst University, Kansas City, Mo.

Students on the dean’s list have achieved a grade point average of 3.5 or above.

Kansas City, Kansas, students on the dean’s list include Christiana Alvey, Joseph Alvey, Matthew Appl, Andrew Burnside, Kennedy Hernandez, Coyote Kishpaugh, Alexandria Medina, Andrew Mikesic, Brandon Ramirez, Tayler Singleton and Mayra Zapata.

Rockhurst University is one of 28 Catholic, Jesuit universities in the United States. For more information, visit rockhurst.edu.