Home Cuccinelli: ‘Hands are tied’ on voter fraud case
News

Cuccinelli: ‘Hands are tied’ on voter fraud case

Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli has not been shy about using the resources of his office and taxpayer dollars to tilt at windmills like climate change and abortion regulations.

But Cuccinelli is holding back from involving his office in expanding the investigation into alleged voter fraud perpetrated by a Republican group that has already led to one arrest in Harrisonburg.

“My office does not have the authority to investigate election matters unless explicitly requested to do so by the State Board of Elections, a local commonwealth’s attorney, or a local electoral board member.  No such request has been made to date; and, therefore, by law, I do not have the authority to undertake the investigation you have suggested.  My hands are tied in this matter,” Cuccinelli wrote in a letter to Democratic State Sen. Donald McEachin, who had written to Cuccinelli to request that he expand the investigation beyond its current parameters.

Cuccinelli did say in his response to McEachin that he “would be happy to support a legislative effort by you in the next General Assembly session to provide investigative authority to the Office of the Attorney General in relation to vote tampering and voter fraud.”

“As you know, then – and only then – would my office be able to fulfill your request to investigate such matters without a formal request from the State Board of Elections,” Cuccinelli said.

Support AFP




Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

soccer
Etc.

UVA Soccer: National team call-ups for Cecil, Hardeman, Simmonds

uva baseball
Baseball

UVA Baseball: Issues with pitching, defense doom ‘Hoos in 16-10 loss to Georgia Tech

Virginia was a half-hearted effort at an inning-ending double play away from getting out of the seventh with a 9-6 lead.

abigail spanberger ms now
Politics, Virginia

Spanberger doesn’t understand why labor critics see ‘betrayal’ on collective bargaining

MS NOW anchor Jonathan Capehart gave Gov. Abigail Spanberger a chance at a Tuesday conference to address her veto of public-sector collective bargaining legislation, which her critics in the labor movement have called a “betrayal.” Her response: “I would defer to them to answer that question.” So, it’s up to Spanberger’s critics to answer why...

measles illustration
Virginia

Virginia Department of Health launches measles dashboard in wake of outbreak

how lenders evaluate mortgage applicants
Local, Politics, U.S. & World, Virginia

House passes bipartisan affordable housing bill: Something we can all agree on

open house real estate sign listing agent
Virginia

Virginia home sales, sale prices up in April: Good news for your favorite local Realtor®

Eugene Vindman
Politics, Virginia

Eugene Vindman votes with MAGAs on the Don’t Say Trans and Forced Outing Bill