Voter fraud allegations are resolved by state

Elections Commission ends investigation

SHARON — The state Elections Enforcement Commission has completed an investigation into actions by Democratic Registrar Liz Piel during last year’s municipal election.

The investigation was instigated after complaints were filed last December by Republican Registrar David Helming.

The report was filed by attorney Joan Andrews acting for the commission.

Piel confirmed to investigators that she did not register with Town Clerk Linda Amerighi prior to sending out 67 absentee ballot applications to Sharon residents for that election.

The commission concluded that Piel violated an election law that states that anyone sending out more than five absentee ballot applications must file the names of the residents receiving the applications with the town clerk’s office.

Also, Piel duplicated absentee ballot applications from the secretary of the state’s website, despite the fact the website states the application is for individual use only.

Despite the violations, the commission has decided not to penalize Piel, or to initiate any further proceedings.

The commission dismissed another complaint made by Helming. In it, the Republican registrar accused Piel of violating the law when she held onto the official voter list overnight after the voting ended on Nov. 3.

The commission dismissed the complaint, stating that although the town has a practice of returning the voter lists to the town clerk’s office immediately after the election for storage, the state does not require the list to be delivered to the town clerk until the following day.

In an interview with The Lakeville Journal, Piel called Helming “uncivil� for not having spoken to her about the complaints he had before filing them with the commission.

“What I am implying is that the political parties in town are not talking to each other,� Piel said. “Frankly, I think that has something to do with it. What I did was unintentional and did not upset the election.�

In an e-mail, Helming said the Republican Town Committee had not wanted to file the accusations.

“The [committee] was very reluctant to make such a complaint given the nature of the small-town culture we all have come to enjoy while living in Sharon.

“However, we felt it was the right thing to do in order to have steps taken to prevent similar behavior from happening in future elections, especially given the enormous importance of the 2010 election.�

In 2009, voters chose their representatives for town government, including the boards of selectmen, finance and education.

The 2010 election will give voters the right to choose a senator and member of Congress, an attorney general and a governor.

Helming said the committee is pleased that the complaints were taken seriously by the state commission, but is only partially satisfied with its findings.

“The committee is not satisfied with the [state commission’s] findings regarding the infractions surrounding the handling of the [voter list],� Helming said in his e-mail.

“That the [voter list] was physically removed from Town Hall, taken home and photocopied by [Piel], then quietly returned the next day in hopes of not becoming revealed is, to us, a much more grievous infraction.

“We were hoping that the commission would rule that the security of these documents and any other voter records should be more closely managed in the 2010 election and in all future elections.�

Town Clerk Amerighi said she is also concerned that the state commission did not find Piel at fault for taking home the voter list.

“The voter list is used at the polls and it is the document we use for recounts,� Amerighi said. “When I requested it [from Piel] to have it in order to provide information for reporters calling in on the night of the election, I did not have it.

“When I phoned her for it, she came into Town Hall, looked diligently for it, then told me she did not know where it was and could not provide it to me.

“Despite it being a closed case, there should be something in the state statutes that prevents the voting list from leaving Town Hall.�

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