Story Published:
Jun 2, 2005 at 7:55 AM PDT
Story Updated:
Jul 24, 2009 at 11:58 AM PDT
SEATTLE - As the results of 2004's general election are
being contested in court halfway across the state, two people
pleaded guilty Thursday to voting twice in the election.
Doris McFarland, 83, and Robert Holmgren, 59, each admitted in
King County District Court that they forged the signatures of and
cast ballots for their recently deceased spouses.
Each will have to pay $490 in fines and court fees but they
won't spend any time in jail. Multiple voting is a gross
misdemeanor that can carry up to a year in jail and a $5,000 fine.
"My wife died just before this election," Holmgren told Judge
Eileen Kato. "My judgment was clouded by the grief. I'm really
sorry for what I did."
McFarland's lawyer, John Price, told the judge that she simply
didn't know what to do with the extra absentee ballot after her
husband of 63 years, Earl, passed away last October.
The judge told each client the court was sorry for their losses
and wished them luck.
The King County prosecutor's office is investigating five
additional cases of multiple voting in the county, but no charges
have been filed.
King County Prosecutor Norm Maleng said the pleas sent a message
that "our system is dependent on the honor of its participants,
and those who cheat may wind up in court explaining it to a
judge."
"At the same time, today's disposition recognizes that these
people made a very human mistake during a time of grieving. ...
Their motivation in these cases was not to throw an election, but
to remember a loved one," Maleng said.
In Chelan County Superior Court in Wenatchee, Republican
candidate Dino Rossi and the state GOP have challenged the 129-vote
victory of Democratic Gov. Christine Gregoire, alleging that
election officials' errors, illegal voters and fraud stole the
election from Rossi.
The case has focused particularly on King County, which has a
third of the state's total votes.