SIX COMPLAINTS FILED WITH THE NEW HAMPSHIRE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE ELECTION LAW UNIT - MAY 1, 2025
- NH Muckraker
- 2 days ago
- 2 min read
In summary, the six-election law reported violations filed against the town of Hampton having to do with, electioneering by public employees, electioneering at the polling place, not upholding one's oath of office, and certain provisions of Presidential Executive Order #14248 (March 25, 2025).
"Under the Constitution, State governments must safeguard American elections in compliance with Federal laws that protect Americans’ voting rights and guard against dilution by illegal voting, discrimination, fraud, and other forms of malfeasance and error. Yet the United States has not adequately enforced Federal election requirements that, for example, prohibit States from counting ballots received after Election Day or prohibit non-citizens from registering to vote."
"Above all, elections must be honest and worthy of the public trust. That requires voting methods that produce a voter-verifiable paper record allowing voters to efficiently check their votes to protect against fraud or mistake. Election-integrity standards must be modified accordingly.
It is the policy of my Administration to enforce Federal law and to protect the integrity of our election process."
"The Attorney General shall take all appropriate action to enter into information-sharing agreements, to the maximum extent possible, with the chief State election official or multi-member agency of each State. These agreements shall aim to provide the Department of Justice with detailed information on all suspected violations of State and Federal election laws discovered by State officials,"
The complaints where hand-delivered to Concord this morning. A copy was sent to U.S. Attorney General Bondi's office.
Attorney General Bondi's office has also been sent copies of the Rockingham Superior Court decision (Barnes v. Hampton) whereas the town was found guilty of violating the state's right-to-know law regarding information sought for the March 2024 town election. Also included was the New Hampshire Attorney General's July 2024 Notice to the Hampton Town Clerk ordering her resignation after election law violations were filed and attested to by Regina Barnes and Beth Frongillo.

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