Pubdate: Thu, 30 Jul 2015
Source: Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)
Copyright: 2015 Associated Press
Contact:  http://www.morningjournal.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3569
Author: Julie Carr Smyth, Associated Press

ELECTIONS CHIEF OPENS POT PETITIONS INVESTIGATION

COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio's elections chief named a special investigator 
on Wednesday to review what he calls "significant disparities" in a 
marijuana legalization group's ballot petitions and said he is 
subpoenaing the campaign's director.

The announcement by Secretary of State Jon Husted is the latest show 
of force by the state's Republican powerbrokers against 
ReponsibleOhio. The group seeks to place a constitutional amendment 
on the November ballot that would mark one of the nation's most 
significant leaps in marijuana policy, taking Ohio from a complete 
prohibition against cannabis use to legalization for both medical and 
recreational use.

In another development, Attorney General Mike DeWine on Wednesday 
rejected the petition summary for the Ohio Medical Cannabis 
Amendment, which seeks to legalize marijuana for medical use in 2016.

Husted said special investigator David Bowers will explore why 
significant numbers of petition signatures collected by 
ResponsibleOhio were invalid and some physical forms didn't match 
electronic copies. If such discrepancies are a product of fraud, they 
are subject to criminal penalties up to a fifth-degree felony.

"As with every possible case of election fraud, it is my 
responsibility to investigate and hold accountable anyone who may 
have cheapened the voice of all Ohioans by cheating the system," he 
said in a statement.

Husted also said he planned to subpoena ResponsibleOhio executive 
director Ian James and records from his consulting firm, The Strategy Network.

James said in a statement that ResponsibleOhio followed the law and 
brought the discrepancies cited by Husted to his office's attention.

ResponsibleOhio legal counsel Andy Douglas, a former Ohio Supreme 
Court, said Husted "will have to answer for" his treatment of the campaign.

"Instead of working with us and addressing the problems within his 
office and at the county boards of election, Secretary Husted has 
slapped us with a subpoena meant to silence us and chill any future 
opposition," Douglas said in a statement. "He even deputized a former 
prosecutor to investigate us, then bragged about his past success 
gaining convictions - all in a further attempt to frighten, harass 
and silence us."

Earlier this month, Husted found about 276,000 of the initial 695,000 
signatures ResponsibleOhio submitted were valid. The group faces a 
midnight Thursday deadline for submitting more signatures; 305,591 
are required to make the ballot.

Prior to that declaration, Husted had issued a warning to county 
election boards, urging them to take special care in reviewing the 
marijuana petitions for fear of problems.

The campaign offered the opportunity to register to vote for those 
who were unregistered but wanted to sign the petitions. Husted said 
an alarming number of those registrations were faulty.

"Fraud and sloppiness have more in common than being the devastating 
cause of undermining voter confidence," Husted said. "They are 
illegal and will not be tolerated by my office."

Before its summer break, the Republican-controlled state Legislature 
authorized a competing ballot measure that would effectively block 
the legalization effort by banning a cartel-like setup that 
establishes 10 privately run growing sites statewide, including one in Lorain.

Also Wednesday, Attorney General Mike DeWine rejected the petition 
summary for another effort, the Ohio Medical Cannabis Amendment, 
which seeks to legalize marijuana for medical use in 2016.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom