Pubdate: Thu, 23 September 1999
Source: Washington Post (DC)
Copyright: 1999 The Washington Post Company
Address: 1150 15th Street Northwest, Washington, DC 20071
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Author: Maria Glod, Washington Post Staff Writer

MAN PLEADS GUILTY TO VOTER FRAUD

Case A Result Of Crackdown

A Leesburg man pleaded guilty last week to felony election fraud in Loudoun
County Circuit Court in a case sparked by a recent statewide effort to
remove ineligible voters from registration rolls.

Prosecutors said Jeffrey B. Abramson, 43, who runs a catering business,
failed to disclose on his voter registration form a drug-related conviction
when he was a teenager.

Deputy Commonwealth's Attorney Owen D. Basham said Abramson was convicted of
felony drug distribution when he was 19 and has had no convictions since.
Abramson "believed that the felony was a juvenile conviction, and he didn't
think he had to report it," Basham said.

Abramson, who was given a three-year suspended sentence in return for his
plea, was among 15 people indicted in July by a Loudoun County grand jury on
charges that they lied about their criminal records when they registered to
vote.

The crackdown was the outgrowth of a 1998 state audit indicating that
Virginia had thousands of felons and dead people on its voter rolls.
Although auditors initially reported 11,211 felons and nearly 1,500 dead
people on voter rolls statewide, officials said later the problem had been
vastly overstated, and they revised their estimate to "well under 1,000"
ineligible voters.

Virginia is one of 14 states that do not allow felons to vote even after
they have served their sentences, although they can ask the governor to
restore their voting rights.

Loudoun County Commonwealth's Attorney Robert D. Anderson has said the local
registrar in February sent him the names of about 45 registered voters
identified in the audit as felons. Further investigation showed that some of
those people had had their voting rights restored.

Prosecutors in other jurisdictions have said they are still reviewing lists
of potentially ineligible voters identified by the audit.

Each year, dozens of felons have their voting rights restored. Applicants
must have completed their sentence, probation and parole and must have been
citizens in good standing for five to seven years, depending on the offense.

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