A man who attempted to vote twice in Virginia’s 2023 election was acquitted of attempted illegal voting on Monday, following his claims in court that he had been testing the system for voter fraud.

A Nelson County jury found 67-year-old Richardson Carter Bell Jr. not guilty of attempting to vote more than once in the same election. According to the Washington Post, Bell, a staunch supporter of former President Donald Trump, admitted voting early at his local registrar’s office only to also show up at a nearby polling place on Election Day.

  • LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    13 days ago

    We punish people for DUI’s harshly because they COULD cause harm. They get charges beyond the DUI when someone IS harmed. This is like saying a person drove a car at parade full speed but ran into a baracade. “I was just testing the baracade to make sure the people in the parade would be safe.”

    • Wrench@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      But driving under the influence is literally the charge. There’s also reckless endangerment and other tack on charges. You couldn’t necessarily tack on attempted homicide, because intent is required.

      In this case, attempted voter fraud is literally the charge. Sentencing guidelines are a state level decision.

      That’s just how the law works. If you want more punishment for failed voter fraud, pressure the state to increase the sentencing guidelines.

      • LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        13 days ago

        “was acquitted of attempted illegal voting”

        Maybe you read something different than I did. He was acquitted of attempting to do what he did.

        Therefore someone driving drunk, should be acquitted of driving drunk, right? That is worded as the attempt is the charge, not the act.

        Which is why I compared it to something that we ban because it could injure someone, and then change the charges when they do harm someone.

        • Wrench@lemmy.world
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          13 days ago

          Ahh, I guess I misread. I thought they got convicted for attempted voter fraud but acquitted of voter fraud.

          Like I said, intent is a large part of the law. A lot of crimes don’t get charged because intent is a high threshold to prove. Just because it seems the intent is obvious, proving it beyond reasonable doubt in a court of law is a very different matter.

        • meco03211@lemmy.world
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          13 days ago

          Except he didn’t vote twice. He got in line to do it. He was turned away. From there he could try to say he never actually intended to vote again and would have not filled out another ballot and submitted it.

          The drink driving analogy to this is walking to your vehicle while drunk with your keys in your hand. Or sitting in your vehicle. In many states and jurisdictions if you are sitting in the car even without keys or actual intent to drive you can be convicted of “DUI”.

          • LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.world
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            13 days ago

            Charge: “Attempted voter fraud”

            That says nothing about voting twice, it says attempting.

            He showed up tried to vote, got denied, lied to the police saying that it wasn’t him, and then when he showed up to court obviously has to admit he did attempt to do so, but only did so because he was testing the system.

            What part did I miss?

            I’d say we can look up what the actual charge is listed as for that state, but honestly I think we might be better off not searching things about such right now.

            • meco03211@lemmy.world
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              13 days ago

              That says nothing about voting twice, it says attempting.

              Had you read the actual statute you’d have found “voter fraud” to be the actual act of voting twice. In another section the modifier attempted is defined as basically attempting a crime defined elsewhere. So you can complain about justice not being served all you want, but the jury was not convinced he would have voted twice. You can say you’d have convicted him even, but you weren’t on the jury. I’m not arguing whether he should or shouldn’t have been convicted. The original question that prompted this chain was how he wasn’t convicted. I was providing a simple explanation as to why. Accept it or not. The part you missed was the part you explicitly said you didn’t look into. The actual law on this issue.