ABC News follows up on Facing South expose of NC robo-call scandal
ABC News reports on the North Carolina robo-call scandal:
A group responsible for misleading automated phone messages to North Carolina voters has drawn the attention and ire of state officials in at least seven other states.
Women's Voices Women Vote, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit voter outreach group, says it has been active in 24 states trying to register unmarried women to vote. Mailings and phone calls from the group, however, have confused thousands of presidential primary voters and caused headaches for state election officials.
In Wisconsin, officials rebuked the group for disregarding the state's primary registration deadline. Arizona's secretary of state called the group's mailings "misleading and deceptive" for suggesting that voters were legally required to send back the enclosed registration forms. Michigan officials fielded thousands of phone calls regarding mailings to deceased voters and those who were already registered, according to news reports. In Virginia, the state police launched an investigation out of concern that the groups mailings could be a part of a identity theft scam.
Last week, North Carolina voters received automated messages -- known as robocalls -- from the group telling them to expect a voter registration packet in the mail, nearly two weeks after the mail-in voter registration deadline for the state's presidential primary.
Election watchdogs say the group's track record of missteps, first uncovered by the Institute of Southern Studies, is surprising considering its connections to several well-experienced political operatives, including former Clinton White House chief of staff John Podesta.
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Chris Kromm
Chris Kromm is executive director of the Institute for Southern Studies and publisher of the Institute's online magazine, Facing South.