Citizens Committee for the D.C. Video Lottery Terminal Initiative v. District of Columbia Board of Elections & Ethics

860 A.2d 813, 2004 D.C. App. LEXIS 457, 2004 WL 2192320
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 28, 2004
Docket04-AA-957
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 860 A.2d 813 (Citizens Committee for the D.C. Video Lottery Terminal Initiative v. District of Columbia Board of Elections & Ethics) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens Committee for the D.C. Video Lottery Terminal Initiative v. District of Columbia Board of Elections & Ethics, 860 A.2d 813, 2004 D.C. App. LEXIS 457, 2004 WL 2192320 (D.C. 2004).

Opinions

FARRELL, Associate Judge:

Petitioner, the Citizens Committee for the District of Columbia Video Lottery Terminal Initiative (the Citizens Committee), challenges a decision of the District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics (the Board) rejecting proposed Initiative Measure No. 68, entitled “The District of Columbia Video Lottery Terminal Initiative of 2004,” on the ground that irregularities in the petition circulation process so “polluted” the signature-gathering operation conducted by a subcontractor, Stars and Stripes, Inc. (Stars and Stripes), as to require invalidation of all petition sheets circulated and signatures gathered by the Stars and Stripes circulators. After exclusion of these signatures, the number of apparent verified signatures remaining was below the number of 17,599 signatures of voter registrants citywide necessary to place the measure on the election ballot.1 The Board therefore declined to certify the [814]*814initiative for submission to the electorate. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the decision of the Board.

I.

The Board rejected the petition sheets and signatures attributable to the Stars and Stripes operation2 after a lengthy evi-dentiary hearing and after finding essentially two classes of wrongdoing by Stars and Stripes circulators headquartered at the Red Roof Inn, a hotel located at 500 H Street, N.W. The first, so-called “false signing” irregularities, concerned the affidavit requirement of D.C.Code § 1-1001.16(h) (2001), which requires an initiative petition circulator to certify under penalty of perjury that, among other things, he or she is a District of Columbia resident who “was in the presence of each person [signing a petition sheet] when the appended signature was written,” and that “according to the best information available to the circulator, each signature is the genuine signature of the person it purports to be.” Id. § 1 — 1001.16(h)(3) & (4).3 The second class of irregularities, which the Board called “false advertising,” concerned the regulation of the Board, 3 DCMR § 1003.6, that requires a circulator to swear that he or she “has not made any false statements regarding the initiative ... to anyone whose signature is appended to the petition.” The Board found that language on a T-shirt worn by circulators (“Sign Up! For Jobs, Education & Healthcare”) and oral communications to the same effect by circulators “were designed to induce potential signers to sign the petition based on the representation that the initiative would produce benefits for [District of Columbia] schools and healthcare.” But because “Initiative Measure No. 68 did not — and could not — make any such promise or guarantee,” the Board found that the representations made to potential signers both orally and via the T-shirts “constituted misrepresentations of Initiative Measure No. 68, and were therefore in violation of the attestation in the circula-tors affidavit that prohibits the making of false statements regarding the Initiative.”

This court initially remanded the record to the Board for clarification of its ruling in light of significant First Amendment concerns raised by the Citizens Committee (as well as the ACLU as amicus) regarding the Board’s exclusion of signatures based on “false advertising.” We asked the Board to clarify (1) whether or not it intended its decision invalidating the Stars and Stripes petitions to rest independently on either class of improprieties found, in particular on the “false signings,” and (2) if so, why. We further stated that “assuming the Board answers the first question affirmatively, it may wish to offer additional explanation of why it believes exclusion of signatures gathered by Stars and Stripes circulators, or sub-classes of such circulators, in addition to those who testi-[815]*815fíed or were named in testimony before the Board, is warranted.”

Following the remand, the Board issued a lengthy memorandum opinion that stated in conclusion:

The Board’s finding regarding “false signings” is separate from its “false advertisement” finding and provides an independent basis on which the Board intends its decision to rest. Because of the pervasiveness of the irregularities associated with the “false signings” and the accompanying pollution of the process that those irregularities fostered, the Board’s decision invalidating the Stars and Stripes petition sheets rests independently on the finding regarding “false signings.”

The Board reaffirmed and further explained its conclusion that “there was a systemic pattern of wrongdoing that permeated the Red Roof Inn operation,” a “pervasive pattern of fraud, forgeries and other improprieties” that necessitated exclusion not just of petition sheets circulated by individuals implicated in wrongdoing by name at the hearing, but of all those circulated by the Stars and Stripes operation.

II.

We affirm the Board’s thoroughly documented and carefully explained decision, substantially for the reasons stated in its supplemental opinion attached hereto.

A.

The Board’s manifold findings of circulator impropriety, which are supported by substantial evidence in the record as a whole, Pendleton v. District of Columbia Bd. of Elections & Ethics, 449 A.2d 301, 307 (D.C.1982),4 include the following:

— Of the seventy-nine Stars and Stripes circulators the Board was able to identify from documents provided by the Citizens Committee, twelve appeared at the hearing in response to subpoena by the Board. Eight of these testified to having falsely signed circulator affidavits, and two refused to testify on grounds of self-incrimination. Those who testified identified three other circulators by name who had engaged in similar false signings. The Citizens Committee, by contrast, called no Stars and Stripes circulators to testify.

— Besides impheating themselves and naming other wrongdoers, the witnesses “implicated ... a much larger group of unnamed wrongdoers.” In particular, Mike Jones, a “mid-level/supervisory affiliate of the Stars and Stripes organization,” had engaged in the “well-known common practice” of having D.C. residents sign the affidavits of non-resident circulators. (“The out-of-towners,” as one resident witness testified, would “go out all day and get signatures; but they didn’t have [anybody to sign it. And so I made a couple of extra dollars by just signing ... their papers.”) Other non-resident circulators likewise claimed not “to worry about D.C. residents being there [to witness petition signatures] ... [T]hey had D.C. residents all lined up to sign off on the signature] petitions] after they turned them in.”

— Regarding some fifty-four petition sheets, the documents themselves showed that the signatures or printed names on the circulator affidavits had been crossed out and another signature or name substituted. “Indeed, the names of twenty-three different circulators appear as the replace[816]*816ments for the crossed-out signatures or names on the altered petition sheets.”5

— Witnesses testified to forgery of their signatures on affidavits.

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Bluebook (online)
860 A.2d 813, 2004 D.C. App. LEXIS 457, 2004 WL 2192320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-committee-for-the-dc-video-lottery-terminal-initiative-v-dc-2004.