North Carolina Green Party v. North Carolina State Board of Elections

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedAugust 7, 2023
Docket5:22-cv-00276
StatusUnknown

This text of North Carolina Green Party v. North Carolina State Board of Elections (North Carolina Green Party v. North Carolina State Board of Elections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North Carolina Green Party v. North Carolina State Board of Elections, (E.D.N.C. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA WESTERN DIVISION No. 5:22-CV-276-D

NORTH CAROLINA ) GREEN PARTY, et al., ) Plaintiffs, v. ORDER NORTH CAROLINA STATE BOARD OF ELECTIONS, et al., ) Defendants.

On May 8, 2023, the North Carolina Democratic Party and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (“DSCC”) (collectively, “intervenors”) moved to dismiss this action as moot 86] and filed a memorandum in support [D.E. 87]. That same day, the North Carolina State Board of Elections, the five Board of Elections members, and the Board of Elections executive director (collectively, “defendants”) moved to dismiss this action as moot [D.E. 88] and filed a memorandum in support [D.E. 89]. On May 30, 2023, the North Carolina Green Party (“Green Party”), Anthony Ndege, Michael Trudeau, Matthew Hoh, Samantha Worrell, Samantha Spence, K. Ryan Parker, and Aaron Mohammed (collectively, “plaintiffs”) responded in opposition to both motions to dismiss [D.E. 90, 91]. On June 13, 2023, defendants and intervenors replied [D.E. 92, 93]. As explained below, the court grants defendants’ and intervenors’ motions to dismiss and dismisses plaintiffs’ action as moot.

I. The North Carolina Green Party is a state affiliate of the Green Party of the United States. See Am. Compl. [D.E. 27] 16. The Green Party sought to place Matthew Hoh (“Hoh”) and Michael Trudeau (“Trudeau”) on the ballot as candidates in North Carolina’s November 8, 2022 general election. See id, at Tf 6, 8-9, 31-32. Although the Green Party was a recognized political party in North Carolina and had candidates on the 2020 general election ballot, the party failed to garner enough votes to qualify automatically as a political party entitled to place candidates on the 2022 general election ballot in North Carolina. See Cox Decl. [D.E. 52] fj 3-4. Thus, to recertify as a political party and to place Hoh and Trudeau on the ballot as candidates in the 2022 general election, the Green Party had to comply with N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ 163-96 and 163-98. See id. at { 5; Am. Compl. [¥f 21-26; [D.E. 51] 5. To meet the statutory requirements for certification in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-96(a)(2), the Green Party needed to submit 13,865 valid signatures to the Board of Electors (“the Board”) by June 2022. See Am. Compl. § 26; [D.E. 52-1] (Green Party petition request form). The Green Party’s petitions were due to the county boards of elections not later than 5:00 p.m. on May 17, 2022, so that the county boards of elections could validate the Green Party’s petition signatures. See Cox Decl. q 5; [D.E. 52-1]. In February 2021, the Green Party began a new petition drive to collect signatures to meet the May 17, 2022 deadline to submit signatures to the county boards of elections for validation. See Am. Compl. ¢ 25; Cox Decl. 5. Three issues emerged regarding the Green Party’s petition drive. First, in October 2021, the Board received queries from county boards in roughly five counties because it appeared that the Green Party had submitted outdated petition sheets. See Cox Decl. {

6. The Board was unable to address that issue with the Green Party at the time. See id. at ff 7-8; [D.E. 52-2]. Second, in March 2022, the Green Party told the Board that they did not intend to seek party recognition in 2022 but instead were starting their petition drive for 2024. See Cox. Decl. 79; [D.E. 52-4]. In response, the Board changed the deadline in the SEIMS Petition Module for the Green Party to submit petitions to county boards to May 17, 2024. See Cox Decl. ¢ 9. When the Green Party later decided to seek certification in 2022, the reversion back to the May 17, 2022 deadline caused confusion. Some county boards accidentally validated signatures submitted after the May 17, 2022 deadline, mistakenly believing they were timely under the May 17, 2024 deadline. See id. Third, the process to validate petition signatures submitted by the Green Party to county boards of elections was hampered by alleged evidence of fraudulent signatures and county board incompetence. Beginning in April 2022, the Board received notice from some county boards of elections that some of the petitions the Green Party submitted contained evidence of fraud. See Martucci Decl. [D.E. 53] 4. The Board continued to receive similar information in May and June from other counties. See id. at J] 8-9. Based on this information, the Board began to investigate the fraud allegations concerning the Green Party’s petitions. See id. at § 3. The Board’s investigation found “what appeared to be noticeably fraudulent signatures, largely submitted from three counties, and bearing the signature marks of the same two individuals throughout.” Id. at □ 11. After meeting with Green Party leadership in June 2022, the Board narrowed its investigation to two persons of interest and possibly a third. See id. at { 19. These persons of interest apparently were

connected to consulting firms or individuals that the Green Party hired to assist with signature gathering. See id. at ff 13, 17-20, 25. As part of its investigation, the Board determined that “the entire universe of possibly fraudulent signatures was believed to be” 2,653 signatures based on 1,382 signatures collected by the three persons of interest and 1,271 signatures collected by a consulting firm. Id. at 25. “Board staff examined roughly 3,560 submitted petition pages” to try to identify signatures that fell within the group of possibly fraudulent signatures. Id. at ] 21. The Board ultimately identified 1,472 signatures gathered by persons of interest in the investigation. See id. at FJ 23, 25. Of those signatures, the Board accepted 624 signatures and rejected 848 signatures. See id. at { 23. Board staff also contacted more than 200 voters to ask whether they signed the Green Party petition. See id. at ]24. Of those that responded, “28 individuals did not sign the petition, 12 did not remember whether they signed, 10 did sign it, and 4 thought they were signing a petition for something else.” Id. The process to validate signatures submitted by the Green Party was also delayed by county boards of elections not validating the signature petitions within the two-week window specified in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-96(c) or not properly reviewing the petitions. As for not meeting the two- week deadline, the Board did not hold the delay against the Green Party so long as the Green Party had submitted the petitions to the relevant county board by 5:00 p.m. on May 17, 2022. See Cox Decl. ff 11-12. Thus, although the Green Party made a timely initial submission to the Board on June 1, the Green Party supplemented its petitions on June 8, June 17, and June 24 with additional signatures after the county boards validated them. See id. at] 14. Board staff reviewed the petitions

1 At the July 18, 2022 status conference, counsel for the Board told the court that there is no allegation from the Board that the Green Party itself committed any fraud.

as they received them. See id. at { 21. In early July, the Board learned that some county boards of elections were not properly verifying petitions because they “did not check to see whether the signature itself resembled that of the voter.” Id. at ]26. This oversight potentially affected “large volumes” of the Green Party’s signatures. Id.” On July 11, 2022, the Board’s general counsel instructed county boards to conduct proper signature comparisons by July 29, 2022, if they had not already done so. See id. at { 27; [D.E. 52-10]. The Green Party submitted 22,530 signatures to the county boards of elections for validation. Am. Compl. { 26.

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North Carolina Green Party v. North Carolina State Board of Elections, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-carolina-green-party-v-north-carolina-state-board-of-elections-nced-2023.