03/24/2026
"If someone is really interested in going to jail, they should submit a fraudulent mail ballot because they have committed a federal and state crime, and they have created an extensive paper trail relating to their crime. It will get caught and they will get prosecuted." David Becker, Executive Director & Founder of The Center for Election Innovation & Research. That may be accurate in most places, but that's certaintly not the case in Columbus-Lowndes, MS where voter and homestead fraud don't get prosecuted.
The Supreme Court will consider whether states can count mail ballots that are postmarked by Election Day but arrive after.