Sessions case resurfaces before hearing

AG pick criticized for work in voting-fraud prosecution while U.S. attorney in ’85

Sen. Jeff Sessions (left), shown being greeted by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell after a Nov. 30 meeting on Capitol Hill, hopes to ease concerns from his Democratic colleagues in his confirmation hearing for attorney general by emphasizing civil-rights concerns throughout his career.
Sen. Jeff Sessions (left), shown being greeted by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell after a Nov. 30 meeting on Capitol Hill, hopes to ease concerns from his Democratic colleagues in his confirmation hearing for attorney general by emphasizing civil-rights concerns throughout his career.

WASHINGTON -- A failed voting-fraud prosecution from more than 30 years ago has re-emerged ahead of Sen. Jeff Sessions' confirmation hearing for attorney general.

RELATED ARTICLE

http://www.arkansas…">Trump huddles with candidates for Cabinet jobs

Sessions was dogged by his handling of the case as a U.S. attorney during his 1986 confirmation hearing for a federal judgeship, when he tried to fend off complaints of a wrongful prosecution. He devoted more space to that case than any other in a questionnaire he submitted this month to the Senate Judiciary Committee for the attorney general post.

The 1985 prosecution involved three black civil-rights activists, including a former adviser to Martin Luther King Jr., who were accused of illegally tampering with large numbers of absentee ballots in rural Perry County, Ala. The defendants argued that they were assisting voters who were poor, uneducated and in some cases illiterate, and marked the ballots with the voters' permission.

A jury acquitted the three after just a few hours of deliberation.

[TRUMP: Timeline of president-elect’s career + list of appointments so far]

Howard Moore Jr., a member of the activists' defense team, said he didn't think it was a legitimate prosecution.

"That's why we defended the case so vigorously," he said in an interview. "We felt that it would have had a chilling effect, if they had been convicted, throughout the South."

Sessions has defended the decision to bring the case and suggested in his questionnaire that there was ample evidence for a conviction. His supporters note that Justice Department officials in Washington approved the investigation and the indictment, and point to one voter's statement to the FBI that her ballot had been manipulated and her preferences crossed out and replaced with a different slate of candidates.

The case matters because as attorney general Sessions would be the federal government's top lawyer in voting-rights disputes, with the authority to challenge -- or support -- state laws dictating access to the polls.

He would inherit an agency that, under President Barack Obama's administration, has sued states over potentially discriminatory voting laws but whose enforcement efforts have been stymied by a Supreme Court opinion that gutted a key provision of the Voting Rights Act. And he could turn the Justice Department's focus to voting fraud, an issue he's repeatedly sounded the alarm about but that current leaders consider nearly nonexistent.

"There's nothing in Sen. Session's record that would give me confidence that protecting voting rights from states' intent on restricting them is something that would be a priority," said Dale Ho, director of the American Civil Liberties Union's Voting Rights Project.

Sessions was U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Alabama from 1981 to 1993, and served two years as state attorney general before being elected to the Senate in 1996.

Ultimately, Sessions' 1986 judicial nomination was derailed by concerns over racially charged comments he was accused of making.

Asked on the questionnaire about the 10 most significant legal cases he's been involved in, Sessions mentioned his office's investigation into the 1981 murder of a 19-year-old black man that resulted in the conviction of two Ku Klux Klan members, as well as litigation that pressed for school integration and for minority representation on a county commission and education board.

He also highlighted his involvement in a separate voting-rights case: a 1984 Justice Department consent decree with Conecuh County, Ala., following allegations that racial epithets were overheard at polling places and that only white poll workers were hired. The agreement required political parties to encourage the nomination of black poll workers and to "ensure that election officials would not engage in racially discriminatory conduct designed to harass or intimidate voters," Sessions wrote.

But the Perry County prosecution remains a focal point.

Sessions, in his questionnaire, wrote that he agreed to investigate the matter after the county district attorney told him that "extremely large numbers" of absentee ballots were being collected and stored in a central headquarters, where they were being altered to ensure that they were marked for particular candidates endorsed by the activists. An FBI agent conducting surveillance outside a post office said he saw the defendants depositing more than 500 absentee ballots to be delivered for counting.

The FBI determined that 75 of 729 absentee ballots contained erasures and alterations, Sessions said, and that about 25 of the voters who were presented with their ballots said they hadn't authorized any changes.

Testifying about the matter at a 1986 hearing, Sessions said, "It is horrible to change somebody's vote."

The jury wasn't convinced.

A defense lawyer in the case, Dennis Balske, said prosecutors had little to back up the charges. "We were prepared for 25 people to get up and say, yeah, I voted this way, and they changed the ballot," he said. "That didn't happen."

A Section on 12/21/2016

Upcoming Events