A western Kansas man accused of voting in two states has agreed to a plea bargain, saying he “simply made a mistake.” Lincoln Wilson, a 65-year-old Republican from Sherman County, will plead guilty to three misdemeanor counts of voting without being qualified and two misdemeanor counts of false swearing to an affidavit, according to his lawyer, Jerry Fairbanks. The lone African-American charged in Secretary of State Kris Kobach’s voter fraud crusade, Wilson faced the most charges, including three felonies and six misdemeanors. In return for the plea, Kobach’s office will drop three felony charges of election perjury and one misdemeanor count of an unlawful advanced voting, Fairbanks says. Wilson will pay a $6,000 fine, Fairbanks says.
In a letter to the court, Wilson says he pleaded guilty because he violated the letter of the law and takes responsibility. But he didn’t intend to do it, he wrote.
“It turns out I simply made a mistake,” Wilson wrote. “I remain steadfast in knowing there was no intent, desire or conspiracy to circumvent the ‘one man-one vote’ integrity of our system of free elections and political representation.”
This is the seventh voter fraud case Kobach has won since he was granted prosecutorial powers from the Kansas Legislature in 2015. Wilson is one of five older Republican men who have been convicted, along with one 77-year-old Democrat and one 65-year-old Republican woman.
Full Article: Kobach Gets Plea Bargain In Seventh Voter Fraud Case | KCUR.