UPDATE
Oct 20, 2025 6:45 PM CDT
A Minnesota woman convicted of filling out and submitting a mail-in ballot for her deceased mother in support of Donald Trump in last year's election was ordered by a judge to write an essay and read a book about voting's importance to democracy. Danielle Christine Miller, 51, was charged with three felonies but Minnesota Ninth Judicial District Judge Heidi Chandler dropped two of them last week, the AP reports. Miller pleaded guilty to intentionally making or signing a false certificate. As part of her plea, she claimed she was intoxicated when submitting the mail ballots and was unable to precisely remember what she did, but she agreed that the evidence could find her guilty, Itasca County Attorney Jake Fauchald said. The illegal vote was flagged in a routine check.
- Miller's sentence includes up to three years' supervised probation and an $885 fine. Miller must also read a book about the history of voting in America and current related issues, Thank You for Voting: The Maddening, Enlightening, Inspiring Truth About Voting in America, by Erin Geiger Smith; and she was ordered to write a 10-page paper "regarding the importance in voting in a democracy and how election fraud can undermine the voting process."
Oct 28, 2024 5:06 PM CDT
A northern Minnesota woman accused of trying to submit a mail ballot for her recently deceased mother has been charged with three felonies. Authorities say the case shows how routine election safeguards thwart the rare instances of attempted voter fraud.
- Officials in Itasca County, about 200 miles north of Minneapolis, said Monday that the improper vote was caught because the state provides a monthly list of people who've died to election officials, who then flag those names in the state's voter registration database, the AP reports. The woman returned ballots for herself and her mother in early October, and the county auditor's office, which oversees local elections, quickly verified that the mother had died at the end of August, almost three weeks before it began mailing out absentee ballots.