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Home : News : News : Today's Stories
Marijuana 'petition' actually voter registration form
By: MARGARET GIBBONS, Times Herald Staff
10/19/2004
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COURTHOUSE - Montgomery County Community College (MCCC) students recently received a real-life lesson: Do not sign something unless you thoroughly read it.

Students, who last month signed a petition that was being circulated on the Blue Bell campus to legalize marijuana for primarily medicinal purposes, now are finding out that they are registered Republicans.
"This is just very disheartening," said Plymouth resident Jennifer Fugo, a 24-year-old continuing education student who describes herself as a "victim of voter registration manipulation."
"Everyone is encouraging young people to register and vote and then they experience something like this," Fugo said Monday. "This is just outrageous."
Fugo, who had been living in New York, this summer returned to the area and, in August, had her voter registration transferred to Plymouth. Her new registration card at that time correctly listed her party affiliation as a Democrat.
Imagine her surprise last week, said Fugo, when she received a new registration card from the county that listed her as a registered Republican.
"It is disgraceful and detestable, not to mention illegal, to alter anyone's voter registration without that person's consent," Fugo said. "The thought that there is a special interest group in my area that is knowingly defrauding citizens voting records is outrageous, no matter what party or interest group is perpetrating this act."
When she contacted the county's voter registration office, she was advised that she was not the only MCCC student who was a victim of registration fraud.
County voter services Director Joseph R. Passarella said that his office has received "less than a handful" of complaints from MCCC students complaining that they have been registered as Republicans and all were tied into the same petition drive.
His office has not been able to pin down the group that submitted these registrations.
Passarella speculated that there are various organizations this year who are paying people to register new voters in specific parties and that this was the work of someone trying to cash in on the registrations.
The good news is that it does not make any difference in what party a person is registered in the upcoming election because a registered voter can vote for any candidate on the ticket regardless of party, Passarella said.
However, if a person wants to vote in next spring's Democratic or Republican primary elections and is not registered in the party of his or her choice, he or she can change the registration after the Nov. 2 general election, he said.
"I think these kids learned the hard way to make sure they read things before signing them and not sign anything that is questionable," Passarella said.
Fugo said she had questioned the signing of the registration form, telling the petition circulator that she already was registered to vote. He told her they were just using the form for information purposes and that she could not sign the petition unless she also signed the form.
Susan Adams, MCCC's director of marketing and communications, Monday said she was first alerted to the situation last Friday after the school had received calls from a student and the parent of another student.
Adams said that all persons circulating petitions on the college's campus must first sign in with the school.
No one signed in nor received an OK to circulate the marijuana petition, Adams said.
MCCC in early September did host a voter registration drive where the Republican, Democratic and Green Parties participated, Adams said.
"That was very successful," said Adams. "There is a lot of interest in this election."
Montgomery County Republican Committee Executive Director Adam Gattuso said the county GOP did not condone such registration fraud and did not learn about it until late last week.
"That is despicable and not something we would do nor need to do," said Gattuso.
Margaret Gibbons can be reached at mgibbons@timesherald.com or 610-272-2501 ext. 216.


©The Times Herald 2009

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Reader Comments
Added: Thursday August 07, 2008 at 01:50 AM EST
i want to smoke pot, andbe able to buy it at 7-11
make it legal
gregg howell, exton, PA
Added: Saturday October 30, 2004 at 01:19 PM EST
I live in San Diego Ca. I re-registered to vote aftrer moving. I specifically told the lady at the voter registration table ( which was funded by the Republican Party) I wanted to be registered as an Independent. What happens? I get my verification a few weeks later and i am now a registered Republican!!! My local Registrar of Votes has not been much help
Tracy Ball
Added: Thursday October 28, 2004 at 12:06 AM EST
Thanks for all of the wonderful input about this story. But, guess what? I never said that I didn't hold some responsibility about what happened to me. I do. I signed the petition dispite having concerns about it. But that, in no way, forgives the misdeeds of the other party involved. Quite a few of the readers posted stating that this experience will help me mature, and read things before I signed them...well, I did read them. In fact, the letter which was sent to Ms. Gibbons made clear that a lack of critical reading on my part was not an issue. I did subsequently speak with Ms. Gibbons about the story and her misguided take on it. She told me that a few students had allegedly told the head of Voter Registration that they didn't really read the petition. So, she took this tid bit of info and used my letter to produce this story which is not entirely accurate.

So, I appreciate the concern of those that think that I was dumb and failed to read the info clearly, or that I simply deny any responsibility on my part in this situation. But maybe you should focus your concern on the fact that our system is out of control. You may laugh at me, you may think that this situation is humorous...but you may not find it so funny when/if something happens to you. Voting is an important right, and although I realize that I'm lucky, any tampering of the vote undermines us all. You cannot have a strong democracy if there are doubts about the vote. Why do you think that half of this country and the majority of the world don't believe that the last election was won fairly?
Jennifer Fugo
Added: Tuesday October 26, 2004 at 09:10 PM EST
I happen to disagree with Mr. McDonald. The Republican Party is completely responsible for the actions of its members. If those members took it upon themselves to make such a daring move, they were obviously influenced from above. Lets face it. People, in general are stupid. Even the people who pulled this stunt. So when stupid people and stupid people are mixed together, its the responsibility of thier superiors, to keep a close watch and make every effort to make sure they dont kill themselves.
I believe radical republicans from Long Island shouldn't be allowed to have internet connections. It causes too many problems, such as the one below. I would also suggest Mr. McDonald reevaluate his stance on the issue by examining his peers. How many Hofstra Students, do you know, that would willingly sign a piece of paper trying to legalize pot?
I'll say this: The Conservative wing of politics are draining the life out of the country, and the liberals arent doing anything about it. Its up to the people in the middle to make sure things get done.
Andrew Rees
Added: Tuesday October 26, 2004 at 12:51 PM EST
Just another example of people who make personal mistakes trying to blame it on the "Big Bad RNC." Get off your high horses people, the DNC does the same exact things that the RNC does, only when they do it, the shrill liberal commentators and newspapers don't scream about it.

As for the students who were "wrongly" registered as Republicans, they should take it as a life lesson and learn not to sign something, no matter how innocent it seems, without taking careful look at what these forms say. Mr Shears from Columbus, Ohio said it excellently, you sign something, you should be damned well sure that its what you meant to sign.

"I know because I attended such a session thinking it was public interest group supporting voting in the US. We found out later that the drive I attended, like many of these drives, was funded by the RNC"

So you're telling us all that it is WRONG for the RNC to try to get people to vote in the forthcoming election? You're saying that parties should be exclusive, and not promote voter awareness? Last time I checked, a democracy is a sampling of as many of the population as possible.

"This election is fraught with deceptive voter registration drives contracted and paid for by the Republican National Convention."

Excuse me ma'am, but where is your proof? You can pontificate all day on the "deceptive" Republican National Convention, which is "fraught" with corruption and graft. But, to be blunt, you have no proof. Sweeping general statements like that are 90% of the time, false. The RNC promotes voting awareness, as does the DNC, but let me ask you something, how many DNC funded conventions and drives are corrupt? Your answer would seem to be 'none of them.' I'm willing to wager that there are just as many crooked Democrats as there are Republicans. But when these people who aren't even officially associated with the RNC do something wrong, the RNC is immediately set in the public's scope, but if Michael Moore presents falsehoods in his movies, in fact downright contradictions and lies in a thinly veiled piece of propoganda, people praise him for "artistic genius" and those who disagree are 'facists.'

When it comes down to it, the Republican Party is likely to be no more or less guilty than the Democrat Party, get over it and read before you sign.

Patrick McDonald
Added: Monday October 25, 2004 at 02:33 PM EST
I agree with the writer Chris who says your paper missed the big story. This election is fraught with deceptive voter registration drives contracted and paid for by the Republican National Convention. I know because I attended such a session thinking it was public interest group supporting voting in the US. We found out later that the drive I attended, like many of these drives, was funded by the RNC, and that there were financial incentives to providers to sign up only republican voters. It was alledged recently that during these drives, some registration forms desginated as democrat were torn up by employees of one drive's organizers. When those newly registered voters show up at the polls on Tuesday, they will not be able to vote. The RNC denies any orchestrated approach to selective voter registration, but claims they cannot control the activities of a few bad apples. If they had not given an incentive to such businesses, maybe the destruction of valid registrations would not have occurred. This is, indeed, the story you are NOT covering, and I ask: WHY NOT?
Monica Hendricks
Added: Thursday October 21, 2004 at 10:48 PM EST
When the spring primaries come around, people who have been falsely registered as Republican can have a wonderful time voting for the least competant candidates. Or has that already happened?
Dan Stevens
View All 30 Comments »

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