North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein exonerated Meadows and his wife of any wrongdoing.
Attorney General Josh Stein has stated that former White House chief of staff and current North Carolina representative Mark Meadows will not face voter fraud charges in North Carolina for his 2020 registration and absentee vote.
On Friday, Attorney General Josh Stein stated that the State Bureau of Investigation had investigated allegations of fraud regarding Mr. and Mrs. Meadows’ registration and voting in the 2020 elections. Based on the investigation conducted by my office, we do not have sufficient evidence to file criminal charges against any of them at this time.
Democrat Ben Stein told The Associated Press on the same day, “Our judgment was… they had reasons that would benefit them if a case was presented such that we didn’t feel we could demonstrate beyond a reasonable doubt that they had engaged in willful vote fraud.”
According to the media, the findings were based on the results of a probe into voting fraud conducted by the State Bureau of Probe.
Meadows, a Republican, caught the attention of federal prosecutors when it was discovered that he had voter registrations in not one but three states.
Meadows listed the location of a mobile home he did not own in the community of Scaly Mountain when he registered to vote in September 2020.
He cast an absentee ballot in the November election that followed.
According to the previous tenant’s statements to The New Yorker magazine, the flat was rented by Meadows’ wife.
Per the state’s interpretation of the law, voters can register at their “permanent place of abode” up to 30 days before an election.
In particular, knowingly registering under a false name is a minor offense.
In a report, prosecutors in Stein’s office said there wasn’t enough evidence to file charges against Meadows and his wife and that the couple had signed a one-year lease on the landlord’s Scaly Mountain residence.
Debra Meadows’s phone records show that she was a resident of the Scaly Mountain region by the following October 2020; her husband, a federal employee in Washington, DC, qualified for a residence exemption based on his employment.
There are “more variables leaning in support of residency in Macon County than arguments are arguing against the residence,” the document adds, even though Mark Meadows was “almost probably never physically present at the Scaly Mountain location.”
There are documents showing that Meadows signed up to vote in both Virginia and South Carolina in 2021 and 2022, respectively.
The paper claims that Mark and Debra Meadows declined an interview with the State Bureau of Investigation.
Ben Williamson, Mark Meadows’s spokesperson, said he had no comment on Stein’s selection.
Meadows made several unfounded claims of widespread voting fraud leading up to and during the 2020 election.
Neither Democratic nor Republican election authorities, the judicial system, or even Trump’s attorney general has found evidence of widespread voter fraud in the 2020 election.
However, Stein noted that “none of the events related to January 6th are relevant to the specific charges of vote fraud against Mr. and Mrs. Meadows that were presented to my office for inquiry.” “Due to the lack of evidence, we will not be pressing charges against Mr. or Mrs. Meadows. If additional information about voter fraud charges is discovered in any future inquiry or prosecution by authorities in other jurisdictions, we reserve the right to reexamine this topic.”
