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Saturday, May 10, 2025

Ballot boxes set on fire in Washington and Oregon destroying hundreds of ballots

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193 days ago
20241028
A replacement ballot drop box is unloaded on Monday, Oct. 28, 2024, in Portland, Ore. (AP Photo/Claire Rush)

A replacement ballot drop box is unloaded on Monday, Oct. 28, 2024, in Portland, Ore. (AP Photo/Claire Rush)

Claire Rush

Au­thor­i­ties, in­clud­ing the FBI, were in­ves­ti­gat­ing Mon­day af­ter ear­ly morn­ing fires were set in bal­lot drop box­es in Port­land, Ore­gon, and in near­by Van­cou­ver, Wash­ing­ton, where hun­dreds of bal­lots were de­stroyed.

The Port­land Po­lice Bu­reau re­port­ed that of­fi­cers and fire­fight­ers re­spond­ed to a fire in one bal­lot drop box at about 3:30 a.m. and de­ter­mined an in­cen­di­ary de­vice had been placed in­side. Mult­nom­ah Coun­ty Elec­tions Di­rec­tor Tim Scott said a fire sup­pres­sant in­side the drop box pro­tect­ed near­ly all the bal­lots; on­ly three were dam­aged, and his of­fice planned to con­tact those vot­ers to help them ob­tain re­place­ment bal­lots.

A few hours lat­er, across the Co­lum­bia Riv­er in Van­cou­ver, tele­vi­sion crews cap­tured footage of smoke pour­ing out of a bal­lot box at a tran­sit cen­tre. Van­cou­ver is the biggest city in Wash­ing­ton’s 3rd Con­gres­sion­al Dis­trict, the site of what is ex­pect­ed to be one of the clos­est U.S. House races in the coun­try, be­tween first-term De­mo­c­ra­t­ic Rep. Marie Glue­senkamp Perez and Re­pub­li­can chal­lenger Joe Kent.

“I hope the per­pe­tra­tor of this rep­re­hen­si­ble act is quick­ly ap­pre­hend­ed — and lo­cal and fed­er­al law en­force­ment have my full sup­port in work­ing to keep our de­mo­c­ra­t­ic process safe and se­cure,” Glue­senkamp Perez said in a state­ment.

She said she’s re­quest­ing an overnight law en­force­ment pres­ence post­ed at all bal­lot drop box­es in Clark Coun­ty through Elec­tion Day.

“South­west Wash­ing­ton can­not risk a sin­gle vote be­ing lost to ar­son and po­lit­i­cal vi­o­lence,” her state­ment said.

Rep­re­sen­ta­tives for Kent’s cam­paign didn’t im­me­di­ate­ly re­turn phone and email mes­sages seek­ing com­ment.

Clark Coun­ty Au­di­tor Greg Kim­sey in Van­cou­ver told The As­so­ci­at­ed Press that the bal­lot drop box at the Fish­er’s Land­ing Tran­sit Cen­ter al­so had a fire sup­pres­sion sys­tem in­side, but for some rea­son, it wasn’t ef­fec­tive. Re­spon­ders pulled a burn­ing pile of bal­lots from in­side the box, and Kim­sey said hun­dreds were lost.

“Heart­break­ing,” Kim­sey said. “It’s a di­rect at­tack on democ­ra­cy.”

There were sur­veil­lance cam­eras that cov­ered the drop box and sur­round­ing area, he said.

The last bal­lot pick­up at the tran­sit cen­tre drop box was at 11 a.m. Sat­ur­day, Kim­sey said. Any­one who dropped their bal­lot there­after that was urged to con­tact the au­di­tor’s of­fice to ob­tain a new one.

The of­fice will be in­creas­ing how fre­quent­ly it col­lects bal­lots, Kim­sey said, and chang­ing col­lec­tion times to the evening, to keep the bal­lot box­es from re­main­ing full of bal­lots overnight when sim­i­lar crimes are con­sid­ered more like­ly to oc­cur.

An in­cen­di­ary de­vice was al­so found on or near a bal­lot drop box in down­town Van­cou­ver ear­ly on Oct. 8. It did not dam­age the box or de­stroy any bal­lots, po­lice said.

In a state­ment, the FBI said it is co­or­di­nat­ing with fed­er­al, state and lo­cal part­ners to ac­tive­ly in­ves­ti­gate the two in­ci­dents. Any­one with in­for­ma­tion is asked to con­tact the near­est FBI of­fice, pro­vide in­for­ma­tion through tips.fbi.gov or call 1-800-CALL-FBI ( 800-225-5324 ).

Wash­ing­ton Sec­re­tary of State Steve Hobbs said the state would not tol­er­ate threats or acts of vi­o­lence meant to de­rail vot­ing.

“I strong­ly de­nounce any acts of ter­ror that aim to dis­rupt law­ful and fair elec­tions in Wash­ing­ton state,” he said.

Vot­ers were en­cour­aged to check their bal­lot sta­tus on­line at www.vote­wa.gov to track its re­turn sta­tus. If a re­turned bal­lot is not marked as “re­ceived,” vot­ers can print a re­place­ment bal­lot or vis­it their lo­cal elec­tions de­part­ment for a re­place­ment, the Sec­re­tary of State’s of­fice said.

Wash­ing­ton and Ore­gon are both vote-by-mail states. Reg­is­tered vot­ers re­ceive their bal­lots in the mail a few weeks be­fore elec­tions and then re­turn them by mail or by plac­ing them in bal­lot drop box­es.

In Phoenix last week, of­fi­cials said rough­ly five bal­lots were de­stroyed and oth­ers dam­aged when a fire was set in a drop box at a U.S. Postal Ser­vice sta­tion there.

Christi­na A. Cas­sidy in At­lanta and Jen­nifer Sin­co Kelle­her in Hon­olu­lu con­tributed. Rush con­tributed from Port­land.

SEAT­TLE (AP) —

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