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Kroll writes: "Last week, O'Keefe and two of his collaborators tried to bait Democratic field staffers into approving voter fraud involving Colorado's universal vote-by-mail program, according to three Democratic staffers who interacted with O'Keefe or his colleagues."

James O'Keefe. (photo: Bill Haber/AP)
James O'Keefe. (photo: Bill Haber/AP)


James O'Keefe Busted in Colorado

By Andy Kroll, Mother Jones

21 October 14

ames O'Keefe, the conservative provocateur, has been on the prowl in Colorado, the setting of a close Senate race between Democratic incumbent Mark Udall and GOP Rep. Cory Gardner, as well as a nip-and-tuck governor's contest. Last week, O'Keefe and two of his collaborators tried to bait Democratic field staffers into approving voter fraud involving Colorado's universal vote-by-mail program, according to three Democratic staffers who interacted with O'Keefe or his colleagues.

Democratic staffers in Colorado recently came to believe they were the subject of an O'Keefe operation after campaign workers became suspicious about would-be volunteers who had asked about filling out and submitting mail-in ballots for others. Recently, the 30-year-old O'Keefe has targeted the Senate campaigns of Arkansas Democrat Mark Pryor and Kentucky Democrat Alison Lundergan Grimes by filming undercover videos of staffers or the candidate.

Last Tuesday, a man who appeared to be in his 20s showed up at a Democratic field office in Boulder wanting to volunteer to help elect Udall and Rep. Jared Polis (D-Colo.), according to a Democratic staffer who met with him and asked not to be identified. The man introduced himself as "Nick Davis," and he said he was a University of Colorado-Boulder student and LGBT activist involved with a student group called Rocky Mountain Vote Pride. Davis mentioned polls showing the race between Udall and Gardner was tight, and he asked the staffer if he should fill out and mail in ballots for other college students who had moved away but still received mail on campus. The Democratic staffer says he told Davis that doing this would be voter fraud and that he should not do it.

On Friday, Udall campaigned with Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) on the University of Colorado-Boulder campus. After the event, a woman calling herself "Bonnie" approached a different staffer and, according to this staffer's boss, asked whether she could fill out and submit blank ballots found in a garbage can. The staffer, according to her boss, said that she told her no.

That same day, the guy identifying himself as "Nick Davis" returned to the Democratic office in Boulder. He was accompanied by a man wearing heavy makeup and a mustache, according to the Democratic staffer who had met Davis three days earlier. Davis introduced his friend as a "civics professor" at the University of Colorado-Boulder and the faculty adviser to Rocky Mountain Vote Pride. Davis and the professor, who said his name was "John Miller," picked up Udall campaign literature and canvassing information.

On Monday, O'Keefe tweeted a photo of himself with a mustache and said he'd recently posed as a "45yo" for one of his "election investigations."

The repeated questions about submitting other people's ballots led Democratic staffers to suspect they were being targeted. Later, the staffers viewed photos of O'Keefe�including one taken in Colorado showing O'Keefe sans mustache and sporting a Udall campaign sticker and a Women for Udall button�and they concluded that O'Keefe and the college professor were the same person. They also said the image O'Keefe tweeted of himself with a mustache matched the man who visited the Boulder office on Friday.

O'Keefe and two male colleagues also targeted a progressive nonprofit named New Era Colorado, according to New Era executive director Steve Fenberg. On Saturday, Fenberg says, O'Keefe and his friends contacted New Era's Fort Collins office to set up an in-person meeting and identified themselves as activists affiliated with Rocky Mountain Vote Pride. The three men arrived carrying Udall campaign literature, Fenberg notes, but a New Era organizer met them outside the office's front door and refused to let them enter with the Udall materials. Outside groups such as New Era cannot coordinate with political campaigns, and Fenberg says he believes O'Keefe and his collaborators "were trying to establish evidence we were working together."

When New Era's staffers began taking pictures of O'Keefe (including the photo embedded at left), Fenberg says, O'Keefe and a colleague went to their car and returned with a large video camera and a microphone. "If you want to take photos of us, we'll take photos of you," O'Keefe said, according to Fenberg, and the New Era staffers closed the door while O'Keefe and his friend tried to push it open and stick their microphone inside. Fenberg says New Era filed a police report about the incident.

Rocky Mountain Vote Pride doesn't seem to have much of a footprint. There is a website and Facebook page for the organization, both created in July, but they provide no information about who's behind the group. Searches for Rocky Mountain Vote Pride in the University of Colorado-Boulder student newspaper, the Denver Post, and the Boulder Daily Camera turned up no results. A search of Nexis archives for the past two years yielded zero mentions.

Chris Harris, the communications director for the Udall campaign, accused O'Keefe of "using sleazy, deceptive tactics to undermine the public's trust in democracy."

O'Keefe is best known for his undercover videos attacking the community organizing group ACORN. Those videos, hyped by Fox News and the conservative blogosphere, led the GOP-led House of Representatives to hold more than a dozen votes to defund ACORN, and the group disbanded soon after. In 2010, the FBI arrested O'Keefe and three others for phone tampering at a New Orleans office of Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.). He was sentenced to 100 hours of community service and three years of probation and fined $1,500.

This fall, O'Keefe's group, Project Veritas, launched a political offshoot with its sights set on high-profile campaigns and organizations. Project Veritas went undercover to try to get campaign staffers for Kentucky's Alison Lundergan Grimes to contradict the candidate's pro-coal message. In Arkansas, O'Keefe's group secretly filmed Sen. Mark Pryor speaking to a local LGBT group in an attempt to expose him as privately supporting marriage equality, which he has publicly opposed. Project Veritas also sought to bait workers for Battleground Texas, the group formed by Obama campaign alums to register and organize Democratic voters, into taking improper actions, but a Texas special prosecutor dismissed the group's video as "little more than a canard and political disinformation."

Neither New Era nor the Udall campaign was aware of any other contacts by staff with O'Keefe or his colleagues, and it was not clear whether other organizations in Colorado might have been contacted. Stephen Gordon, a spokesman for Project Veritas, declined to comment. "We're not making any comment on potential operations in Colorado at this moment," he said. "But watch for our upcoming videos."

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+51 # tswhiskers 2016-02-29 15:16
Your actions are all too understandable; living in the Bible Belt can be difficult for many reasons. I only hope that you will not leave the U.S. We need the jobs and services that you and your company provide. Surely up North or out West, say Oregon or Colorado, you will find more open-minded people with whom to start a business. Thank you for speaking up honestly about leaving GA and maybe the South entirely.
 
 
+5 # NAVYVET 2016-03-01 04:37
Philadelphia, PA welcomes you! Where universities provide ideas & employees, the cost of living, though risen, is still lower than in other big cities. Most of all, it's a city to respect for its visionary history, open-minded activism, and honest, loving ecumenical teamwork that includes all religions--or, if you prefer, none. Of course there are differences of opinion and a hostile state legislature. Much is needed to clean up our rusted infrastructure, an old Pay-to-Play political machine, the city police with their own white supremacist hate crimes and public schools which are a shambles of neglect & abandonment. But dozens of community groups recognize these problems and work for improvement! It's a city where every neighborhood has a lively Bernie grassroots group, plus political coordinating groups. We have a new liberal mayor. Social justice Quakerism makes its home here in the Friends Center, and Reconstructioni st Judaism, now a strong voice, was born in Philadelphia, befriending open-minded Islamic masjids. My own Unitarian Universalist parish is at the heart of justice activism, but voices for equity & tolerance now can be found in many theologically conservative churches & colleges. I've lived in 15 states, about 1/3rd in the Bible Belt, but also Hawaii (a terrific state but too expensive for me). Even with faults and problems, Phila PA is the best home for energetic activists! I've been here 20 years, 3 times longer than anywhere else, & don't want to leave.
 
 
+4 # economagic 2016-03-01 07:10
"Oregon or Colorado" -- choose the locale in either state only after careful research. Both have significant pockets of deep anti-everything -ism, especially around the Air Force Academy in Fort Collins!
 
 
0 # Nominae 2016-03-01 20:02
Quoting economagic:
"Oregon or Colorado" -- choose the locale in either state only after careful research. Both have significant pockets of deep anti-everything-ism, especially around the Air Force Academy in Fort Collins!


You advice is germane, even as your geography, (and that of your 5 "fans" on the green thumb bar), absolutely sucks.

Fort Collins is a highly progressive town, and the home of Colorado State University. Ft. Collins is 60 miles *NORTH* of Denver.

As one who claims to be a former teacher, it is hard to believe that this fact just plumb evaded you. After all, anyone can make a mistake, but isn't that what the internet is *for*? Aren't teachers fond of attention to actual facts ?

The freakin' *ACTUAL* Air Force Academy is located 71 miles SOUTH of Denver in the city of Colorado Springs. It is not only heavily populated by military, but it is an absolute MECCA for Evangelical Christians, who hold INCREDIBLE power in the community, and who have QUITE successfully invaded the USAF Academy, even when doing so is supposed to be against military regs.

So, yeah .... you can comfortably recommend Fort Collins, so that your correspondent DOESN'T end up in Colorado Spring !!

Talk about "out of the frying pan, into the fire" ! ;-D

Close, tho - the two cities ARE in the same State, but they are roughly *130* miles apart.
 
 
+39 # Ken Halt 2016-02-29 22:10
The Bill of Rights was created to protect minorities from the tyranny of the majority. Unfortunately the balance rests with the SCOTUS, and because of the quality of jurists appointed by the ascendance of conservatives since RR, civil rights have been eroded and corporate rights substituted in their stead. I am delighted to find the current demographic in the US much more tolerant and rainbow colored than the old white guys that have called the shots for way too long. Never thought that in my lifetime (I'm an old white guy) there would be such a strong and successful movement for feminist and LGBT rights. We are all brothers and sisters under the skin, there is room for all of us here, all preferences should be respected.
 
 
+24 # Farafalla 2016-02-29 23:49
OMG, Georgia. Dixie is Dixie. We should have finished the Civil War long ago and we wouldn't be coddling these "state's rights" racists and their pals, the religious fanatics. Deeply held? The only thing they hold deep is an abiding animus toward most of their countrymen.

I'm for a Supreme Court that defines citizenship as related to the whole country and not every little fuctup red state that wants to secede. Either our constitutional rights are protected or not. Hiding behind a misconstruction of the First Amendment does little to hide their hatred toward equality and justice.
 
 
-8 # ThorunnPS 2016-03-01 01:27
But of course, as a result of the company relocating, any number of presumably good workers will lose their jobs unless they are willing to relocate as well. Considering that this bill is unconstitutiona l and may well be reversed fairly quickly, I believe that this decision is precipitous and that the head of the company should sit on it for a while and see how the situation develops.
 
 
+8 # Scott Griffith 2016-03-01 02:46
My guess is that your correspondent ThorunnPS wants his comment to exemplify moderation and gentlemanliness , or something along those Southern lines. Allow me to indicate that there are times when such counsel is laughably inappropriate and this is one such.
 
 
+18 # NAVYVET 2016-03-01 04:06
Everyone who lives in the South and values personal integrity needs to read this article! And please read my comment, too: In 1957, the year I graduated after I was -- oh-so-politely and Southernly -- kicked out of the U of Florida for civil rights activities, I graduated with Cum Laude honors from Miami. It was a private school & cost money, and I had to go deeper into debt to pay off a scholarship that obligated me to teach in that disgusting state, where I'd be fired about 10 minutes after I opened my big mouth. To get away, I signed up for Navy OCS in March, as soon as I turned 21. (I'll be 80 in a few days!) Having been impressed with two women activists who'd been officers in WWII, I figured the military HAD to be better than living in the #$%^*& South! And it was more liberal, or I was too young and naive to see otherwise -- until the Vietnam war forced me to make another choice and resign in 1968.

PS: My parents had moved South only because Dad's company was sending its elder engineers to Sunbelt (Southern) states, thinking they'd prefer to retire there. But they detested Florida, too, never went to church -- dismally Fundamentalist! -- and as soon as Dad retired in 1965 they put their house up for sale. Florida is always in a dreary depression so it took 4 years, but finally they were able to move back North. Best move they ever made. They enlivened their rural Iowa town with liberal ideas & actions! GET UP AND GO.
 
 
+5 # Bruce Gruber 2016-03-01 05:40
Perhaps that "god" will slowly drown or storm the many for their self-righteous judgement, presumptuous misinterpretati on of the prophetic messengers enabled to think with their own minds, and inability to grasp the simplicity of the concept of being one WITH nature.
 
 
+9 # jcdav 2016-03-01 07:02
I'm rather suprized. in the 1980's I lived in Decatur. I had really great gay neighbors & Atlanta was about as gay as SF & NY....on the flip side prejudice was an undercurrent..w e moved back North when a neighbor child called another child (who was white) "nigger"...and I can recall a volunteer a Decatur Hospital trying to deny me access to my wife @ the birth of our son because our last names were not the same...I agree with your thoughts and decision. Navy Vet has a good suggestion, look @ PA if not Phl then the main line or Chester Co...we have it all.
 
 
+3 # Krackonis 2016-03-01 11:33
Come to Canada.... It's where the free people live.
 
 
+2 # Krackonis 2016-03-01 11:36
"It is my deeply held religious belief that Anikin Skywalker was the coming messiah.

We don't serve Christians and other non force users..."

"The Police of the Romans killed Jesus, we don't serve Police here"

"The Romans killed Jesus, we don't serve Italians here."
 
 
0 # Blackjack 2016-03-01 16:34
Let me assure you, SC is just as bad. If companies aren't leaving yet, they should. Unbelievably, though our Grand Dame Haley chose NOT to take federal money for Medicaid or for education, she had no problem holding both hands out for FEMA money after the October flood. . .which Obama graciously granted. And now our legislative hypocrites and the guv are gushing about all that "extra money."
 

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