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York County calls police over ‘election integrity’ home visitors

  • The Associated Press
FILE PHOTO: Voters walk along the steps of the York County Courthouse on June 1, 2020, to deposit their ballots in a drop box ahead of the Pennsylvania primary.

 Kate Landis / PA Post

FILE PHOTO: Voters walk along the steps of the York County Courthouse on June 1, 2020, to deposit their ballots in a drop box ahead of the Pennsylvania primary.

(Harrisburg) — York County officials have received reports about people purporting to be from an “election integrity committee” going to homes and questioning the residents about their vote in the 2020 presidential election, the York Dispatch reported Thursday.

The reports come as county officials are under pressure from supporters of former President Donald Trump to submit to an Arizona-style “forensic investigation” of the 2020 presidential election being pursued by a state senator who has helped spread Trump’s baseless falsehoods that the election was rigged against him.

York County’s president commissioner, Julie Wheeler, told the Dispatch that she received numerous calls and emails about the activity and referred the matter to the Southern York Regional Police Department.

Chad Baker, the county’s Democratic Party chair, said the group appears to be targeting registered Democrats in an attempt to seek out voter fraud.

“There is an intimidation factor, and that’s what their intent is,” Baker said.

Steve Snell, a registered Democrat, said two women claiming to be members of the committee knocked on his door Saturday and asked to speak with his 89-year-old mother-in-law.

They did not ask who she voted for, Snell said.

In May, the U.S. Department of Justice told Republican lawmakers in Arizona that a plan to question voters could violate laws against voter intimidation.

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