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Special prosecutor appointed in 2008 presidential election fraud case


WestVirginiaRebel

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WestVirginiaRebel

?test=latestnewsFox News:

A special prosecutor will now take over the election fraud case that involves the allegedly forged petitions for President Obama and Hillary Clinton in the 2008 presidential race.

Mike Dvorak, the prosecutor for Indiana's St. Joseph County, has withdrawn, the day after he brought charges against four Democratic officials and party operatives -- accusing them of faking voters' names and signatures to put Obama and Clinton on the Indiana primary ballot four years ago.

Dvorak's name was reportedly faked on one of the petitions. A statement from his office states "he may be called as a witness." Under Indiana state law, a lawyer cannot try a case in which he or she may be called as a witness. Because of that, his office has announced that Stanley Levco, a former prosecutor from another county, will take over.

The defendants, each accused of multiple felony counts, include former longtime Democratic county chairman Butch Morgan, who is accused of being the mastermind behind the forgery scheme.

Democratic Voter Registration Board Supervisor Pam Brunette and Democratic Board worker Beverly Shelton are also charged.

Democratic volunteer and former Board worker Dustin Blythe, who is accused of forging signatures on Obama's petitions, also faces charges of forgery and falsely making a petition of nomination.

The case was blown open three years after the election, when one of the alleged participants in the scheme came forward to authorities.

26-year-old Democratic worker and Voter Registration Board employee Lucas Burkett told prosecutors that in January 2008, he was ordered to forge presidential petitions for then-Sen. Barack Obama to put his name on the primary ballot. He claims that the plot was hatched and carried out inside the St. Joseph County Democratic Party headquarters, and that he even forged some of the signatures himself.

According to court papers, Burkett told investigators he had a change of heart during the secret operation and decided to come clean.

Now his lawyer calls him "a hero."

Andrew B. Jones, Burkett's attorney, told Fox News that Burkett "is the whistleblower in this. ... He is someone who stood up for good government, and has cooperated with the state police and will continue to do so."

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Only one case of fraud being investigated?

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