Felony Charges Filed Against 7 in Michigan Double-Voting Case

Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel has announced felony charges against four St. Clair Shores residents and three assistant clerks accused of orchestrating a double-voting scheme in the 2024 primary election.
On Oct. 4, Nessel’s office announced that it had formally charged the four residents of voting twice in the August primary election, while accusing the three assistant clerks of falsifying voter records to cover up the double voting by marking absentee ballots as rejected instead of received.
The four residents—Frank Prezzato, Stacy Kramer, Douglas Kempkins Jr., and Geneva O’Day—allegedly cast both absentee and in-person votes. Each faces one count of voting as an absentee and in person, a felony punishable by up to five years in prison, along with one count of offering to vote more than once, which carries a four-year penalty….