Current:Home > InvestProsecutor tells jury former Milwaukee official who requested fake ballots was no whistleblower -CapitalWay
Prosecutor tells jury former Milwaukee official who requested fake ballots was no whistleblower
View
Date:2025-04-25 00:32:45
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — A prosecutor urged jurors Wednesday to find a former Milwaukee elections official who requested fake absentee ballots guilty of misconduct and fraud, rejecting her argument that she was only trying to expose flaws in Wisconsin’s election system.
Assistant District Attorney Matthew Westphal said during his closing arguments in Kimberley Zapata’s trial in Milwaukee that if Zapata felt the system was vulnerable she could have told state elections officials, reporters or legislators but instead chose to go rogue and break the law.
“She is not a whistleblower. She’s not exposing information. She’s committing election fraud,” Westphal said. “As a society we cannot tolerate people who break the law when there are multiple legitimate means to raise those same concerns.”
Zapata’s attorney, Daniel Adams, said in his closing arguments that Zapata was stressed over death threats and wanted to divert election conspiracy theorists’ attention to real loopholes in hopes the harassment would stop. Her actions were “not perfect in any way,” Adams told the jury, “but the truth of what she was pointing out is there. And it remains.”
Zapata was serving as deputy director of the Milwaukee Election Commission in October 2022 when she accessed the state’s voter database from her work laptop and fabricated three names with fake Social Security numbers and requested military absentee ballots in those names, according to a criminal complaint.
She then accessed voter registration records to find state Republican Rep. Janel Brandtjen’s address and had the ballots sent to Brandtjen’s home in Menomonee Falls, according to the complaint. Zapata later told investigators she sent them to Brandtjen because she was a vocal proponent of election conspiracy theories.
Brandtjen has advocated for decertifying President Joe Biden’s 2020 win in Wisconsin and has espoused conspiracy theories supporting her position.
Zapata said in the interview she wanted to show how easily anyone can obtain a military absentee ballot.
Prosecutors charged her in November 2022 with one felony count of misconduct in public office and three misdemeanor counts of making a false statement to obtain an absentee ballot. She was fired from the election commission after her activities came to light and could face up to five years behind bars.
Adams spent the two-day trial arguing Zapata knew Brandtjen would never cast the ballots and didn’t think her actions would hurt anyone. He said Wednesday that she could have alerted the media to the military loopholes but no whistleblower is perfect.
Westphal said during his rebuttal that vulnerabilities in the election system aren’t on trial.
“The truth is Ms. Zapata lied,” he said. “People can have good motives to commit crimes. They’re still crimes.”
The case against Zapata mirrors one against Harry Wait, a Racine man who requested and received absentee ballots in the names of legislators and local officials in July. Wait also said he wanted to expose vulnerabilities in the state’s elections system. He faces up to 13 years in prison if convicted on two misdemeanor counts of election fraud and two felony counts of identity theft.
Milwaukee, home to the largest number of Democrats in Wisconsin, has been a target for complaints from former President Donald Trump and his supporters, who made unsubstantiated claims of widespread voter fraud to attack Biden’s 2020 victory.
Heading into the state’s April 2 presidential primary, Wisconsin is once again one of a few battleground states crucial for both sides in the November presidential election.
Brandtjen faces her own legal troubles. The Wisconsin Ethics Commission last month recommended felony charges against Brandtjen and a fundraising committee for Trump, accusing them of efforts to evade campaign finance laws during an attempt to unseat GOP Assembly Speaker Robin Vos.
veryGood! (4182)
Related
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- Bass Reeves deserves better – 'Lawmen' doesn't do justice to the Black U.S. marshal
- South Carolina city pays $500,000 to man whose false arrest sparked 2021 protests
- Matthew Perry Laid to Rest at Private Funeral Attended by Friends Cast
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Emotional outburst on live TV from Gaza over death of reporter encapsulates collective grief
- Meloni pushes change to let voters directly elect Italy’s premier in bid to make governments last
- 'Golden Bachelor' Episode 6 recap: Gerry Turner finds love, more pain from three hometowns
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- A small plane headed from Croatia to Salzburg crashes in Austria, killing 4 people
Ranking
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Earthquake rocks northwest Nepal, felt as far as India’s capital
- From soccer pitch to gridiron, Cowboys kicker Brandon Aubrey off to historic NFL start
- Joro spiders, huge and invasive, spreading around eastern US, study finds
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Biden is bound for Maine to mourn with a community reeling from a shooting that left 18 people dead
- Survey finds PFAS in 71% of shallow private wells across Wisconsin
- Two more former Northwestern football players say they experienced racist treatment in early 2000s
Recommendation
NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
Cedar Fair and Six Flags will merge to create a playtime powerhouse in North America
Elwood Jones closer to freedom as Ohio makes last-ditch effort to revive murder case
Pelosi bashes No Labels as perilous to our democracy and threat to Biden
The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
The FDA proposes banning a food additive that's been used for a century
E-cigarette and tobacco use among high school students declines, CDC study finds
Packers fans tell Simone Biles how to survive Green Bay's cold weather