altered "official election documents" illegally. Apparently the Democrat Party of Florida was involved in changing the due-date on documents intended to remedy errors on mail-in ballots from 5 November [BEFORE the election] to 8 November [AFTER the election]. Altering these official documents is against the law.
Additionally after receiving the "[illegally] altered forms" some of these voters received followup telephone calls from the Denmocrat Party of Florida.
Curious Questioins:
i. Who altered the forms ?
ii. Why would whoever altered the forms change the due-date to after the election ?
iii. How did the Democrat Party of Florida become aware of the [illegally] altered forms beimng mailed and the contact information of the recipients of the [illegally] altered forms before the election ?
Maybe the answers will be forthcoming:
"The Florida Department of State quietly referred altered state election documents to federal prosecutors last week [election week], marking the first known instance of state officials flagging irregularities to law enforcement this year.
In a letter sent on Friday, Bradley McVay, the Department of State's interim general counsel, asked the state's three U.S. attorneys' offices to investigate "certain irregularities" related to the vote-by-mail process in at least four counties.
The referral centers on altered dates on forms sent to voters to remedy errors on mail-in ballots, known as 'cure affidavits.'
Email exchanges released publicly on Wednesday by the Department of State suggest that the altered affidavits may be tied to the Florida Democratic Party.
Under Florida law, making or using an altered form is a criminal offense. In his letter to prosecutors, McVay argued that the incorrect information on the affidavits amounted to an unlawful obstacle to voting.
"Altering a form in a manner that provides the incorrect date for a voter to cure a defect (or an incorrect method as it relates to provisional ballots) imposes a burden on the voter significant enough to frustrate the voter’s ability to vote," he wrote."
Ref: The Hill