Looking up past cases of fraud. Here's one from CT:
Christina Ayala
OUTCOME: CRIMINAL CONVICTION
False Registrations
Former state representative Christina Ayala pleaded guilty to
two counts of providing a false statement and was sentenced
to a suspended one-year prison term followed by two years of
conditional discharge. Ayala had voted in a series of elections,
including the 2012 presidential election, in districts in which she did
not live. When confronted about residency discrepancies by state
investigators, Ayala fabricated evidence to corroborate her false
residency claims. Before agreeing to a plea deal, she faced eight
counts of fraudulent voting, 10 counts of primary or enrollment
violations, and one count of tampering with or fabricating physical
evidence. As a condition of her plea deal, she is barred from seeking
elected office for two years.[
What gets me about this one, is she was effectively given a slap on the wrist for doing a lot more compared to people who received lifetime bans from ever holding office for a lot less.
And she's a former Representative!
Less proof of tampering in this election, and more proof of a two tiered justice system imo. You can lie, and lie to cover up your lie, and even if caught you can salvage your life if you know what you're doing, or know the right people.