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Police are searching for the person who set ballot boxes on fire in Washington and Oregon. Here’s what we know

Burned ballots were removed from Vancouver, Wash., ballot box targeted by arsonist.
KGW
Burned ballots were removed from Vancouver, Wash., ballot box targeted by arsonist.

By Chris Boyette, CNN

(CNN) — Hundreds of ballots were destroyed or damaged in fires set Monday at two ballot drop boxes in the Pacific Northwest – and investigators are searching for a person they believe is responsible for both incidents.

Almost all the ballots that were damaged or destroyed were in a drop box in Vancouver, Washington, while most ballots in a drop box in Portland, Oregon, survived a fire set the same day, election officials said. The incidents are believed to be connected to a third fire on October 8, also in Vancouver.

The fires came after a US Department of Homeland Security bulletin from September obtained by the watchdog group Property of the People warned: “Some social media users are discussing and encouraging various methods of sabotaging ballot drop boxes and avoiding detection, likely heightening the potential for targeting of this election infrastructure through the 2024 election cycle.”

The fires were started by devices placed outside the drop boxes, authorities said.

Voting in Oregon and Washington is done almost entirely by mail or ballot drop off. Less than 1% of people in Oregon’s Multnomah County vote in person, county Elections Director Tim Scott said. In Clark County, Washington, 60% of the ballots received are from ballot drop boxes and 40% are received by mail, according to Clark County Auditor Greg Kimsey.

Here are the latest developments:

  • About 475 damaged ballots were retrieved from the burned ballot box in Vancouver, Kimsey told CNN.
  • On Wednesday, workers will search through the damaged ballots for information in order to contact voters about getting a new one, according to Kimsey. The workers will be able to pull voter information from the ballots despite the damage to them.
  • Devices found at both scenes Monday and at the ballot box targeted earlier in the month were marked with the words “Free Gaza,” The New York Times reported, citing two law enforcement officials. Investigators are trying to determine if the suspect is a pro-Palestinian activist or someone trying to sow discord, according to the newspaper.

How the ballot boxes went up in flames

An “incendiary device” was found attached to the side of a ballot drop box when Portland Police responded about 3:30 a.m. Monday, and security personnel extinguished the fire, the Portland Police Bureau said in a statement.

CNN has reached out to the bureau, which declined to comment on the reported writing on the devices, but said they were sent for forensic analysis and will be examined for “unique writings and markings.”

At a bus station in Vancouver, just 15 miles from Portland, another ballot box was set on fire early Monday, according to the Vancouver Police Department. Responding officers discovered a “suspicious device” on fire next to the box, police said.

CNN also reached out to the Vancouver Police, who referred questions about the case to the FBI.

“The US Attorney’s Office and the FBI want to assure our communities that we are working closely and expeditiously together to investigate the two incendiary fires at the ballot boxes in Vancouver, Washington, and the one in Portland, Oregon, and will work to hold whoever is responsible fully accountable,” US Attorney Tessa M. Gorman and Greg Austin, acting special agent in charge of the FBI’s Seattle office said in a statement Tuesday.

All ballot boxes in Multnomah and Clark counties have fire suppressant installed, election officials said during a news conference Monday. Scott said fire suppressant inside the Portland box protected more than 400 ballots inside, and only three ballots were damaged. Election officials said they plan to contact the three voters affected using “unique identifiers on their ballot envelopes, so they can receive replacement ballots.”

Election officials were still trying to count all the ballots destroyed in the Vancouver fire, according to Clark County’s Kimsey.

“Our best guess is closer to dozens than hundreds but there is no way to know,” he said Wednesday.

Roughly 500 Clark County voters have requested replacement ballots, The Oregonian said, citing the auditor’s office.

“Drop boxes are useful and secure ways voters can return their mail ballot without using the US Postal Service,” Jay Riestenberg, director of communications for Voting Rights Lab said. “They help cut down on ballots returned by mail, which can alleviate the stress put on the US Postal Service and local election officials during busy election seasons.”

What should I do if my ballot was impacted?

John Burnside and his wife voted Sunday afternoon by depositing their ballots in a drop box near their Vancouver, Washington, home.

The next day, he saw reports that someone set fire to the box, destroying hundreds of votes.

“When I saw the video of them scraping the ballots out of there. I knew there was little chance that mine would have been working,” Burnside told CNN. “I don’t know that they were able to salvage any of the ballots out of that box.”

They’ve used that drop box in past elections, Burnside said, and it was disturbing that someone would destroy it.

Burnside said he looked online and saw their ballots had not been received, so they immediately ordered replacement ballots. This time, he said, they’ll drive across town to the election office so they can deliver their votes in person.

“It’s probably a 20-minute drive, but it’s well worth it at this point,” Burnside said.

Kimsey, the Clark County auditor, said anyone who dropped off a ballot at the damaged Fisher’s Landing Transit Center box in Vancouver between 11 a.m. on Saturday and 4 a.m. on Monday should request a replacement ballot online at VoteWA.gov.

Authorities looking for ‘suspect vehicle’

Evidence from the incendiary devices found at the ballot boxes Monday shows the fires are connected to each other, as well as the October 8 incident in Vancouver, said Portland Police Bureau spokesperson Mike Benner.

Police identified a “suspect vehicle” seen leaving the scene of the fire in Portland, they said in a news release Monday – a black or dark-colored 2001-2004 Volvo S-60.
According to the Oregon Department of Driver and Motor Vehicle Services, 3,828 of those vehicles were registered in the state – 558 of which have a valid registration status.

The FBI and the US Attorney for the Western District of Washington put out a joint statement Tuesday, saying they “are working closely and expeditiously together to investigate the two incendiary fires at the ballot boxes” and “will work to hold whoever is responsible fully accountable.”

Enhanced ballot box security

As Election Day nears, state leaders are encouraging citizens to vote despite the incidents, pledging increased security around the drop boxes.

“There are multiple ways for voters to cast their ballot and make sure their voice is heard,” Washington Gov. Jay Inslee said.

The ballot box in Portland has already been replaced, according to Multnomah County Chair Jessica Vega Pederson, and law enforcement in Multnomah County and Vancouver, Washington, plan to increase patrols of ballot boxes in the area.

“Voter intimidation or any criminal act to undermine the upcoming election is un-American & will not be tolerated,” Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek said on X.

Inslee said in a statement Monday evening “there will be 24-hour enhanced security around ballot drop-off locations.

”While law enforcement is increasing drive-by patrols, Kimsey said elections staff are acting as observers at all 22 drop box locations to report suspicious activity to 911.

“Make no mistake, an attack on a ballot box is an attack on our democracy and completely unacceptable,” Oregon Secretary of State LaVonne Griffin-Valade said Monday.

“Whatever the motivation behind this incident, there is no justification for any attempt to disenfranchise voters.”

CNN’s Nicole Chavez, Taylor Romine, David Williams and Natasha Chen contributed to this report.

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