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TAMPERING WITH THE ROLLS.

The New Zealand Herald says:—-In a recent issue we drew the attention of bur readers to the necessity of thoroughly in-, epecting the electoral rolls, for the purpose of seeing that their names were inserted thereon, and intimating that there was reason to believe that a careful scrutiny was desirable. Our warning has not been long in bearing fruit, for we believe Mr Cotter, or some of his assistants, discovered sufficient to justify him in taking steps to set the machinery of the Corrupt Prevention Act into operation. The person against whom proceedings are to be taken is one who himself aspires to legislative honors and who has recently been making himself very active in respect to matters connected with the electoral rolls, namely, Mr Garrard. There are other cases, we believe, about which proceedings may be instituted shortly, so that those who have been ia

the habit in times past of putting bogus names on the roll, for tho purpose of personating when an election came round, will find that they have a more thorny path to tread now than they had formerly. We quote a Bmall portion of the Act, to show that bringing men from the grave, or creating fictitious men for the purpose of an election is to be dealt with differently than formerly. Under the heading of " Personation " we find the following :—" Clause 27: A person shall, for all the purposes of the _ laws relating to elections, be deemed guilty of the offence of personation who at any such election applies for a voting paper in the name of some Other person living or dead, or of a fictitious person, or who, having voted once at any such election, applies at the same election for a voting paper in his own name. 28 : A person shall also, for all the purposes of the laws relating to elections, be deemed guilty of the offence of personation who at any time, without a written authority to do so: —(1) Sends in any claim to have the name of any other person inserted on any list of voters, or on any electoral list or roll; (2) attaches or writes the name of any other person or any such claim, in order to make it appear as the claim of such person ; (3) procures the name of any such person to be inserted in any such list of voters or electoral list or roll, 29. The offence of personation, or of aiding, abetting' counselling, or procuring the commission of the offence of personation by any person, shall be misdemeanour, and any person convicted thereof shall be punished by imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years, with or without hard labor, at the discretion of the judge."

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DTN18811022.2.9

Bibliographic details

Daily Telegraph (Napier), Issue 3218, 22 October 1881, Page 2

Word Count
462

TAMPERING WITH THE ROLLS. Daily Telegraph (Napier), Issue 3218, 22 October 1881, Page 2

TAMPERING WITH THE ROLLS. Daily Telegraph (Napier), Issue 3218, 22 October 1881, Page 2

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