17
Oct
FLORIDA ACTIVIST, CANDIDATE CHARGED WITH FELONY WIRETAPPING
by Mirth

Miriam Raftery
Tuesday October 17, 2006

The State of Florida has filed felony wiretapping charges against election reform activist Charles Grapski for audiotaping his efforts to obtain public records related to his investigation of alleged election fraud, RAW STORY has learned. He faces arraignment Tuesday, October 17th…

…Grapski is charged with felony wiretapping for making an audiotape of his efforts to obtain documents at City Hall. Those documents related to a lawsuit alleging fraud in the canvassing of absentee ballots in the election of Commissioner James A. Lewis, who won by 18 absentee votes.

“This is not the first time that sitting Commissioners who are candidates for an election have won by absentee votes. This seems to be a chronic problem here and nobody takes it seriously,” Thomas [Carol Thomas, co-coordinator of Grapski’s defense committee] said. “Suddenly absentee ballots disappear. It’s outrageous.”

Grapski audiotaped City Manager Clovis Watson, who commented on the fact that he was being taped, consented, and kept talking, Thomas noted. Subsequently Watson, who also serves as Police Commissioner (an apparent violation of Florida law that prohibits officials from holding more than one public office at a time), ordered Grapski arrested.

“He didn’t do anything a newspaper reporter doesn’t do every day. It’s absurd,” Thomas said. “While he was being arrested, the editor of a newspaper was in there audiotaping this.” A third person, Green Party representative Michael Canney, was also present making audiotapes. Canney and Grapski have been threatened with additional charges, but the newspaper editor has not, Thomas said.

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