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119.195 Removing or tampering with ballots.
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Any person who, during an election, knowingly and willfully removes or attempts
to remove an official ballot from the election room, or has in his possession outside
the election room any official ballot, either genuine or counterfeit, shall be guilty of
a Class D felony.
Any voter who attempts to leave the election room with an official ballot in his
possession shall at once be arrested on demand of either of the judges of election
and shall be guilty of a violation, unless the act was done knowingly in which event
he shall be guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
Any person who takes or removes in any manner, feloniously or with the consent or
permission of the custodian, any official ballot from any place where it may
lawfully be, or knowingly and willfully has in his possession or custody any such
official ballot, except as an officer or custodian under the law or while within the
polling place for the purpose of voting, and any custodian or officer who permits
any official ballot to be removed or carried away from the place where it may
lawfully be by any person other than the officer or custodian whose duty it is to
receive it, shall be guilty of a Class C felony.
Any election officer, or other person entrusted with the custody or control of any
official ballot, either before or after it has been voted, who in any way marks,
mutilates, or defaces any official ballot or places any distinguishing mark thereon,
for the purpose of vitiating the official ballot, shall be guilty of a Class C felony.
Any person who unlawfully destroys or attempts to destroy any official ballot box
used, or any official ballot deposited, at any election, or who unlawfully, by force,
fraud, or other improper means, obtains or attempts to obtain possession of any
ballot box or any official ballot therein deposited, while the voting at any election is
going on or before the official ballots are duly taken out and counted according to
law, shall be guilty of a Class D felony.
Any election officer who mutilates or tampers with any of the seals, or destroys or
removes any official ballots required to be preserved, shall be guilty of a Class D
felony.
Any county clerk who knowingly and willfully opens any ballot box and removes
any official ballot therefrom, or removes, destroys, or tampers with a ballot box and
official ballots left in his care and custody, or permits any other person to do so,
during the period the boxes are required to remain locked in his office, shall be
guilty of a Class D felony.
Any person who removes, mutilates, or destroys, or adds any new official ballots to,
the regular official ballots that have been counted and prepared for preservation, or
that have already been preserved, so that the result of the election in the precinct or
county is changed, shall be guilty of a Class D felony.
Any person who tampers with or changes the official ballots, or opens the
receptacles in which the official ballots are contained without the order of the court,
after the ballots have been sent to the Franklin County courthouse in connection
with the contest of a constitutional amendment, shall be guilty of a Class D felony.
Effective: July 14, 1992
History: Amended 1992 Ky. Acts ch. 463, sec. 13, effective July 14, 1992. --Amended
1990 Ky. Acts ch. 48, sec. 75, effective July 13, 1990. -- Amended 1976 (1st Extra.
Sess.) Ky. Acts ch. 1, sec. 14. -- Created 1974 Ky. Acts ch. 130, sec. 80.
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