Posted on 11/14/2014 3:04:51 PM PST by afraidfortherepublic
MADISON, Wis. The postal carrier who investigators say dumped hundreds of GOP political mailers in a Neenah apartment complex recycling bin days before the general election could face criminal charges, a federal agent tells Wisconsin Reporter.
What we have found is that the carriers actions, in our opinion at least, has merited some sort of (charging) decision on the part of prosecutors, said Scott Pierce, spokesman for the Great Lakes Field Office of the Office of Inspector General for the U.S. Postal Service. We feel like there is enough information here at least to present the case for prosecution.
As first reported by Wisconsin Reporter on Nov. 3, an OIG investigation confirmed the mail carrier dumped 879 pieces of political mail Oct. 30. An official with the inspector generals office told Wisconsin Reporter it appeared the postal worker wasnt politically motivated, the employee just didnt feel like delivering the mailers.
Based upon our investigation, this was nothing done toward a specific candidate or party. It looks like it was a decision made by the carrier, and it was not a good decision, to not deliver the campaign advertisements, Robert Rukes, special agent with the inspector generals office in Chicago, said at the time.
A lot of times, what happened in this situation, you have a carrier who felt overwhelmed with the volume of mail so they decided to discard some of the mail without delivering, Rukes added.
U.S. Postal Service officials have yet to disclose the name of the mail carrier, or the employment status of the individual.
I have no comment. This is still an ongoing investigation, said Neenah Postmaster Brian Smoot.
An official with the U.S. Postal Service did not return requests for comment Friday.
Administratively, discipline could include removal from the Postal Service, Rukes told Wisconsin Reporter last week.
Sometimes people just make decisions that are out of character, Rukes said. One thing we want to stress is that the vast majority of postal workers are honest, hard-working employees.
Pierce referred administrative questions such as whether the postal worker is on paid or unpaid leave, or whether the employee continues to deliver the mail to USPS administrative offices.
Pierce did say the OIG agent on the case has issued his administrative report of investigation, and that postal management will make the final determination on whether to issue administrative disciplinary action.
We are currently putting the finishing touches on our criminal report of investigation, Pierce said. As soon as that is finished, we will forward that report to either the U.S. Attorneys office or the local district attorneys office.
He said, as of Friday, investigators had not determined whether to send their report to federal or local prosecutors.
An official with the Winnebago County District Attorneys office Friday said the office had not processed any reports concerning the matter.
The political mailers were from the campaigns of Mike Rohrkaste, Republican candidate for Wisconsins 55th Assembly District, and Glenn Grothman, a Republican state senator running for the open 6th Congressional District seat, as well as political messages from a special interest group in support of former state Rep. Roger Roth, a Republican who was running for Wisconsin 19th Senate District seat.
All three Republicans won their respective races.
Rukes last week confirmed Neenah postal officials responded to the apartment complex and verified the mailers had been unloaded in the Dumpster. A resident saw the mail carrier dump the campaign literature, according to Rukes.
There were no reports that campaign mailers from Democratic Party candidates have been similarly mishandled.
Most of the mailers came from Rohrkastes campaign.
Rohrkaste, a retired human resources executive, ran against Democrat Mark Westphal, an industrial electrician and president of the Fox Valley Area Labor Council AFL-CIO, in the race to replace outgoing state Rep. Dean Kaufert, R-Neenah, who left the Legislature to become mayor of Neenah.
Rohrkaste told Wisconsin Reporter on Nov. 3 he found it striking the mishandled mailers only came from Republicans. He said he had no idea there were nearly 900 discarded political mailers, campaign literature, the Republican candidate said, that was mailed to voters in an important swing district in Neenah.
In my mind, either reason is totally unacceptable, whether it was partisan-related or the guy is tired or lazy, he said. Ive worked jobs since I was 12 years old. If you are tired, well, too bad. You do your job. Thats just how I was raised.
Hopefully it wont happen to anybody again. Whatever candidate, whatever party, Rohrkaste added.
He said postal administrators who responded were apologetic and assured him they would investigate and deal with the situation appropriately.
All of the mailers had been delivered to their appointed rounds as of Oct. 31, postal officials confirmed.
Since the Republican won, he could make things a little warm for the Post Office IG. Time to play for keeps.
Sounds familiar. Covering up a crime by doing an internal investigation.
The postal carriers love the campaign mailers (and junk mail) because it keeps them in work. I have not talked to one postal carrier that did not say they really appreciate getting campaign mail to deliver.
Yep. If a civilian saw those same fliers sitting in the van and picked them up and tossed them in the same dumpster, he’d be prosecuted for sure.
Like that matters?
The mailman acted stupidly.
He should absolutely go to prison.
Stupidly? He acted criminally.
The postal worker just might have helped these Republican candidates get elected.
I got so much Republican/ Democrat political junk mail and I was so disgusted I hand shredded it and threw it directly in the recycling bin. It totally ticked me off. I actually thought about not voting at all.
Come on. Let the poor guy go. America is a lawless nation now! Laws don’t apply to anyone. If it feels good to it. To hell with the laws! Right Barry?!
About 30 years ago when I was living in Los Angeles, I saw something similar happen. Once the federal indictment came down, the union said, "We don't know this guy."
What they usually do is offer them the choice of resigning and losing all benefits or be prosecuted. At least that’s what I’ve personally seen on more than one occasion at the office I worked at until my retirement.
Thanks for the info.
Yes, I agree!
” I have not talked to one postal carrier that did not say they really appreciate getting campaign mail to deliver. “
My carrier would demur. We had a hard fought city council election going and I filled an entire grocery bag with election mailers. So many trees gave their lives for so many lies.
“Since the Republican won, he could make things a little warm for the Post Office IG. Time to play for keeps.”
Certainly the Republican candidates should file a civil suit.
“COULD???” face charges? The criminal broke several federal laws. Is this ountry insane or what?
Whoever paid for the flyers should sue the postal carrier for the cost of the items and the cost of postage, plus punitive damages. And if they lost the election by a reasonably slim margin, they should sue for whatever they can get in regards to the potential job loss, etc.
Based upon our investigation, this was nothing done toward a specific candidate or party. It looks like it was a decision made by the carrier, and it was not a good decision, to not deliver the campaign advertisements, Robert Rukes, special agent with the inspector generals office in Chicago, said at the time. A lot of times, what happened in this situation, you have a carrier who felt overwhelmed with the volume of mail so they decided to discard some of the mail without delivering, Rukes added... Sometimes people just make decisions that are out of character, Rukes said. One thing we want to stress is that the vast majority of postal workers are honest, hard-working employees.
...The political mailers were from the campaigns of Mike Rohrkaste, Republican candidate for Wisconsins 55th Assembly District, and Glenn Grothman, a Republican state senator running for the open 6th Congressional District seat, as well as political messages from a special interest group in support of former state Rep. Roger Roth, a Republican who was running for Wisconsin 19th Senate District seat. All three Republicans won their respective races... There were no reports that campaign mailers from Democratic Party candidates have been similarly mishandled. Most of the mailers came from Rohrkastes campaign. Rohrkaste, a retired human resources executive, ran against Democrat Mark Westphal, an industrial electrician and president of the Fox Valley Area Labor Council AFL-CIO... Rohrkaste told Wisconsin Reporter on Nov. 3 he found it striking the mishandled mailers only came from Republicans.
What’s the difference between this guy and the IRS or even Gruber? They’re all lying and cheating for ‘the cause’...
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