A Pennsylvania woman has been arrested on felony forgery, tampering with public records, and voter registration charges after she allegedly attempted to fraudulently register dead people, including her own father, to vote in the 2024 election.
Jennifer Hill, from the Chester area, was arrested Thursday and accused of trying to add four ineligible people to the voter rolls, including her deceased father.
Delaware County Democratic District Attorney Jack Stollsteimer said publicly that Hill used the app to register 324 people as staff members for an organization called the New Pennsylvania Project.
Stollsteimer said the Pennsylvania Department of State is making the app available for legitimate voter registration efforts. He said Hill was successful in registering 181 names, but 129 other names – which he called “a big number” – were not successful.
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A welcome sign greets drivers on Route 222 from Conowingo, Maryland, to Peach Bottom, Pennsylvania. (Charlie Crates)
“Literally what this woman did was inflate the employment numbers. She started registering people who had died. One of them was her father.”
Hill is said to have tried to register a second death, and Stollsteimer said Hill was dead because he died in 2011 in the house where the two currently lived. He said he knew.
“She knows that because she was the one who called the police to come when he died in his home.”
“She did register fraudsters,” Stollsteimer said, adding that certain registrants did not vote this year. According to the Philadelphia Inquirer, the identity of the imposter was her grandmother’s name and birthday bag.
Additionally, prosecutors charged an 84-year-old man named Philip Moss with mail-in voting in both Florida and Delaware County.
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Voters cast their votes on Election Day. (Patrick T. Fallon/AFP via Getty Images)
In a statement obtained by Fox News Digital, New Pennsylvania Project officials called the allegations “heartbreaking” and said the group does not offer financial incentives or bonuses for additional voter registration. He said no.
“Our employees do not have quotas to meet, and the hourly rate paid to part-time recruitment employees remains the same regardless of the number of voter registration applications collected,” Kadida Kenner said.
Kenner added that the Pennsylvania Department of State notified the group of a potential issue with the recruiter and that person, believed to be Hill, was immediately suspended.
“Thanks to the hard work of many individuals to prevent destructive actions by bad actors, our voting rolls and elections are secure and there were no fraudulent votes,” she said. .
“As a nonpartisan organization, our year-round voter registration efforts are not directed, coordinated, or affiliated with any political party or candidate. Our registration efforts vary from election cycle to election cycle. It doesn’t depend on us, and it never will.” Kenner continued.
Of the roughly 10,000 successful applicants the group recruited, 48% registered as Democrats, 34% as independents or third parties, and 18% as Republicans.
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Media reports that Hill faces up to 10 charges for each of the four registrations that led to the prosecution’s indictment.
The Democratic-majority Philadelphia suburbs are once again a “swing” county. In the 2000s, while electing Republicans to state legislatures like then-Senate Majority Leader Dominic Pileggi, he often voted for Democrats at the presidential level.
But the area, often referred to as “Delco,” along with neighboring Chester and Montgomery counties, has moved sharply to the left in the era of Donald Trump.
Vice President Kamala Harris won the county with 61% of the vote.
Charles Creitz is a reporter for Fox News Digital.
He joined Fox News in 2013 as a writer and production assistant.
Charles covers media, politics and culture for Fox News Digital.
Charles is a Pennsylvania native and graduate of Temple University with a bachelor’s degree in broadcast journalism. Story tips can be sent to charles.creitz@fox.com.