Bribery statute may need clarification
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State Rep. Debbie Rodella, D-Ohkay Owingeh, gave $100 from her campaign fund three times last year to help cover funeral costs, according to a Wednesday article in the Albuquerque Journal. She also wants to use her campaign fund for other expenses some would find questionable: She wrote a letter to the Attorney General’s Office last year asking whether it is alright to spend campaign money on phone cards, pizza parties and other expenses for voters. She wrote in her letter that her purpose in doing that “would be to garner good will from these men and women and their family and friends.” The AG’s office, in a letter I found confusing, responded last month that, while the Campaign Reporting Act appears to allow such expenditures, they might be illegal bribes under the state Election Code. The Election Code forbids a lawmaker from “willfully advancing, paying… directly or indirectly, any money or other valuable consideration… to any person… to induce such a person, if a voter, to vote or refrain from voting for or against any candidate.” Violation is a fourth-degree felony. The AG opinion states that any thing of value, “no matter how trivial,” can’t be given to “influence or induce a vote” unless it is strictly campaign literature. Continue Reading