By Marc Levy
Associated Press
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — An investigation into an apparent bureaucratic blunder by Gov. Tom Wolf’s administration that scuttled a statewide voter referendum sought by victims of childhood sexual abuse found no evidence of a deliberate attempt to derail it.
The Office of Inspector General’s report, released Wednesday, said agents interviewed 22 current and former state employees and reviewed the email accounts of nine state officials for any evidence of outside influence or intentional acts.
Rather, it said, Wolf’s Department of State — which oversees elections — had no executive office, bureau or executive staff member responsible for overseeing internal processes for constitutional amendments.
The revelation of the mistake sparked outrage in the community of childhood sexual abuse survivors. They questioned anew how it was possible that the Department of State had successfully advertised every other proposed constitutional amendment.
The Department of State’s liaison to the Legislature resigned on Friday, but agency officials would not say whether it was related.
The referendum was to be on whether to give victims of childhood sexual abuse a fresh opportunity to sue their abusers and complicit institutions, a proposal propelled by investigations into Pennsylvania’s Roman Catholic dioceses.
The referendum had been on track for last week’s primary election until Wolf’s administration revealed four months ago that it hadn’t advertised the proposal in newspapers across Pennsylvania, as is constitutionally required.
A referendum may now have to wait until 2023.
- Posted May 27, 2021
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Probe finds no intentional act to derail sex-abuse vote
headlines Detroit
headlines National
- Online shoppers find deals on the Temu app, but states say the trade-off is personal data
- Florida Bar reverses itself, says it is not investigating Lindsey Halligan
- Attorney indicted for trying to kill her husband of more than 25 years
- American Bar Association cites members’ needs in law firm intimidation hearing
- OpenAI sued for practicing law without a license
- Lindsey Halligan being investigated by the Florida Bar




