KSL INVESTIGATES

Gephardt: If You Die Or Move Before Election Day, Does Your Ballot Still Count?

Nov 2, 2020, 7:18 PM | Updated: 8:01 pm

SALT LAKE CITY, Utah – Utahns have been voting by mail for weeks, and it is very likely that some of those mail-in ballots have been cast by people who have either moved or died.

So what happens to the ballots of somebody who has voted and then moved away or died before Election Day?

More than 1 million Utahns have already voted. Statistically, the possibility of someone casting their ballot but then dying before Nov. 3, is almost certain to happen.

According to the most recent U.S. Census data, close to 50 Utahns die every day. So what does happen to their ballots if theyre already in the mail?

Its considered good, said Lannie Chapman, Salt Lake County’s chief deputy clerk.

Salt Lake County chief deputy clerk, Lannie Chapman. (KSL-TV)

She said the way Utahs voting law is set up, all votes cast during the voting window will be counted, even if the person is gone by Election Day.

And gone doesn’t just mean death. Sometimes people vote and then move. Chapman explained the same rules apply.

When you get your ballot, that’s where you vote, she said. You vote that time we started sending ballots out on Oct. 13. If you voted Oct. 14, and that’s where you live, that was your primary residence. That ballot is perfectly acceptable.

What is not perfectly acceptable: casting your ballot, moving, then showing up to vote again with your new address.

You cannot vote twice. You can only vote once per election, said Chapman.

VOTE WATCH

If you see something in the next couple of weeks or on Election Day that doesnt seem quite right, youve got an advocate in the KSL Investigators. You can let us know by clicking on the Vote Watch banner at the top of this website, KSLTV.com, or by calling/texting 385-707-6153.

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Gephardt: If You Die Or Move Before Election Day, Does Your Ballot Still Count?