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In Ohio, Mystery Robo-Calls Upend Race .

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  • In Ohio, Mystery Robo-Calls Upend Race .

    Wall Street Journal
    March 30 2012


    In Ohio, Mystery Robo-Calls Upend Race .

    By ALICIA MUNDY

    A mysterious group involved in the upset of an Ohio Democrat during
    the congressional primary earlier this month continues to befuddle
    both the loser and winner of that race, as well as the Justice
    Department.

    David Krikorian, a Cincinnati-area Democrat, appeared to have his
    party's nomination locked up, giving him a chance to take on a
    vulnerable Republican incumbent, Rep. Jean Schmidt. But Mr. Krikorian
    was upended by a 61-year-old truck driver who made $15,000 last year,
    didn't campaign and was unknown to the Democratic Party in the
    Cincinnati area district.

    The trucker, William Smith, benefited from a series of robo-calls
    suggesting President Barack Obama supported him. The messages said
    they came from the "Victory Ohio" super PAC, but neither the Federal
    Election Commission or the Ohio State elections board has a record of
    such a group.

    For weeks, Mr. Krikorian, 44, an Armenian-American, has said he
    believes Turkish-Americans and operatives with the Turkish Coalition
    of America were behind the calls. Mr. Krikorian has been involved in
    several public disputes over Turkish-American groups' financial
    support of Ms. Schmidt. Tensions between Armenians and Turks go back
    100 years to the Turkish massacre and deportations of more than one
    million Armenians.

    Ms. Schmidt also lost her primary to physician Brad Wenstrup, who will
    likely win the House seat in the solid Republican district.

    This week, a new FEC report showed the Turkish Coalition of America's
    political-action committee, which has denied any involvement in the
    robo-calls, donated $1,000 to the Ohio Congressional Victory Fund in
    late February. Mr. Krikorian at first said the report showed a link
    between robo-calls and the Turkish-American group, but that connection
    didn't seem to pan out.

    The Ohio Congressional Victory Fund is part of Athens, Ga.-based PDS
    Compliance Inc., a longtime Republican campaign accounting operation.
    "All the committees here are registered with the FEC," said PDS
    President Paul Kilgore. He noted this company manages the "Ohio 2012
    Victory Fund," not "Victory Ohio." He added: "We don't know anything
    about them - if you find out, let us know, cause we're getting a lot of
    questions."

    G. Lincoln McCurdy, treasurer of the Turkish Coalition of America's
    PAC, said in a statement that the $1,000 contribution was for an Ohio
    GOP congressional fund-raiser on Feb. 16, hosted by House Speaker John
    Boehner (R., Ohio). He said the PAC "had no involvement in or
    awareness of unregistered PAC activities, including Victory Ohio Super
    PAC, in recent Ohio congressional primary elections."

    The U.S. Attorney in southern Ohio has begun examining whether the
    robo-call group violated federal-election disclosure laws. Fred
    Alverson, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney, confirmed that the
    government is reviewing the situation; he called it unusual, but
    wouldn't say more.

    Mr. Smith, for his part, said that he had just filed to run in
    December to get some "empathy for the working people" and has no idea
    who ran the automated call campaign. He said he spent just a few
    hundred dollars campaigning, mostly on filing fees and gasoline to
    drive around the district, reaching out to people "at convenience
    stores, gas stations, that sort of thing."

    On primary night, he said he was in his 18-wheeler driving between
    Cincinnati and Cleveland when he got a call from a friend saying,
    "Butch, you've won the nomination for the Democratic Party."

    "I said, 'Sparky, please don't mess with me, it's not funny,' " said Mr. Smith.

    Corrections & Amplifications
    The Turkish Coalition of America's political-action committee donated
    to the Ohio Congressional Victory Fund, an FEC report says. An earlier
    version of this article incorrectly called the group the Turkish
    American Coalition, and didn't specify that the donation was made by
    its PAC.

    - Douglas Belkin contributed to this article.

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303404704577314092671808170.html


    From: Baghdasarian
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