RALEIGH — After two days of hearings the fates of the last uncertified congressional race in the United States and a judicial race in Robeson County still are unknown.

The State Board of Elections convened on Monday an evidentiary hearing related to allegations of absentee ballot irregularities in the race to win the N.C. District 9 seat in the U.S. House. The allegations rose from Bladen County and entangled the District Court 16-B Seat 2 elections campaign between Democrat Vanessa Burton and Republican Jack Moody Jr.

Neither race was certified by the state board. The board’s choices with both races are to certify the results or call for a new election.

On Tuesday at the hearings in Raleigh, the political consultant, Andy Yates hired to manage the District 9 campaign for Republican Mark Harris, said he was surprised at how little he knew last year about an operative’s sketchy activities.

Political operative Leslie McCrae Dowless conducted an illegal and well-funded ballot-harvesting operation last year, state elections Director Kim Strach testified Monday. Dowless’ workers in rural Bladen County testified that they were directed to forge signatures, collect blank or incomplete ballots voters handed over, and even fill in votes for local candidates who hadn’t earned them.

Dowless was hired to work for Harris last year and focused on boosting mail-in votes for the GOP candidate in the 9th Congressional District in south-central North Carolina. Harris said he sought out and hired Dowless because he secured votes, including for a Republican rival in the 2016 GOP primary.

Harris leads Democrat Dan McCready by 905 votes in unofficial results. But the race wasn’t certified in November after allegations involving Dowless’ operation were made. The elections board is expected either to declare a winner or order a new election after the multiday hearing wraps up.

Harris had decided to deploy Dowless before Yates and his firm, Red Dome Group, began working for the Republican’s campaign. Yates said he was instructed to pay Dowless but said he didn’t know about legal trouble Dowless faced after the 2016 general election. That was months after Harris lost a primary election to incumbent Robert Pittenger and discussed with an attorney whether or not to challenge Dowless’ amazing results for a third GOP candidate.

Republican officials never signaled the risk of trouble ahead, Yates told the elections board under questioning. They didn’t inform him that Dowless’ work collecting mail-in ballots in 2016 was sent to federal prosecutors for potential criminal prosecution, Yates said.

Yates said he also didn’t know about complaints Pittenger reportedly raised about Dowless’ suspicious work to the state and national Republican Party officials after May’s primary, when Harris beat the incumbent.

“It shocks me that they didn’t,” said Yates, adding he thought GOP officials had an obligation to warn him about Dowless.

Yates testified he told state Republican Party Executive Director Dallas Woodhouse the day after the primary that Dowless was working for Harris, and Woodhouse raised no red flags.

Woodhouse told reporters after the hearing that losers in party primaries often voice complaints, but the party machinery can’t get involved in intra-party campaign spats. Woodhouse said when nothing happened to Dowless after accusations of 2016 ballot-harvesting were forwarded to prosecutors “it was my belief that everything was legal.”

Yates said he initially believed Dowless’ history of delivering big vote results in Bladen County involved effective and legal methods. Yates insisted that had he known about Dowless’ methods, Harris would have had to make a choice about cutting him or Dowless.

“If Dr. Harris had told me he didn’t know about it, I would have advised him that we needed to immediately terminate our relationship with Mr. Dowless,” Yates said. If the Republican candidate wouldn’t, “I would have told Dr. Harris that I need to resign from the campaign.”

Burton and Moody both filed briefs with the state elections board. In her brief, Burton asked for the certification results that gave her a victory after absentee and provisional ballots were counted. Moody asked for a new election.

The Robeson County judicial race has yet to be mentioned during the hearing in Raleigh.

Marc Elias, an attorney for Democratic congressional candidate Dan McCready, questions a witness Tuesday during the second day of a public evidentiary hearing on the 9th congressional district voting irregularities investigation at the North Carolina State Bar in Raleigh.
https://www.robesonian.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/web1_122289135-0e3ee1cae4d84089b1abba07ad585390-1.jpgMarc Elias, an attorney for Democratic congressional candidate Dan McCready, questions a witness Tuesday during the second day of a public evidentiary hearing on the 9th congressional district voting irregularities investigation at the North Carolina State Bar in Raleigh.

Dallas Woodhouse, executive director of the North Carolina Republican Party, talks with reporters on Tuesday before the start of the second day of a public evidentiary hearing on the 9th congressional district voting irregularities investigation at the North Carolina State Bar in Raleigh.
https://www.robesonian.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/web1_122289135-0737a75ee0de42f5900ecf324ed6f4be-1.jpgDallas Woodhouse, executive director of the North Carolina Republican Party, talks with reporters on Tuesday before the start of the second day of a public evidentiary hearing on the 9th congressional district voting irregularities investigation at the North Carolina State Bar in Raleigh.
Robeson judical race still not mentioned

Staff and wire report