Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette has filed criminal charges against former staffers of former Congressman Thaddeus McCotter.
The five-term Congressman resigned from office after fake signatures were found on his re-election petitions.
Schuette charged four McCotter staffers with conspiring to commit election fraud.
The charges range from felony conspiracy, to misdemeanor counts of falsely certifying petitions.
Schuette says the four used a variety of tricks to inflate the number of petition signatures needed to get McCotter on the ballot.
“They copied petitions, submitted petitions falsely signed by circulators, and did cut and paste jobs that would make an elementary art teacher cringe," he said.
Schuette says it’s clear McCotter was “asleep at the switch” while his staffers “acted above the law.”
There’s no evidence McCotter was aware of their schemes.
But Schuette says that if such evidence emerges, he won’t hesitate to “pull the trigger and file new charges.”
In a press advisory released today, McCotter said,
"I thank the Attorney General and his office for their earnest, thorough work on this investigation, which I requested, and their subsequent report.For my family and I, this closure commences our embrace of the enduring blessings of private life."