This was posted in Trump2020 thread and I said "is the orange menace going to serve their sentences when they get caught"?
The reason, that there is little fraud committed is that the penalties for try to vote twice are very
severe. There is very little benefit to the risk of felony voter fraud.
This guy got caught in NC in the exact manner in which the orange menace is telling people to do.
Explore a sampling of recent proven instances of election fraud from across the country. The database is intended to demonstrate the vulnerabilities in the election system and the many ways in which fraud is committed.
www.heritage.org
Dewey Gidcumb
Dewey Gidcumb, of Haywood County, was found guilty of voting twice in the 2016 Republican Primary. Gidcumb first cast a ballot in the early voting period, then voted a second time on Election Day. He received a five-to-15-month suspended prison sentence, one year of supervised probation, and 24 hours of community service. He was also fined $100 and ordered to pay court costs.
Pasco Parker
Pasco Parker, a 63-year-old Tennessee resident, admitted to voting in three states during the 2012 federal election. He mailed an absentee ballot to both Florida and North Carolina, and he voted in person in Tennessee. Upon pleading guilty to felony voting fraud and felony voter registration, Parker was sentenced to between six and 17 months of jail time, and was ordered to complete 48 hours of community service. The sentence was later suspended in favor of 24 months of supervised probation, and $940 in fees, fines, and court costs. This case was brought to the attention of election officials by a North Carolina volunteer voting watchdog group, The Voting Integrity Project.
Here's guy who thought he was able to vote but because of a felony, he faced 2 years in prison.
Twelve people in a North Carolina county have been charged with voting illegally in the 2016 election. They face up to two years in prison.
www.nytimes.com