Spencer Pratt Pack uncovers disturbing new mystery on Skid Row

A Spencer Pratt volunteer team has claimed they found lots of ballots were sent out on Skid Row – but few there actually voted in the Los Angeles mayoral race.The California Post joined four members of the “Pratt Pack” on Sunday as they spent hours touring the run-down neighborhood.They asked dozens of locals about voter registration, mail-in ballots and the petition gatherers who have worked the district for years trying to get them to vote.It comes just a week after Pratt was dumped out of the race for mayor after Karen Bass won and Nithya Raman received a huge pile of mail-in ballots that saw her dramatically overtake him.Susan Collins, a former California State Senate candidate who was part of the “Pratt Pack” on Sunday, told The Post: “What we’re finding is a lot of people being registered to vote, a lot of ballots being sent out, and nobody actually voted.”The California Post’s own investigation uncovered thousands of voter registrations.A review of public records identified more than 7,600 registered voters linked to shelters, supportive housing projects, addiction treatment centers and social service agencies, including 1,160 registrations connected to the Midnight Mission in Skid Row.One longtime local told volunteers on Sunday he personally knew the Marina del Rey woman recently charged by federal prosecutors with paying homeless people to register to vote.Brenda Lee Brown Armstrong, known as “Anika,” was charged in May with paying another person to register to vote.
According to federal prosecutors, Armstrong worked for years as a paid petition circulator collecting signatures for California ballot measures and has agreed to plead guilty.“She was right at this corner.This was her area,” Thadeus Brown told volunteers.
Brown claimed people were routinely offered money or cigarettes to sign forms.California's top news, sports and entertainment delivered to your inbox every day.
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