OCDA: Webster Guillory Charged with Filing False Nomination Papers for June Primary

Webster Guillory - OC Assessor
 Webster Guillory - OC Assessor
Webster Guillory – OC Assessor

The Orange County District Attorney’s office issued a press release Tuesday afternoon announcing that Orange County Assessor Webster Guillory has been charged with filing false nomination papers for the June 2014 Primary.

The details from the press release are below:

ORANGE COUNTY ASSESSOR CHARGED WITH FILING FALSE NOMINATION PAPERS IN PRIMARY ELECTION

SANTA ANA – The Orange County District Attorney has charged Orange County Assessor Webster Guillory with filing false nomination papers in a re-election bid for County Assessor in the March 2014 Orange County primary election. Webster James Guillory, 70, Newport Beach, is charged with three felony counts of filing false nomination papers and faces a possible sentence ranging from probation up to four years and four months in jail if convicted. He is expected to be released on his own recognizance and arraigned Friday, Sept. 12, 2014, at 9:00 a.m. at the Central Justice Center, Santa Ana. The Department is to be determined.

At the time of the incident, Guillory was the four-term elected County Assessor for the Orange County Office of the Assessor.

Background Information

To appear as an Assessor candidate on the ballot for a primary election, a person must file required paperwork, including nomination papers, with the Registrar of Voters by 5:00 p.m. on the filing deadline date. A nomination paper is a petition that can be signed by Orange County registered voters to support the candidacy of/nominate the candidate. Each petition page has space for 10 voter signatures. For the Office of Assessor, a candidate must submit 20 valid signatures of registered voters on nomination papers to qualify as a candidate and appear on the ballot.

Nomination papers cannot legally be accepted by the Registrar of Voters unless an affidavit is signed at the end of each page by the signature collector stating that he/she personally circulated the nomination paper and witnessed the signatures being written.  The signature collector does not need to be the candidate, but the actual signature collector must be the person to sign each affidavit.

Circumstances of the Case

The filing deadline for the 2014 Orange County primary election was March 7, 2014, at 5:00 p.m. On the afternoon of March 7, 2014, Guillory collected signatures on two petitions, nine on the first and two on the second. Guillory is accused of also receiving petitions circulated by his associate, who gathered and collected three full pages of 10 signatures each. Knowing that he had not personally collected the signatures or witnessed them being written, Guillory is accused of signing his name on two of the 10-signature petitions collected by his associate under the affidavit that reads, “I circulated the petition and witnessed the signatures on this section of the nomination paper being written.” He is accused of requesting another colleague to falsely sign the third petition.

Shortly before the end-of-day filing deadline, Guillory is accused of fraudulently filing the three nomination papers at the Registrar of Voters, knowing the information each contained about who had personally circulated the petitions and collected the signatures was untrue.

The Orange County District Attorney’s Bureau of Investigation received a confidential complaint and investigated this case.

Senior Deputy District Attorney Brock Zimmon of the Special Prosecutions Unit is prosecuting this case.

 

5 Comments

  1. I think it is a stupid law that needs to be changed. REALLY – it’s just a few signatures which could have been gotten with little effort. Who is harmed by this “crime”?

    I don’t get why this “offense” is such a big deal. For criminy sakes – it’s not like he was handed $200K from a supplier to the City of Santa Ana.

  2. Guess Guillory must have fallen out of favor with the almighty Tony Rakakus, who now throws him under the bus. Too bad that Rakakus can’t find any real political corruption in Orange County to clean up. It is more unfortunate that Rakakus doesn’t have any real competition running against him in November. That clown needs to go.

    • Is it too bad, because he won re-election to office in the June election, or did I miss some sort of veiled sarcasm? He DOES need to go. Anybody know how (if) that $419K (raised in ONE night) was spent?

  3. Guillotine is a crook. If there is a shred of justice left in our legal system, the judge will max out this embarrassment and house him with the worst sex offenders who have ever walked any level 4 yard. Crooked politicians are the worst type of criminal because they undermine confidence in the system. You suck guillory!!!!!

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