the big steal continues
Maine Woman Discovers Hundreds of Election Ballots in Amazon Package as State Considers Voter ID
As Maine considers the "Yes on One" Voter ID law, hundreds of ballots mysteriously turn up in an Amazon shipment
Steve RobinsonBy Steve Robinson October 1, 2025Updated:October 1, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read10K Views
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A Newburgh resident expecting an Amazon delivery of rice, paper plates and a toy lightsaber instead opened a box to find 250 state election ballots.
The discovery raised alarms about election security, leading the Maine Republican Party Chairman to call for a federal criminal investigation as the state is mere weeks from deciding on whether it will join 36 other states in requiring some form of Vote ID.
The package arrived Tuesday looking beat up and re-taped, as if tampered with. Inside, along with household items, were bundles of ballots packaged in tamper-evident packs of 50 — the same format used for official shipments to local clerks. Election officials who reviewed photographs confirmed the documents appear to be authentic 2025 ballots.
A Newburgh resident expecting an Amazon delivery of rice, paper plates and a toy lightsaber instead opened a box to find 250 state election ballots.
The discovery raised alarms about election security, leading the Maine Republican Party Chairman to call for a federal criminal investigation as the state is mere weeks from deciding on whether it will join 36 other states in requiring some form of Vote ID.
The package arrived Tuesday looking beat up and re-taped, as if tampered with. Inside, along with household items, were bundles of ballots packaged in tamper-evident packs of 50 — the same format used for official shipments to local clerks. Election officials who reviewed photographs confirmed the documents appear to be authentic 2025 ballots.
The resident, stunned by the find, immediately turned the ballots over to the town office.
“I am greatly concerned for our state and its voting requirements,” she said.
“When I opened it, there were 250 official State of Maine referendum ballots inside my box. Thank goodness I am an honest citizen and immediately reached out to my town clerk and took the ballots to the town for safekeeping.”
The misdelivery comes just 35 days before Maine’s Nov. 4 election, which features a high-stakes referendum on requiring voter identification.
The initiative, Question One, has divided state politics, with Democrats warning it could shrink their vote totals and Republicans insisting it would bolster election integrity.
Thirty-six other U.S. states, as well as virtually every nation in the European Union, have some form of Voter ID law.
Yet Maine Democratic Party Chairman Charlie Dingman has frequently downplayed the need for election integrity measures and fretted that if the “Yes on One” effort succeeds, Democrats could lose as many as 13,000 votes in future statewide elections.
In a May 30 text message to voters, for example, Dingman said that if Maine adopted Voter ID requirements similar to those of 36 other states that “it could result in a loss of 13,000 Democratic” votes being counted in subsequent elections. (Dingman did not provide an explanation as to how the proposed Voter ID would prevent any legal U.S. citizen from voting in the election, nor did he elucidate how the Maine Democrats arrived at the 13,000 figure.)
If the Maine Democratic Party chairman is correct, though, then those 13,000 voters who will mysteriously disappear from the election tallies if IDs are required could reshape control of the state and even the U.S. Congress.
With the stakes so high, the epic blunder in Newburgh will only cast more doubt on the legitimacy of Maine’s elections, as well as the conduct of arch-partisan Shenna Bellows, a lifelong leftist activist who is currently seeking the Democratic nomination to run for governor in 2026.
Maine Republican Party Chairman Jim Deyermond called the Newburgh ballot discovery “beyond the realm of accidental.”
“The U.S. Department of Justice needs to assume jurisdiction over this matter immediately,” Deyermond said.
“This incident should be treated as a potential crime and a crime scene,” said Deyermond, a retired longtime Massachusetts State Trooper.
Under state law, the Secretary of State’s Office designs, approves, and oversees distribution of ballots. Ballots must be printed on secure paper, shipped in sealed units, and delivered directly to municipal offices under strict chain-of-custody rules.