Politics & Government
Former Kansas AG Kline Not Letting Absence Of Law License Hinder Work On Trump Election-Fraud Fight
Amistad Project's legal gambit aims to undercut President-elect Biden.

By
Tim Carpenter - December 1, 2020

Find out what's happening in Overland Parkfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
TOPEKA β Former Kansas Attorney General Phill Kline resumed riding waves of contested-election controversy Tuesday in battleground states at the center of President Donald Trumpβs bid to block ascent of President-elect Joe Biden.
Klineβs role in the legal apparatus has been to help with a flurry of lawsuits alleging Trump was outflanked in key states by well-financed, technologically savvy collaborators eager for the GOP presidentβs exit. As director of the Amistad Project of the Thomas More Society, Kline has shared theories about election theft on Fox News and during interviews with an array of conservative political outlets. His time under the spotlight also features arguments for how Trump could achieve this reversal of fortune.
Find out what's happening in Overland Parkfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Kline alleged, for example, the volume of potentially corrupt ballots in Georgia was 15 times greater than Bidenβs advantage over the president. He promised to personally produce Tuesday in Arlington, Virginia, three whistleblowers with βsubstantial evidence of unlawful actionsβ by election officials and βwidespread illegal effortsβ by U.S. Postal Service workers to influence the election.
In a theme echoed by Trump, Kline said the 2020 election was one of the most lawless in U.S. history. Kline said he was apprehensive as far back as 2019 that novel election practices would taint the vote.
βThey used COVID fear to justify lawlessness and within that lawlessness they created a system where we canβt have faith,β Kline said. βNow weβre proving that all the flaws had a direct impact on results.β
Kansas connection
Many Kansans remember Kline as a polarizing political figure whether serving as a Republican state representative, state attorney general or Johnson County district attorney.
Klineβs desire to investigate and prosecute Kansas abortion providers was so fervent that he was found by a state disciplinary panel to have engaged in a pattern of unethical conduct, including presenting false testimony and illegally acquiring medical records of women planning abortions.
In the end, the Kansas Supreme Court determined there was βclear and convincing evidenceβ to require indefinite suspension of Klineβs law license in 2013.
Here is what the state Supreme Court said: βUltimately, we unanimously conclude the weight of the aggravating factors β i.e., Klineβs inability or refusal to acknowledge the line between overzealous advocacy and operating within the bounds of the law and his professional obligations; his selfish motives; and his lengthy and substantial pattern of misconduct β weigh more heavily than the mitigating factors and merit his indefinite suspension.β
Klineβs attempts in federal court to reverse the state decision failed, including a request for the U.S. Supreme Court to consider his case.
In his day job, Kline was rendered an academic oddity β a University of Kansas law school graduate stripped of legal certification yet employed as an associate professor of law at Liberty University, the evangelical college in Lynchburg, Virginia.
Zuckerbergβs money
In the Trump legal showdown against Biden, Klineβs challenge has been to work the courts in Wisconsin, Michigan, Georgia, Arizona, Pennsylvania and Nevada to convince judges there was legitimacy to claims mass quantities of votes were fraudulently cast and counted. The idea is to assert a brazen level of cheating, he said, capable of eventually flipping the election. His high-stakes campaign has been hampered by lack of persuasive evidence of widespread irregularity.
Itβs not clear Kline expects to win in the lower courts, because the former Kansas prosecutor has declared the ultimate goal was to get in front of the U.S. Supreme Court. Any decision altering outcome of the presidential election β the Electoral College tally has Biden at 306 and Trump at 232 β must come from the nationβs highest court, Kline said.
Klineβs political assignment gives him freedom to repeatedly denounce Facebook co-founder and billionaire Mark Zuckerberg, who donated $400 million to provide nonpartisan support to local election offices preparing for Nov. 3.
The grant money through the Chicago-based Center for Tech and Civic Life for acquisition of personal protective equipment at urban, rural and suburban polling sites, assist with drive-thru voting locations, purchase equipment to process ballots and other steps to assist election officials conduct the election during a pandemic.
Kline described Zuckerbergβs cash infusion as an βinsidious, coordinated and stealth campaign to manipulate this yearβs elections.β
βShould not standβ
An Amistad Project research study, Kline said, showed the centerβs 20 largest publicly identified donations went to areas Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton won in 2016. In addition, Kline asserted Zuckerburgβs financial leverage was a source of compensation for election judges and officials inside ballot counting rooms who were empowered to exclude GOP observers.
Kline told commentator Lou Dobb on Fox Business Network that swing states had hundreds of thousands of suspect votes. He said tens of thousands of valid ballots were spoiled by anti-Trump conspirators.
βThat canβt stand and should not stand,β Kline said. βThey wanted to infuse fraudulent ballots. And, they did it.β
Kline took to social media Monday to declare nothing in Wisconsin state law allowed cities and counties to take millions of dollars from an βincredibly wealthy, interested and partisan actor (i.e., Zuckerberg) in order to βassistβ those cities and counties in administering the vote.β He said voting discrepancies in Wisconsin resulted from election officialsβ willful violation of law.
Zuckerburg dollars flowing into Georgia, Kline said on Twitter, were used to pay ballot harvesters, compensate political activists managing ballots and consolidate counting centers to facilitate movement of ballots.
Kline also said Amistad Projectβs consultant who developed data analysis of the election to support lawsuits was contacted by the FBI regarding his findings. βHe is cooperating and we fully support him,β Kline said.
The Kansas Reflector seeks to increase people's awareness of how decisions made by elected representatives and other public servants affect our day-to-day lives. We hope to empower and inspire greater participation in democracy throughout Kansas.