Queens Meeting Member Jenifer Rajkumar (l.) and her challenger within the Democratic major, David Orkin (r.).
Images courtesy of Rajkumar and Orkin campaigns
A Queens Supreme Court docket decide adjourned a poll battle for subsequent week to present town Board of Elections (BOE) commissioners an opportunity to weigh in on the allegations that incumbent Meeting Member Jenifer Rajkumar used cast signatures to safe her place on the June Democratic major poll.
Rajkumar’s challenger, David Orkin, a Democratic Socialists of America (DSA)-endorsed candidate, filed the case to compel the court docket to invalidate her designating petition and block her title from showing on the Democratic major poll. Rajkumar’s marketing campaign has repeatedly referred to as the accusations false and politically motivated.
A BOE assessment of Rajkumar’s petition earlier this week discovered that she had sufficient to qualify for the June 23 poll, however it opted out of constructing a ruling on 1,168 forgery objections that the BOE clerk concluded had been “not ruled upon for lack of jurisdiction.”
This left the central fraud claims unresolved because the dispute made its approach earlier than a decide on April 23. Not lengthy after receiving the case, Supreme Court docket Justice Denise Johnson opted to attend till after the commissioner’s assembly scheduled for April 28 to revisit the fraud prices in court docket.
Earlier than the Thursday morning listening to, Orkin’s election lawyer Renee Paradis made an extra court docket submitting that accused Rajkumar’s marketing campaign workers and consultants of pressuring a bunch of younger marketing campaign employees from ages 19 to 23 to falsely signal witness statements for cast petition filings.
Within the submitting, Paradis wrote that she had obtained secondhand info that “campaign staff and/or consultants falsely reassured these young people with statements like ‘everybody does it’ and ‘you won’t get in trouble.’”
The Rajkumar marketing campaign denied allegations of impropriety in an announcement to New York News Thursday.
“Assemblywoman Rajkumar is immensely proud of her extraordinary team of petitioners — hardworking young people from immigrant backgrounds who carried out their responsibilities with passion, precision, and excellence,” the marketing campaign stated. “No amount of false, frivolous, or spurious claims from the DSA’s desperate campaign will stop our resounding victory in this case and again at the ballot box in June, on behalf of the emerging immigrant communities across our Assembly District.”
With reporting by Adam Daly





