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Um. Julia Letlow committed voter fraud… twice.

  • Writer: Dr. Bill Cassidy Press
    Dr. Bill Cassidy Press
  • May 12
  • 6 min read

In a strange coincidence, Letlow is one of the few Republicans that has expressed soft-on-voter fraud opinions


Baton Rouge, LA — Yea, you read that headline correctly.


Progressive Leader Julia Letlow – the stock market wizard, the DEI champion, the Hamas-funder-meeter, the climate-change-paid-junket-enjoyer – appears to have committed voter fraud not just once but twice.


First, here’s what Liberal Letlow says about voter fraud: Letlow was once quoted by a news outlet that said “she does not have the continuing concerns that some Republicans have cited about fraud.” 


Hm. Wonder why she said it like that.


Oh! Maybe because she knows she did it?


Here are the facts:

  • The first time she committed voter fraud, she voted in Florida after already moving to Louisiana.

  • The second time, Letlow voted in a parish she had already moved out of.


PS: Letlow has also skipped about half of the elections she’s been eligible to vote in. Fittingly lackluster.


While nonchalance about voter fraud does fit with Letlow’s progressive pro-DEI outlook, fraud is actually an ongoing scourge we must attack and eliminate. 

Louisiana doesn’t deserve a senator that has committed voter fraud… twice.


Here’s the documentation:

COMMITTING VOTER FRAUD


2008: Voting In Wrong State

In October 2008, Letlow voted in Florida by mail as a “Temporary Absentee” for the 2008 general election.

In August 2005, Letlow registered to vote as a Republican in Florida. (RE: Julia Barnhill, Florida Secretary of State, 5/12/25)

(RE: Julia Barnhill, Florida Secretary of State, 5/12/25)


On her registration application, Letlow listed her legal residence as 10215 Devonshire Lake Dr. in Tampa, FL and confirmed that she was a legal resident of Florida, under penalty of a felony conviction. (Voter Registration Application, Voter ID No. 110908868, Hillsborough County Supervisor of Elections, Filed 9/9/05)


(Voter Registration Application, Voter ID No. 110908868, Hillsborough County Supervisor of Elections, Filed 9/9/05)


Letlow voted by mail in the November 2008 general election in Florida. (RE: Julia Barnhill, Florida Secretary of State, 5/12/25)


Letlow requested the mail-in ballot be sent to a different address than her Florida registration address and described herself as a “Temporary Absentee.” (Vote-By-Mail Information Sheet, Hillsborough County Supervisor of Elections, Accessed 5/15/25)



(Vote-By-Mail Information Sheet, Voter ID No. 110908868, Hillsborough County Supervisor of Elections, Accessed 5/15/25)

NOTE: “Address Override Provided” indicates Letlow requested her mail-in ballot be sent to an address different from the one on her Florida voter registration.


 Letlow appears to have requested the mail-in ballot on October 3, 2008 and returned it October 20, 2008. (Voter Audit Report, Voter ID No. 110908868, Hillsborough County Supervisor of Elections, Accessed 5/15/25)


(Voter Audit Report, Voter ID No. 110908868, Hillsborough County Supervisor of Elections, Accessed 5/15/25)


At the time she cast her Florida ballot, Letlow had already purchased a home in Louisiana, pledged to live there as her primary residence, and taken a full-time job in Louisiana to be “close to family.”


NOTE: As noted above, Letlow had her mail-in ballot sent to an address different from the one on her Florida voter registration. Letlow has no other known address in Florida other than the one she registered with in 2005. Therefore, it is likely her ballot was sent to her Louisiana address.


In October 2008, Letlow took out a $120,706 mortgage from BancorpSouth Bank on the property at 3517 Stowers Dr. (Mortgage No. 1523541, Ouachita Parish Clerk of Court, Filed 10/10/08)



(Mortgage No. 1523541, Ouachita Parish Clerk of Court, Filed 10/10/08)


Under the terms of the mortgage and on penalty of default, Letlow pledged to “occupy, establish, and use the Property as [her] principal residence within sixty days… for at least one year after the date of occupancy.” (Mortgage No. 1523541, Ouachita Parish Clerk of Court, Filed 10/10/08)



NOTE: Letlow requested her Florida ballot on October 3, signed the Louisiana mortgage on October 10, and cast her ballot on October 20.


Letlow was living and working in Monroe by October 23, 2008 and appears to have expected to remain in Louisiana to be “close to family.” “Hi Ashley!  It is so good to hear from you!  I'm back in Monroe working at ULM and loving it.  Nothing can replace being close to family.  I just bought a house so that has been keeping me busy at the moment...it's just an exciting time.  How about you?  I have to say you have the most beautiful family!  I miss those track days...especially being in that kind of shape!” (Julia Barnhill Letlow, Facebook, 10/23/08)



(Julia Barnhill Letlow, Facebook, 10/23/08)


Because Letlow appears to have already intended to live in Louisiana at the time of her 2008 vote, her ballot in Florida may have been fraudulently cast.


To vote in a Florida election, a person must be a legal resident, defined as where they “mentally intend” to permanently reside. “Legal residency is not defined in law. However, over the years, the courts and the Florida Department of State/Division of Elections‟ have construed legal residency to be where a person mentally intends to make his or her permanent residence.1 Evidence of such intent can come from items or activities such as obtaining a Florida driver‟s license2, paying tax receipts, paying bills for residency (light, water, garbage service) and receiving mail at address, claiming the property as homestead, 3 declaring the county as domicile, and doing other activities indicative or normally associated with home life. Therefore, legal residence is a convergence of intent and fact. Once residency is established for voting purposes, it is presumptively valid or current until evidence shows otherwise. See Op. Atty Gen. Fla. 055-216 (August 26, 1955).” (Voter Residency Guidelines for Florida, Florida Department of State, Updated October 2011)


Letlow did not register to vote in Louisiana or cancel her Florida registration until April 2009.

On April 1, 2009, Letlow registered to vote as a Republican in Ouachita Parish, Louisiana. (Louisiana Voter Registration Application, Julia Barnhill, Louisiana Secretary of State, Filed 4/1/09)



(Louisiana Voter Registration Application, Julia Barnhill, Louisiana Secretary of State, Filed 4/1/09)


Letlow canceled her Florida voter registration on April 27, 2009 by sending her new Louisiana registration to the Hillsborough County Supervisor of Elections. (Voter Registration Cancellation, Voter ID No. 110908868, Hillsborough County Supervisor of Elections, Filed 4/27/09)



(Voter Registration Cancellation, Voter ID No. 110908868, Hillsborough County Supervisor of Elections, Filed 4/27/09)


2015: Voting In Wrong Parish


In the October 2015 general election, Letlow illegally voted in Ouachita Parish despite being registered in

Richland Parish.


A Louisiana resident must vote in the parish where they have registered and seek to reside. “To register and vote in Louisiana you must: be a U.S. citizen; be at least 16 years old, but must be 18 years old prior to the next election to be eligible to vote; reside in the parish in which you seek to register and vote” (Voting in Louisiana, Louisiana Secretary of State, Accessed 6/5/25)


On October 3, 2015, Letlow registered to vote as a Republican in Richland Parish, Louisiana. (Louisiana Voter Registration Application, Julia Barnhill, Louisiana Secretary of State, Filed 10/3/15)



(Louisiana Voter Registration Application, Julia Barnhill, Louisiana Secretary of State, Filed 10/3/15)


In the October 24, 2015 general election, Letlow voted in Ouachita Parish, Louisiana. (Voter Election History Report, Julia Barnhill, Accessed 5/26/25)


Letlow’s Ouachita Parish registration was canceled on October 3, 2015, though it was not processed until October 26, 2015. (Cancellations, Louisiana Secretary of State, Accessed 5/26/25)



(Cancellations, Louisiana Secretary of State, Accessed 5/26/25)


Letlow voted in Richland Parish for the runoff one month later.


In the November 2015 runoff election, Letlow voted in Richland Parish, Louisiana. (Voter Election History Report, Julia Barnhill, Accessed 5/26/25)


INFREQUENT VOTER

Letlow has skipped nearly half the elections for which she was registered since 2000.


Since 2000, Letlow has voted in 37 of the 65 elections (57%) for which she was registered. (Voter Election History Report, Julia Barnhill, Accessed 5/26/25; RE: Julia Barnhill, Florida Secretary of State, 5/12/25; Voter Profile, ID No. 600853742, Colorado Secretary of State, Accessed 5/9/25)




(Voter Election History Report, Julia Barnhill, Accessed 5/26/25; RE: Julia Barnhill, Florida Secretary of State, 5/12/25; Voter Profile, ID No. 600853742, Colorado Secretary of State, Accessed 5/9/25; Voting History Report,


Voter ID No. 110908868, Hillsborough County Supervisor of Elections, Accessed 5/15/25)


NOTE: While the Louisiana Secretary of State records Letlow’s participation (shown above) in elections prior to 2009, the agency has no documents on file relating to her voter registration for those years. These records are likely housed with the Ouachita Parish Registrar of Voters and can only be obtained via a petition signed by 25 qualified voters in the parish.


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