County election officials across the metro area are scrutinizing dozens of voter registrations tied to commercial mail centers after a probe in Minneapolis revealed a loophole in the state's election system.
A new Star Tribune comparison of voter records and data from the U.S. Postal Service found that 95 voters were registered at the addresses of mail centers — such as UPS Stores — despite requirements that voters list their physical residence.
The findings show that illegal voter registration at mail centers extend beyond a Cedar-Riverside shopping center in Minneapolis, a previously unregistered center that became the target of a complaint when it was discovered that 141 would-be voters had registered there.
The Star Tribune's inquiry unearthed a batch of private mail centers scattered from St. Cloud to Duluth that were previously unknown to several county election officials, who said they are now canceling or challenging voter registrations at those locations.
The secretary of state's office only recently sent a complete list to county officials around the state.
People sometimes use private mailboxes to receive mail, particularly if they move frequently, and may list it on voter registrations separately from their residential address. One St. Cloud voter contacted by the Star Tribune said he was unaware he could not register a nearby UPS Store as his primary address.
"We are … in the process of notifying the people who are registered at those addresses that we are going to cancel unless they have some evidence to give us that they actually live at those addresses," Hennepin County election manager Ginny Gelms said.
The county actively sought out the list of mail centers from the Postal Service and has deactivated 31 registrations at three locations until voters provide that evidence. One of those locations is also in the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood.