Federal authorities are investigating fires at two ballot boxes reported Monday morning in the Portland, Oregon, area.
Police responded to a call about a fire in Portland about 3:30 a.m. Monday, the Portland Police Bureau said in a statement. An βincendiary deviceβ was placed inside the box and security personnel extinguished the fire, officials said.
Federal officials are investigating the incident in Portland and a second fire in nearby Vancouver, Washington, with the help of state and local law enforcement agencies, said Steve Bernd, a spokesperson for the FBIβs Seattle office.
Nearly all the ballots were protected by fire suppressant inside the box, but three were damaged, Multnomah County Elections Director Tim Scott said in a statement.
Officials plan to contact the three affected voters βvia unique identifiers on their ballot envelopes, so they can receive replacement ballots.β Voters who dropped their ballots at the box between 3:30 p.m. Saturday and 3 p.m. Monday should reach out to the Multnomah County Elections Division if they have concerns, Scott said.
βVoters should be assured that even if their ballots were in the affected box, their votes will be counted,β Scott said.
The second ballot box was set on fire early Monday morning at a bus station in Vancouver, according to the Vancouver Police Department. When officers arrived, they found a βsuspicious deviceβ next to the box, which was smoking and on fire, police said.
The Clark County Elections Office said hundreds of ballots were damaged at the box in the C-TRAN Park and Ride at Fisherβs Landing Transit Center, CNN affiliate KPTV reported.
Laura Shepard, a spokeswoman for the city of Vancouver, said elections officials are asking anyone who may have placed a ballot in the box after 11 a.m. on Saturday to contact them to check the status of their ballot.
Washington Secretary of State Steve Hobbs condemned the fire and confirmed some ballots were damaged.
βWe take the safety of our election workers seriously and will not tolerate threats or acts of violence that seek to undermine the democratic process,β Hobbs said.
βI strongly denounce any acts of terror that aim to disrupt lawful and fair elections in Washington state,β Hobbs added. βDespite this incident, I have complete confidence in our county elections officialsβ ability to keep Washingtonβs elections safe and secure for all voters.β
The boxes are about 15 miles apart. The one in Vancouver is in Washingtonβs 3rd Congressional District, where one of the most competitive House races in the country is taking place.
The district is represented by Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, one of five seats held by Democrats in a district former President Donald Trump won in 2020. She is facing a rematch against Republican Joe Kent, a retired Green Beret who had Trumpβs endorsement.
Other fires affecting ballots have been recently reported across the country. Last week, a mailbox outside a Phoenix post office was set on fire, damaging an unknown number of ballots. A 35-year-old man was charged with arson in connection with the incident. The Phoenix Police Department said he told them it was not politically motivated.
The fires come after the FBI and Department of Homeland Security recently issued a bulletin raising concerns βelection-related grievances,β such as a belief in voter fraud, could motivate domestic extremists to engage in violence in the weeks before and after the November election.
In the intelligence bulletin obtained by CNN, the agencies said some domestic violent extremists likely see publicly accessible locations, including ballot drop boxes, as βattractive targets.β
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