In August 2008, several voters filed a complaint with the D.C. Office of Campaign Finance, alleging that D.C. Councilmember Jack Evans had made unlawful use of government resources in his campaign for reelection. After investigating, the Office concluded that there had been no violation. The voters then sought review of that decision by the D.C. Board of Elections and Ethics, but the Board ruled (at Councilmember Evans’ urging) that the voters were not “adversely affected” by the OCF order, and thus lacked standing to seek Board review. We agreed to represent the voters in appealing that decision to the D.C. Court of Appeals, but the court rejected our arguments, finding that it was required to “defer to the Board’s interpretation of the regulation it has promulgated . . . even where the petitioner advances a more plausible reading of the regulations than that offered by the agency, it is the agency’s choice that receives substantial deference.”
Mallof v. D.C. Board of Elections and Ethics
Date filed
June 29, 2009
Status
Closed
Related Issues
Related content
LAS AMERICAS IMMIGRANT ADVOCACY CENTER V. KRISTI NOEM – ACCESS TO...
February 14, 2025K.Y. v. District of Columbia - challenging juvenile justice agency...
October 28, 2024Ebosele Oboh v. D.C. Department of Buildings - Excessive Fine...
February 28, 2023Taylor v. McDonough – The Government Should Take Care of Veterans...
February 24, 2023
St. Elizabeths Hospital Settles Case with Patients Who Endured...
February 14, 2023
3 Ways Courtwatch DC Challenged Injustice in 2022
December 20, 2022AMERICANS FOR IMMIGRANT JUSTICE V. U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND...
October 27, 2022