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'Suspicious' donations to political campaigns might have another explanation, 9NEWS finds

When 9NEWS started contacting frequent donors and their families, we found a potentially troubling explanation.

Chris Vanderveen

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Published: 8:30 PM MDT October 9, 2024
Updated: 9:52 PM MDT October 9, 2024

With the click of a button, five bucks can flow from your bank account and into the campaign coffers of some of your favorite politicians. The ease of giving has turned into a veritable boon for both political parties, which now often raise tens of millions per day with the help of individual, and oftentimes small, donations.

You’ve probably seen or even received a few of the pitches yourself on your cellphone or in an email. They generally follow a pattern. “We need 5 bucks by Wednesday!” “We haven’t heard from you in ages!”

Most of us simply ignore the requests.

But a few of us like to give. And some of those few like to give a lot. Like, multiple times a day. Every day. For weeks. That kind of “a lot.”

It’s led some to assume something suspicious, perhaps even illegal, is taking place.

When 9NEWS Investigates started looking into what we’ll call the “frequent donors” in early August, we didn’t exactly know what we’d eventually find.

More than two months later, we have yet to find any definitive proof of fraud, but we have found something we believe worthy of additional review.

At least a few of the frequent donors are dealing with varying levels of cognitive decline. 

One, according to his daughter, has advanced Alzheimer’s. Federal Elections Commission data indicates her father has donated more than $100,000 since the start of last year. Another is a Vietnam veteran suffering from what he calls the long-term effects of Agent Orange exposure.

His hands constantly shake, and he admits, “I don’t remember things.” 

He’s donated more than $50,000, mostly through the ActBlue platform.

Experts in cognitive decline tell us the methods used by the political parties that make it so easy and enticing to donate are now taking advantage of people who oftentimes can’t remember a donation made a week or, in some instances, an hour ago.

The daughter of one of the frequent donors tells us the parties are taking advantage of people like her mom. 

“This is a form of elder abuse in my opinion,” she told us.

For the purposes of this story and to help protect the identities of the people we believe to be vulnerable, we have chosen to identify the donors – and their families – by using only their first names. We know some of you might disagree with our decision, but we made it once we learned more about the people we were contacting.

Their names are public, but we’ve decided not to make them any more so.

In one instance, a woman who had donated thousands couldn’t recall by the end of a five-minute call who I was or why I was calling.

“These are real people who are giving this money, and for campaigns to treat them as replaceable and disposable, yes, that raises some ethical concerns they should be thinking about,” said Derek Willis, a data journalist and lecturer at the University of Maryland. “There has to be the recognition that there is the potential for harm.” 

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