A Marina del Rey woman has agreed to plead guilty in a federal voter registration fraud case that prosecutors say lasted nearly 20 years and involved paying homeless individuals on Los Angeles’ Skid Row to register to vote, as reported by Trending Politics News.
The U.S. Department of Justice announced Monday that 64-year-old Brenda Lee Brown Armstrong, also known as “Anika,” was charged with one felony count of paying another person to register to vote.
The federal charge carries a maximum sentence of five years in prison.
PAY-TO-REGTISTER to VOTE scheme EXPOSED with woman FEDERALLY CHARGED in Los Angeles, California. Huge win for election integrity!
Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon:
“False registrations undermine Americans’ faith in elections – even more so when payoffs are… pic.twitter.com/35LabjPR6C— The SCIF (@TheSCIF) May 18, 2026
According to federal prosecutors, Armstrong worked for roughly two decades as a “petition circulator,” collecting signatures for California ballot initiatives, referendums, and recall efforts.
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Petition circulators are often paid based on the number of valid signatures they collect, and signatures from registered voters carry more value in that process.
Authorities said Armstrong traveled throughout Los Angeles County gathering signatures before submitting them to coordinators, who paid her based on how many registered voters signed the petitions.
Prosecutors said that the payment structure created an incentive for Armstrong to make sure people were registered to vote before signing.
Federal investigators said Armstrong frequently worked in Skid Row, where large homeless populations allowed her to collect signatures quickly.
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Prosecutors said she paid people cash, usually between $2 and $3, to sign petitions connected to California ballot measures.
According to the plea agreement cited by the Justice Department, Armstrong’s operation expanded no later than 2025. Prosecutors said she began paying individuals not only to sign petitions, but also to complete voter registration forms.
Investigators said many homeless individuals did not have permanent addresses. Prosecutors alleged that Armstrong handled that issue by giving some registrants her former Los Angeles address to list on voter registration forms.
Because California automatically mails ballots to registered voters, authorities said ballots could have been sent to an address where those people did not actually live.
The Justice Department said Armstrong knowingly paid another person to register to vote on Jan. 30 as part of the operation. That incident became part of the federal charge against her.
Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon said the conduct described by prosecutors damages public confidence in elections.
“False registrations undermine Americans’ faith in elections,” Dhillon said in the DOJ announcement.
Dhillon also said the department is committed to ensuring elections remain “fair and free from illegal meddling.”
UPDATE ~ NEW DETAILS: CALIFORNIA ELECTION FRAUDSTER PLEADS GUILTY IN SKID ROW SIGNATURE SCHEME
A California woman exposed in an investigation tied to ballot petition fraud has pleaded guilty after allegedly collecting voter registrations and signatures from homeless individuals… pic.twitter.com/iGzKF01UyG— Sergeant News Network (@sgtnewsnetwork) May 18, 2026
The FBI and investigators with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California handled the investigation. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Michael Wheat and Nandor Kiss are prosecuting the case.
The case is drawing attention because it involves election integrity, voter registration safeguards, and California’s ballot and vote-by-mail systems.
California automatically sends mail ballots to registered voters, a system critics have long argued can create vulnerabilities if voter rolls are not properly maintained.
JUST IN🚨: Marina del Rey woman Brenda Lee Brown Armstrong, 64 (aka “Anika”), has agreed to plead guilty to federal charges for paying homeless people on LA’s Skid Row $2–$3 each to register to vote often using her own former address. pic.twitter.com/YCCtW6JOox
— THE 17PRIME (@Theanonprime2) May 19, 2026
Supporters of the system have argued there is little evidence of widespread fraud capable of changing election outcomes.
Armstrong is expected to make her initial appearance in federal court in Santa Ana and formally enter her guilty plea in the coming weeks.
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