Oklahoma City voters will decide on a $2.7 billion municipal bond package — the biggest in the city’s history. The bond is divided into 11 propositions, with over half the funding centered around street improvements. Unlike a school bond, it will only need a simple majority to pass.
If convicted, 31-year-old Victoria Vincenza Dill faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison and/or a fine of up to $50,000.
An Oklahoma County woman has been indicted, accused of voting twice in the Nov. 2024 general election.Victoria Vincenza Dill, 31, is charged with one felony count of voting illegally.The Oklahoma State Election Board discovered Dill voted in person in Oklahoma County and submitted an absentee ballot in Payne County on the same day.
Oklahomans went to the polls on Tuesday to cast their votes on several elections that will have a major impact on the local level.
Conservative messaging and media strategy appear to be reshaping the race for governor, according to new poll.
Oklahoma voters in 27 counties cast ballots in an array of elections Tuesday, including the largest bond package in state history in Oklahoma City, which passed easily.
With the largest bond in the city's history on the ballot, here's what Oklahoma City residents need to know to vote in today's election.
An Oklahoma City woman has been accused of voting twice in the Nov. 5, 2024, general election. The state's multicounty grand jury indicted Victoria Vincenza Dill, 31, on Oct. 9 on a felony charge of voting illegally. The maximum punishment for the offense is five years in prison and a $50,000 fine.
An Oklahoma woman was indicted by the Oklahoma Multi-County Grand Jury on one felony count of voting illegally.
An Oklahoma woman, Victoria Vincenza Dill, 31, has been indicted for allegedly voting twice in the November 2024 general election, facing a felony charge of illegal voting that carries up to five years in prison and a $50,