CONCORD, N.H. ā A political consultant who sent voters artificial intelligence-generated robocalls mimicking former President Joe Biden last year went on trial Thursday in New Hampshire, where jurors are being asked to consider not just his guilt or innocence but whether the state actually held its first-in-the-nation presidential primary.
āThis case is about a brazen attack on the integrity of the 2024 New Hampshire presidential primary election,ā Assistant Attorney General Brendan O'Donnell said in opening statements in Belknap County Superior Court.
Recommended Videos
Steven Kramer, who faces decades in prison if convicted of voter suppression and impersonating a candidate, has admitted orchestrating a message sent to thousands of voters two days before the Jan. 23, 2024, primary. The message played an AI-generated voice similar to the Democratic presidentās that used his catchphrase āWhat a bunch of malarkeyā and, as prosecutors allege, suggested that voting in the primary would preclude voters from casting ballots in November.
āItās important that you save your vote for the November election,ā voters were told. āYour votes make a difference in November, not this Tuesday.ā
Kramer, who owns a firm specializing in get-out-the-vote projects, has said he wasnāt trying to influence the election but rather wanted to send a wake-up call about the potential dangers of AI when he paid a New Orleans magician $150 to create the recording.
āMaybe Iām a villain today, but I think in the end we get a better country and better democracy because of what Iāve done, deliberately,ā Kramer told The Associated Press in February 2024.
Ahead of the trial, prosecutors sought to prevent Kramer from arguing that the primary was a meaningless straw poll because it wasnāt sanctioned by the Democratic National Committee. At Bidenās request, the DNC dislodged New Hampshire from its traditional early spot in the nominating calendar, but later dropped its threat not to seat the stateās national convention delegates. Biden did not put his name on the ballot or campaign there, but won as a write-in.
The state argued such evidence was irrelevant and could confuse jurors, but Judge Elizabeth Leonard denied the motion in March, saying the DNCās actions and Kramerās understanding of them were relevant to his motive and intent. She did grant the prosecutionās request that the court accept as fact that the state held its presidential primary election as defined by law on Jan. 23, 2024. Jurors will be informed of that conclusion but wonāt be required to accept it.
Defense says the only attack came from the DNC
In his opening statement, defense attorney Thomas Reid said the robocall was Kramer's āopinion and commentaryā on the DNC's initial decision to block the state's delegates to the convention.
āThat, ladies and gentlemen, was a brazen attack on your primary,ā he said, referring to the DNC's actions. āAnd it wasn't done by Steve Kramer.ā
āHe didn't see it as a real election, because it wasn't,ā Reid said.
Kramer faces 11 felony charges, each punishable by up to seven years in prison, alleging he attempted to prevent or deter someone from voting based on āfraudulent, deceptive, misleading or spurious grounds or information.ā The 11 candidate impersonation charges each carry a maximum sentence of a year in jail.
Kramerās attorney argued that his client didnāt impersonate a candidate because the message didnāt include Bidenās name, and Biden wasnāt a declared candidate in the primary. He also said the robocall message didn't tell anyone not to vote, a point quickly contradicted by the first half dozen witnesses for the prosecution.
āHow else would one take it?ā said Theodore Bosen, a retired lawyer from Berlin who received the call.
āThat was horrific to my sensibilities that anybody would be trying to influence the vote in any election,ā he said.
On cross-examination, witnesses all said the calls didn't deter them from voting, and none believed that doing so would preclude them from voting in the general election. They described varying levels of awareness of the DNCās decision, and some agreed with Kramerās lawyer that they would want someone to tell them if their vote āwasnāt going to count.ā
O'Donnell, the prosecutor, told jurors that Kramer tried to minimize his connection to the calls, including using his father's online banking account to pay the magician and fabricating the name of a āclientā when emailing a company involved in sending the calls. And he didn't contact authorities until the magician publicly identified him and authorities had begun tracing the calls to him, O'Donnell said.
āHe knew it was wrong and was trying to get away with it,ā O'Donnell said.
Trial begins as the national landscape on AI is shifting
Kramer has been fined $6 million by the Federal Communications Commission, but it's unclear whether he has paid it. The FCC did not respond to a request for comment earlier this week.
The agency was developing AI-related rules when Donald Trump won the presidency, but has since shown signs of a possible shift toward loosening regulations. And though many states have enacted legislation regulating AI deepfakes in political campaigns, House Republicans in Congress recently added a clause to their signature tax bill that would ban states and localities from regulating artificial intelligence for a decade.