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SCHEDULE 4OFFENCES

Other voting offences

3.—(1) A person (P) is guilty of an offence if P —

(a)votes in person or by post in the referendum, whether as an elector or as proxy, or applies to vote by proxy or by post as an elector in the referendum knowing that P is subject to a legal incapacity to vote in the referendum; or

(b)applies for the appointment of a proxy to vote for P in the referendum knowing that P or the person to be appointed is subject to a legal incapacity to vote in the referendum; or

(c)votes, whether in person or by post, as proxy for some other person in the referendum, knowing that the other person is subject to a legal incapacity to vote.

(2) For the purposes of sub-paragraph (1), references to a person being subject to a legal incapacity to vote do not, in relation to things done before the day of the poll, include the person being below voting age if the person will be of voting age on that date.

(3) A person (P) is guilty of an offence if P —

(a)votes as an elector otherwise than by proxy more than once in the referendum;

(b)votes as an elector in person in the referendum when P is entitled to vote by post;

(c)votes as an elector in person in the referendum, knowing that a person appointed to vote as P’s proxy in the referendum either has already voted in person in the referendum or is entitled to vote by post in the referendum; or

(d)applies for a person to be appointed as P’s proxy to vote for P in the referendum without applying for the cancellation of a previous appointment of a third person then in force in respect of the referendum or without withdrawing a pending application for such an appointment in respect of the referendum.

(4) A person (P) is guilty of an offence if P —

(a)votes as proxy for the same elector more than once in the referendum;

(b)votes in person as proxy for an elector in the referendum when P is entitled to vote by post as proxy in the referendum for that elector; or

(c)votes in person as proxy for an elector in the referendum knowing that the elector has already voted in person in the referendum.

(5) A person (P) is guilty of an offence if P votes in the referendum as proxy for more than two persons of whom P is not the spouse, civil partner, parent, grandparent, brother, sister, child or grandchild.

(6) A person (P) is guilty of an offence if P knowingly induces or procures some other person to do an act which is, or but for that other person’s want of knowledge would be, an offence by that other person under the foregoing provisions of this paragraph.

(7) For the purposes of this paragraph a person who has applied for a ballot paper for the purpose of voting in person, or who has marked, whether validly or not, and returned a ballot paper issued for the purpose of voting by post, is deemed to have voted, but for the purpose of determining whether an application for a ballot paper constitutes an offence under sub-paragraph (5), a previous application made in circumstances which entitle the applicant only to mark a tendered ballot paper is, if the person does not exercise that right, to be disregarded.

(8) A person is not guilty of an offence under sub-paragraph (3)(b) or (4)(b) only by reason of the person’s having marked a tendered ballot paper in reliance on situations B, C or D in rule 28 of the Referendum Rules.

(9) An offence under this paragraph is an illegal practice, but the court before whom a person is convicted of any such offence may, if the court thinks it just in the special circumstances of the case, mitigate or entirely remit any incapacity imposed by virtue of paragraph 25.