Home>Articles>DOJ Secures Guilty Plea from Skid Row Election Fraudster Exposed by O’Keefe Media Group Undercover Investigation

Brenda Brown exchanges cash for voter registrations (Screenshot)

DOJ Secures Guilty Plea from Skid Row Election Fraudster Exposed by O’Keefe Media Group Undercover Investigation

Brenda Brown admitted to a decades-long ‘cash-for-ballots’ scheme in which she worked as a paid ‘petition circulator’ for ballot initiatives, referendums, and recalls

By Megan Barth, May 18, 2026 10:47 am

 In a significant victory for election integrity, the U.S. Department of Justice announced Monday that Brenda Lee Brown Armstrong, a 64-year-old longtime petition circulator from Marina del Rey also known as “Anika” or Brenda Brown, has agreed to plead guilty to a federal felony charge of paying individuals, including homeless people on Los Angeles’ Skid Row, to register to vote. 

The charge stems directly from an undercover investigation by O’Keefe Media Group (OMG), which captured Armstrong on hidden camera engaging in a cash-for-ballots scheme targeting vulnerable homeless individuals. As previously reported by the California Globe, OMG’s undercover videos exposed how Armstrong and others operated a forgery pyramid on Skid Row, paying cash, cigarettes, and other inducements to collect signatures and voter registrations for ballot initiatives. 

According to the DOJ’s plea agreement, Armstrong admitted to a roughly 20-year scheme in which she worked as a paid “petition circulator” for ballot initiatives, referendums, and recalls. Coordinators paid her per registered voter signature.

To maximize her earnings, she targeted Skid Row’s dense homeless population, offering payments of $2 to $3 (and sometimes cigarettes or phone cards) not only for petition signatures but also to complete voter registration forms. 

On multiple occasions, she even supplied her own former Los Angeles address for those without one, potentially routing vote-by-mail ballots to a location where the registrant did not reside. 

The scheme violated federal law by paying people to register to vote in federal elections. Armstrong is charged with one felony count under 52 U.S.C. § 10307(c), which carries a statutory maximum of five years in federal prison, three years of supervised release, and a $10,000 fine. She is scheduled to make her initial appearance Monday morning in U.S. District Court in Santa Ana and is expected to formally enter her guilty plea in the coming weeks. 

Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division issued a statement underscoring the case’s importance:

“False registrations undermine Americans’ faith in elections – even more so when payoffs are involved. This Justice Department is committed to ensuring that all U.S. elections are fair and free from illegal meddling – so that all Americans can accept the results with confidence.” 

The FBI and investigators from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California conducted the probe. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Michael Wheat and Nandor Kiss are prosecuting the case. 

Armstrong’s guilty plea marks a rare but important instance of accountability in a state long plagued by questions over election security. Independent journalism, rather than state officials or legacy media, drove the investigation that forced federal action.

 As James O’Keefe noted in breaking the news on X, his team’s work directly led to this outcome,  a reminder that citizen journalists continue to play a critical role where government oversight has fallen short.

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