(File Photo of a Gavel)
Noah Haswell, Beaver County Radio News
(Harrisburg, PA) Pennsylvania Attorney General Dave Sunday announced that an Allegheny County jury has convicted a man for forging signatures on nomination petitions for a U.S. congressional candidate prior to the 2022 primary election.
Following a weeklong trial, Kirk Rice of Allegheny County was found guilty this morning of theft by deception, forgery, perjury and related charges. Sentencing is scheduled for Aug. 17.
According to testimony, Rice was paid $1,340 to collect 437 signatures for Democratic candidate Steve Irwin. Investigators determined the signatures — including one allegedly belonging to a federal judge — were falsified.
The Office of Attorney General said it interviewed dozens of people listed as signers, and none confirmed they had signed the petitions.
“This defendant deliberately undermined the integrity of Pennsylvania’s election process by falsifying signatures for financial gain,” Sunday said. “This type of conduct is taken very seriously as it threatens the foundation of our democracy. I applaud the agents and prosecutors whose work exposed the fraud and ultimately brought the offender to justice.”
According to testimony, Rice submitted 34 pages of signatures totaling 437 names, which were filed for Irwin’s nomination. He was paid per signature.
The campaign later discovered that Rice may have submitted fraudulent signatures, including the forged signature of U.S. District Court Judge Cathy Bissoon.
During the investigation, Rice admitted he did not go door-to-door, but instead collected signatures in Pittsburgh by entering businesses and gathering names without verifying whether signers were registered Democrats, a requirement of the petition process.
The case was prosecuted by Senior Deputy Attorney General Alexander Cashman.










