LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Opponents of a proposal to block a planned casino in Arkansas asked the state Supreme Court Thursday to disqualify the measure from the November ballot.
Cherokee Nation Entertainment, which was awarded a license to build and operate the casino, and a newly formed affiliated group filed a lawsuit challenging the proposed constitutional amendment a day after the secretary of state's office said it qualified for the ballot.
The lawsuit accuses the ballot measure campaign, which is funded by Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, of violating several laws regarding signature gathering. The suit also challenges the wording of the ballot proposal, calling it “riddled with flaws.”
“Arkansans must be made aware of this deliberate scheme to openly violate Arkansas laws regarding canvassing and to mislead and confuse voters,” said Dover Mayor Roger Lee, an officer with Arkansas Canvassing Compliance Committee, which filed paperwork Thursday with the state to campaign against the measure.
Local Voters in Charge, the group campaigning for the ballot measure, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A spokesperson for Arkansas Secretary of State John Thurston, who is named as the defendant in the case, declined to comment.
The lawsuit claims that canvassers hired by the campaign were paid by signature, in violation of state law, and that they made repeated false statements about the measure when gathering signatures.
"I anticipate a number of legal challenges between now and November that will expose a systemic pattern of abuse in the signature canvassing campaign and an overwhelming mountain of evidence to support such challenges," Pope County Judge Ben Ross said.
Thurston's office on Wednesday said Local Voters in Charge had turned in more than enough valid signatures from registered voters to put it measure on the ballot.
The proposed amendment would revoke the license granted for a Pope County casino that has been hung up by legal challenges for the past several years. Pope County was one of four sites where casinos were allowed to be built under a constitutional amendment that voters approved in 2018. Casinos have already been set up in the other three locations.
Ross said the proposed constitutional amendment would deprive Arkansas of new tax revenue, quality jobs, and an entertainment destination.
"While competing out-of-state casino interests have contributed over $9 million dollars in the past four years in attempts to stave off competition under the pretense of giving Arkansans local control, they are, in fact, seeking to deprive our state of new tax revenue, quality jobs, and an entertainment destination," Ross said. "This attempt, in turn, would serve to negatively quash a growth catalyst for many other businesses seeking to locate in Russellville."
The state Racing Commission in June awarded Cherokee Nation Entertainment the license for the casino.
THV11 contributed to this report.