Courts

Wausau's mayor won't face charges over removing a ballot drop box in 2024

Wausau Mayor Doug Diny posed for photos as he removed a drop box for absentee ballots from outside the city hall in September 2024, and Fond du Lac County District Attorney Eric Toney announced that he was unable to prove criminal wrongdoing in an investigation of the incident.

Associated Press

April 8, 2026

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A weathered wood sign with stylized images of hills and trees and the words Welcome Home to Wausau and City Hall stands in a mulched garden bed in front of a multi-story masonry building with large glass windows in front of small grass lawn, a concrete ramp and a flagpole with a U.S. flag, withe light poles, buildings and leafless trees in the background to the side.

A flag flies on a flagpole in front of Wausau City Hall on Nov. 21, 2023. Mayor Doug Diny, who carted away a drop box intended for absentee ballots ahead of the 2024 election, won't face charges following a probe conducted by Fond du Lac County District Attorney Eric Toney. (Credit: PBS Wisconsin)


AP News

By Todd Richmond, AP

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — A Wisconsin mayor who carted away a drop box intended for absentee ballots before any votes were cast in the 2024 election won’t face any charges, a special prosecutor announced April 8.

Wausau Mayor Doug Diny posed for photos wearing a hard hat and work gloves as he removed the drop box from outside the city hall in September 2024. City workers hadn’t yet unlocked the box but voters had started to receive their absentee ballots, according to the city’s elections clerk, Kaitlyn Bernarde.

The move became a flashpoint over whether communities in swing state Wisconsin should allow absentee ballot drop boxes. Diny returned the box a week later after Bernarde raised questions about election integrity. The mayor denied he did anything wrong, saying the box was not secured to the ground and that anyone could have stolen it so he decided to secure it in City Hall.

The city’s ethics board determined in October 2024 that Diny violated Wausau’s ethics policy. A state Justice Department investigation found no basis for charges.

Wausau’s mayor is officially a nonpartisan position, but Diny campaigned on his opposition to absentee drop boxes and had Republican backing during his run.

Fond du Lac County District Attorney Eric Toney, a Republican running against Democratic Attorney General Josh Kaul in the November 2026 elections, launched another probe acting as a special prosecutor. Toney said April 8 he would not be able to prove any charges beyond a reasonable doubt. He noted that Wisconsin law prohibits breaking open a ballot box and tampering with ballots found in a ballot box, but the box Diny moved remained sealed and contained no ballots.

Toney also said the drop box didn’t meet the definition of a ballot box because it was intended as a receptacle for multiple city materials, including ballots and payments. He cited the Wisconsin Elections Commission in saying ballot boxes are used in a polling place rather than for returning absentee ballots.

Diny did not immediately return email and voicemail messages seeking comment on Toney’s conclusions.