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Nevada judge rejects Trump request for order over early voting
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Politics | Tue Nov 8, 2016 | 6:51pm EST

Nevada judge rejects Trump request for order over early voting

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Customers exit Cardenas supermarket, where an advance polling station for the U.S. presidential election was allowed to remain open late on November 4, in a east side neighborhood of Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. November 8, 2016. REUTERS/David Becker
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A customers exits Cardenas supermarket, where an advance polling station for the U.S. presidential election was allowed to remain open late on November 4, in a east side neighborhood of Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. November 8, 2016. REUTERS/David Becker
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A worker collects shopping carts at Cardenas supermarket, where an advance polling station for the U.S. presidential election was allowed to remain open late on November 4, in a east side neighborhood of Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. November 8, 2016. REUTERS/David Becker
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Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump shakes hands with a woman before voting at PS 59 in New York, New York, U.S. November 8, 2016. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
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By Dan Levine and Mica Rosenberg

A Nevada judge on Tuesday rejected Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump's request for records from a Las Vegas polling place that the campaign said had allowed people to vote after a deadline last week.

Trump and Democratic rival Hillary Clinton are in a close contest for Nevada's six electoral votes in Tuesday's election after a long and contentious campaign. Nevada is one of several states that permits early voting, and Las Vegas is viewed as a base of support for Clinton.

Nevada state law says voters who are in line at 8 p.m., when the polls close, must be allowed to cast their ballots. Trump's lawsuit, filed in a Nevada state court on Monday, said election officials violated state law because they allowed people to join the line after 8 p.m. at a polling location at a Latino market during last week's early voting period.

Trump, a New York businessman and reality TV personality who had never previously run for political office, said last month that he might not accept the outcome of the national election if he thinks it is unfair.

"Today may be the last time that ordinary citizens are able to stand up and say 'No' to an overreaching, unaccountable government controlled by a ruling establishment," Charles Munoz, the Nevada state director for Trump's campaign, said in a statement after the ruling.

The suit had asked the court to order officials to preserve various records from the Cardenas Market and to segregate ballots from the voting machines at issue.

At a court hearing in Las Vegas on Tuesday, a county attorney argued that election officials already preserve records. Sturman agreed, saying she did not want to issue an order that could help reveal which candidates were chosen by particular voters.

The Trump campaign also asked for information about poll workers on duty at the market, and Sturman said she was concerned they might face threats for helping people vote.

"Have you watched Twitter? Do you watch any cable news shows? People can get information and harass them," the judge said.

Clinton spokesman Glen Caplin said the campaign was pleased by the ruling. He described Trump's suit as "a desperate response to the record turnout we’re seeing in Nevada and across the country."

Dan Kulin, a spokesman for the Clark County Office of Public Communications, said that when early voting was taking place on Friday "most if not all" polling places had lines at the time they were scheduled to close.

"As has been our practice for many, many years, those early voting locations continued processing voters until the lines were gone," Kulin said.

(Reporting by Dan Levine in San Francisco and Mica Rosenberg in New York; Additional reporting by and Nate Raymond in New York; Editing by Bill Trott and Leslie Adler)

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