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    You are at:Home»State News»Grandmother: Church played role in disputed Kobach firing

    Grandmother: Church played role in disputed Kobach firing

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    By KMAN Staff on August 23, 2017 State News
    In this Wednesday, May 17, 2017 photo, Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach talks with a reporter in his office in Topeka, Kan. Kobach has been picked by President Donald J. Trump to help lead a new commission on election fraud. (AP Photo/Orlin Wagner)
    In this May 17, 2017 photo, Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach talks with a reporter in his office in Topeka. Kobach has been picked by President Donald J. Trump to help lead a new commission on election fraud. (AP Photo/Orlin Wagner)

    TOPEKA — The grandmother of a woman suing over her 2013 firing from the Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach’s office has testified the woman’s failure to go to church was a factor in her dismissal.

    The Topeka Capital-Journal reports Margie Canfield also told jurors Tuesday in Topeka that Kobach’s chief deputy, Eric Rucker, asked her to do the firing of granddaughter Courtney Canfield. Margie Canfield says that’s even though she didn’t work in that office and hadn’t hired her granddaughter.

    Rucker countered he decided to dismiss Courtney Canfield at the deputy assistant secretary of state’s behest after she was sent home from work because of an office “altercation.”

    Rucker says he asked Margie Canfield to deliver the news to her granddaughter about her firing to avoid creating an office scene.

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