Assistant Prosecuting Attorney James Gutierrez said Burkman and Wohl were "held accountable" for infringing on voters' rights.Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost, whose office's consumer protection division referred Wohl and Burkman for prosecution, said in a statement Monday that "voter intimidation won’t be tolerated in Ohio.”Burkman, of Arlington, Virginia, and Wohl, of Irvine, California, have been accused of trying to dissuade 85,000 voters in urban areas across the country, through robocalls that included misinformation about mail-in voting leading up to the 2020 election in Illinois, Michigan, New York and Pennsylvania and other states.Last year, New York Attorney General Letitia James sought $2.7 million in penalties over robocalls that reached nearly 5,500 New Yorkers and made false claims that personal information of mail-in voters would be given to law enforcement, debt collectors and the government.Burkman and Wohl have also been accused of targeting critics or perceived opponents of former President Donald Trump, with debunked allegations of sexual misconduct and other criminal activity.Some of their schemes have focused on then-Democratic presidential candidates Kamala Harris, Pete Buttigieg and Elizabeth Warren, as well as former special counsel Robert Mueller."