From the Brad Blog.
The Florida Election Commission has decided that the statute of limitations has run on Ann Coulter's alleged perjury and vote fraud because the operative date is the date she registered to vote, which was in 2005.
This does appear to settle the matter as far as Florida officials are concerned. In previous investigations, the police, state's attorneys, and election commissioner have decided that there was no probable cause to find that she intentionally broke the law by providing a false address on her voter registration and on her driver's license application, because she was supposedly concerned about a stalker.
I have diaried on this issue in the past, here and here. There is a 5-year statute of limitations on federal crimes, but I disagreed with Joe Conason as to whether Ms. Coulter's actions violated federal law (I do not believe they did).
At this point, I would say that there is the outside chance that Ms. Coulter could still be investigated by the New York Bar; there is no statute of limitations on lawyer misconduct. (see Title 22, New York Administrative Code section 1200.3). It is an outside chance, because it is less likely to result in a violation in the absence of a conviction.
Just goes to show, there are different rules for some of us.
Update: I should mention that the Election Commission was responding to a complaint that was filed in the latter part of this year, which is why the commission decided the SOL had run.