Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Judge rules against Florida voting law

Felon payment terms unconstitu­tional

- PATRICIA MAZZEI

MIAMI — A Florida law requiring people with serious criminal conviction­s to pay court fines and fees before they can register to vote is unconstitu­tional, a federal judge ruled Sunday, declaring that such a requiremen­t would amount to a poll tax and discrimina­te against felons who cannot afford to pay.

Florida did not explicitly impose a poll tax, Judge Robert Hinkle of the U.S. District Court in Tallahasse­e wrote, but by conditioni­ng felons’ voting rights to fees that fund the routine operations of the criminal justice system, it effectivel­y created “a tax by any other name.”

“The Twenty-Fourth Amendment precludes Florida from conditioni­ng voting in federal elections on payment of these fees and costs,” Hinkle wrote, calling the restrictio­n an unconstitu­tional “pay-to-vote system.”

The judge granted a permanent injunction to civil-rights groups that challenged the law as discrimina­tory for the majority of felons, many of whom are indigent. The state is expected to appeal. However, much of Sunday’s ruling is built on a previous ruling by the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta, which would hear any appeal.

“This really is a landmark decision for voting rights,” said Julie Ebenstein, senior staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, one of the groups that sued. “It’s a decision that will likely affect hundreds of thousands of voters — and it’s been a long time coming.”

Whether the decision will have immediate electoral impact is unclear.

With the November presidenti­al election looming, voter registrati­on groups will now likely redouble their efforts to sign up people released from prison after felony conviction­s. Major elections in Florida are frequently decided by thin margins, and expanding the electorate by even a modest number of new voters could prove decisive.

The appeals court fasttracke­d its earlier decision in the case, knowing that the election is approachin­g. But, with an appeal likely — and legal and political steps beyond that uncertain — it’s too early to assume that people affected by the ruling will be able to register to vote in time for November — or how many will vote even if they do.

The Florida secretary of state, who oversees elections, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment about Sunday’s ruling.

For decades, all Florida felons were barred from the ballot box. But in 2018, voters approved a landmark measure known as Amendment 4, automatica­lly restoring voting rights for people who have completed their sentences for felonies other than murder or sex crimes.

The Republican-controlled Legislatur­e then adopted a new restrictio­n — that felons had to settle their financial obligation­s to the court before having their eligibilit­y to vote restored. Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, signed it into law last year. The state’s lawyers argued that voters knew when they supported Amendment 4, the measure restoring voting rights, that felons would have to pay their outstandin­g debts before becoming eligible to vote.

But the judge roundly rejected that argument and noted that the state has no uniform way to let felons know how much they owe or have already paid.

“Surely very few Florida voters knew that every Florida felony conviction results in an order to pay hundreds of dollars in fees and costs intended to fund the government, even when the judge does not choose to impose a fine as part of the punishment and there is no victim to whom restitutio­n is owed,” Hinkle wrote in his 125-page opinion.

“Surely very few Florida voters knew that fees and costs were imposed regardless of ability to pay, that the overwhelmi­ng majority of felons who would otherwise be eligible to vote under Amendment 4 owed amounts they were unable to pay, and that the State had no ability to determine who owed how much.”

He upbraided Florida for failing to come up with a satisfacto­ry way for felons to check how much they might owe or show the state that they could not afford to pay.

During the trial, Hinkle did agree with lawyers for the state when they said that there was no evidence to show that legislator­s intended to cause a racial disparity when they adopted the fee payback requiremen­t. But the judge also noted there was nonetheles­s a clear “racial impact,” because so many Florida felons are black or Hispanic.

The judge during the trial had pressed Mohammad Jazil, a lawyer for the Florida secretary of state, the official who oversees elections, about possible partisan motives.

“Why is it that all the Republican­s voted ‘yes’ and all the Democrats voted ‘no’?” Hinkle said. “That is not a coincidenc­e. It would be stunning if somebody told me that they did not realize that African Americans tend to vote Democratic more than Republican.”

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