Los Angeles Times

Texas woman gets 5 years for voter fraud

Convicted felon says she didn’t know she couldn’t cast ballot while on probation.

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FORT WORTH, Texas — A Texas woman was sentenced to five years in prison for voting in the 2016 presidenti­al election when she was ineligible because she was on probation.

Crystal Mason, 43, will appeal the punishment handed down last week in Fort Worth, her attorney said. Mason is a former tax preparer who was convicted in 2012 on charges related to inflating refunds for clients.

She testified that she didn’t know people convicted of felonies can’t vote until they complete their sentence, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram reported.

She told the newspaper last year after her indictment that she had gone to vote at her mother’s encouragem­ent and wasn’t told when released from federal prison that she could not cast a ballot.

Mason’s illegal voting case was prosecuted in Tarrant County, the same place where a Mexican national last year was sentenced to eight years in prison over illegal voting.

Voting illegally in Texas is a second-degree felony punishable by up to 20 years in prison.

Mason used a provisiona­l ballot to vote, and it was not counted.

She has said that she believes she was being targeted for prosecutio­n because she voted for Democrat Hillary Clinton over Republican Donald Trump for president.

Tarrant County leans Republican.

Mason’s attorney, J. Warren St. John, did not immediatel­y return a phone message Saturday.

Voter fraud conviction­s are rare, but Texas Republican­s leaders have zealously pursued a crackdown on illegal voting in recent years. A federal judge has twice blocked Texas’ voter ID law, including a revised version last year that was backed by the Trump administra­tion.

At the time of the 2016 election, Mason was on probation after pleading guilty to defrauding the federal government in 2011. She served nearly three years in prison on a five-year sentence.

After her prison release, she was put on a three-year term of supervised release. She also had to pay $4.2 million in restitutio­n, according to court documents.

Mason testified that when she voted in November 2016, she signed a provisiona­l ballot affidavit stating that she had not been convicted of a felony.

Prosecutor­s said she signed the form with the intent to vote illegally, but Mason’s attorney called it a mistake.

 ?? Ron Jenkins Getty Images ?? VOTERS in Fort Worth. Crystal Mason, on probation for a 2012 felony conviction, broke Texas law by voting in the 2016 election before her sentence was complete.
Ron Jenkins Getty Images VOTERS in Fort Worth. Crystal Mason, on probation for a 2012 felony conviction, broke Texas law by voting in the 2016 election before her sentence was complete.

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