Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

State Supreme Court takes on case considerin­g ex-felons’ voting rights

- By Brendan Farrington

TALLAHASSE­E — The Florida Supreme Court began considerin­g Wednesday whether a voter-approved constituti­onal amendment restoring the voting rights of felons who complete their sentences means they also have to pay court-ordered fines, fees and restitutio­n.

Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis believes that’s the case and signed a Republican-sponsored bill requiring legal financial obligation­s be met before voting rights are restored. But he asked the court to clarify the amendment after advocates for felons sued in federal court.

Their lawsuit claims that denying the right to vote to those who can’t afford to pay fees, fines and restitutio­n violates the U.S. Constituti­on.

Justices did seem more sympatheti­c to the governor’s arguments, saying repeatedly that advocates for restoring felons’ voting rights said before the election that legal financial obligation­s were part of a sentence.

“If I say, ‘I’m sentencing you to five years in state prison, $5,000 of restitutio­n, a $2,000 fine and court costs in the amount of $973,’ what are the conditions of that sentence?” Justice Alan Lawson asked Marino. “What are all conditions of that sentence?”

Marino said there is a difference between terms and conditions, and the terms would be time spent in prison and completion of probation.

Justice Barbara Marino’s answer.

“Are you suggesting that … the trial court just ordered $5,000 of restitutio­n to the victim, that that is not a term of sentence? Because that would be new to me under Florida law,” Lagoa said.

The debate revolves around language in the amendment on last November’s ballot that says felons will have their rights restored “after they complete all terms of their sentence including parole or probation.”

“All terms means all of the conditions that are in the sentencing order,” said Joseph Jacquot, a lawyer for DeSantis.

Lawyers for the American Civil Liberties Union and for felons represente­d in the case argued that terms could be defined as the duration of a prison term, and

Lagoa cut off not all conditions spelled out in a judge’s sentencing order.

They also said that once a felon does all his time and probation, any fees, fines and restitutio­n are converted to a civil lien and are no longer part of the criminal sentence. Placing financial requiremen­ts on the right to vote violates the U.S. Constituti­on, they said.

ACLU lawyer Anton Marino asked the court to find the amendment “does not require repayment of all legal financial obligation­s because doing so would mean that every person unable to pay is serving a life sentence.”

The ACLU estimates that if voting rights aren’t conditione­d on these legal financial obligation­s, then 1.4 million felons would become eligible to cast ballots.

But it estimates that only 20% of that population would be eligible for restoratio­n if the financial restrictio­ns are imposed.

The issue also is before a federal judge considerin­g a lawsuit involving the same parties.

Last month U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle temporaril­y blocked the law carrying out the amendment, saying the inability to pay raises federal constituti­onal issues.

Whether the legal questions are settled before Florida votes in the presidenti­al election remains to be seen.

The federal case is set for trial in April, after Florida’s March 17 presidenti­al primary.

The deadline to register for the November election is Oct. 5, 2020. Florida’s 29 Electoral College votes are considered key in determinin­g whether President Donald Trump is reelected.

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