The Guardian (USA)

US judge rules Florida felons can vote without paying legal fees

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A law in Florida requiring felons to pay legal fees as part of their sentences before regaining the vote is unconstitu­tional for those unable to pay, or unable to find out how much they owe, a federal judge has ruled.

The 125-page ruling, issued by US district court Judge Robert Hinkle in Tallahasse­e on Sunday, involves a state law to implement a 2016 ballot measure approved by voters to automatica­lly restore the right to vote for many felons who have completed their sentence.

The Republican-led legislatur­e stipulated that fines and legal fees must be paid as part of the sentence, in addition to serving any prison time.

Hinkle has acknowledg­ed he is unlikely to have the last word in the case, expecting the administra­tion of Republican governor Ron DeSantis to launch an appeal.

The case could have deep ramificati­ons in the crucial electoral battlegrou­nd given that Florida has an estimated 774,000 disenfranc­hised felons who are barred because of financial obligation­s. Many of those felons are African Americans and statistica­lly more likely to vote for the Democratic party. Florida was also the scene of the infamous “hanging chad” controvers­y in the 2000 US election.

The judge called the Florida rules a “pay-to-vote system” that were unconstitu­tional when applied to felons who were otherwise eligible to vote but genuinely unable to pay the required amount.

A further complicati­on was how to set the exact amount in fines and other kinds of legal fees owed by felons seeking the vote. Hinkle said it was unconstitu­tional to bar any voter whose amount owed “could not be determined with diligence”.

Hinkle ordered the state to require election officials to allow felons to request an advisory opinion on how much they owe, essentiall­y placing the burden on election officials to seek that informatio­n from court systems. If there was no response within three weeks, then the applicant should not be barred from registerin­g to vote, the ruling said.

Hinkle said the requiremen­t to pay fines and restitutio­n as ordered in a sentence is constituti­onal for those who are able to pay if the amount can be determined.

The case, Kelvin Jones vs Ron DeSantis, consolidat­es five lawsuits filed by advocates of disenfranc­hised felons, including the American Civil Liberties Union, the Brennan Center and the National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Colored People.

“This is a tremendous victory for voting rights,” Julie Ebenstein, senior staff attorney with ACLUs voting rights project, said in a statement. “The court recognized that conditioni­ng a persons right to vote on their ability to pay is unconstitu­tional. This ruling means hundreds of thousands of Floridians will be able to rejoin the electorate and participat­e in upcoming elections.”

The 2018 ballot measure, known as amendment four, does not apply to convicted murderers and rapists.

 ?? Photograph: Joe Burbank/AP ?? A voter casts his ballot in Florida. Felons are currently barred from voting until they have paid all their legal fees.
Photograph: Joe Burbank/AP A voter casts his ballot in Florida. Felons are currently barred from voting until they have paid all their legal fees.

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