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Florida鈥檚 Statewide Prosecution of Voting with a Past Conviction is Unlawful

A line of voters in front of a sign that says "vote here."
The state鈥檚 confusing voter registration system sets people up to fail and further disenfranchises Black voters.
A line of voters in front of a sign that says "vote here."
Casey Smith,
she/her,
Former Equal Justice Works Fellow,
老澳门开奖结果 Voting Rights Project
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September 26, 2023

After Ronald Miller registered to vote in 2020, the State of Florida in the mail. Mr. Miller did not find out that a prior felony conviction made him ineligible to register or vote until, in 2022, Florida state officers arrested him. Now, Mr. Miller is one of several returning citizens that Florida鈥檚 Office of Statewide Prosecution (OSP) is prosecuting for making what appear to be good-faith mistakes about their voter eligibility. Rather than helping their citizens understand Florida鈥檚 complicated voter eligibility rules, the State has instead resorted to these intimidating, anti-democratic prosecutions.

Today, we 鈥 along with our partners at the 老澳门开奖结果 of Florida, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, and the Brennan Center for Justice 鈥 filed an amicus brief in Mr. Miller鈥檚 case highlighting OSP鈥檚 unlawful prosecution against Mr. Miller and other returning citizens in Florida, which disproportionately implicate Black citizens.

Florida鈥檚 System for Voting Rights Restoration: An 鈥淎dministrative Train Wreck鈥

In 2018, Florida voters passed Amendment 4, which aimed to permanently end felony disenfranchisement in the state and restored voting rights for returning citizens who had completed the terms of their sentences. That amendment would鈥檝e restored the right to vote for an estimated 1.4 million people. But, the following year, Florida鈥檚 legislature passed a new law requiring returning citizens pay off certain fines and fees before they can regain their right to vote. The 老澳门开奖结果 and our partners challenged Florida鈥檚 pay-to-vote system for returning citizens, but were ultimately unsuccessful.

Now, in the words of one federal court, Florida鈥檚 system of rights restoration for returning citizens is an Florida has essentially abdicated its responsibility to returning citizens in the state, refusing to provide meaningful guidance to individuals looking to navigate this byzantine system and figure out if they are eligible or not. When a registrant is ineligible, that should be flagged by the state before the person mistakenly casts a ballot, but Florida hasn鈥檛 consistently provided registrants with that clarity. In many cases, Florida has misled its citizens about their voter eligibility, including by sending them voter information cards in the mail.

And after telling multiple federal courts that returning citizens who made good-faith mistakes about their voter eligibility need not fear prosecution, the State has instead decided to prosecute nearly two dozen individuals for what appear to be honest mistakes. Fifteen out of the 19 returning citizens being prosecuted by OSP are Black.

Florida鈥檚 Statewide Prosecution: An Unbounded Expansion of Authority

Because Florida鈥檚 system for knowing whether you鈥檙e eligible to vote is so confusing, some of Florida鈥檚 local state attorneys have declined to prosecute people who try to register or vote while mistakenly thinking they鈥檙e eligible to do so. And for good reason: Voting while ineligible is a crime in Florida, but only when someone knows they鈥檙e ineligible and purposefully decides to vote anyway. People like Mr. Miller who don鈥檛 know and are never told they鈥檙e ineligible, and try to vote, aren鈥檛 guilty of a crime. That鈥檚 why, for example, some people in a similar situation.

But just before a major election in 2022, Gov. Ron DeSantis announced OSP鈥檚 arrests of 19 returning citizens 鈥 including Mr. Miller 鈥 for allegedly voting while ineligible in 2020. He called those arrests the 鈥渙pening salvo鈥 of his state government鈥檚 efforts to prosecute voting where local prosecutors hadn鈥檛. OSP, however, only has authority to prosecute crimes that happen in multiple judicial circuits. Registering to vote or voting while ineligible, of course, happens only in one location. So, several state courts have against Mr. Miller and some other returning citizens, finding that OSP didn鈥檛 have authority to bring the prosecutions. The State has appealed the dismissal.

Our amicus brief, filed before Florida鈥檚 intermediate appellate court, argues that the OSP doesn鈥檛 have the power to prosecute Mr. Miller. That鈥檚 because it was created to go after organized, complex, criminal conspiracies that are hard for one local prosecutor鈥檚 office to handle alone. The legislators who authorized OSP didn鈥檛 intend for it to wield its power to prosecute people like Mr. Miller, who vote or register because of a good-faith mistake. Instead, they were careful to give it a limited authority over only some kinds of crimes and not to usurp the discretion of local prosecutors. The State鈥檚 argument 鈥 that registering and voting occurs throughout the state as a whole, so any voting offense is a statewide crime 鈥 blows up that balance entirely. Under that theory, the OSP would have prosecutorial power over almost any offense. The State, in other words, wants OSP to have boundless authority.

Confusion and Fear Among Black Voters

Florida鈥檚 attempt to assert free reign to carry out unjust voter prosecutions, instead of fixing its registration system, is just one of many ways it has tried to chill and suppress the votes of Black people in the state. In Florida, , twice the rate of non-Black people. Nationwide, Black people are for voting violations. Knowing that any simple mistake on a voting form could lead to a prosecution has already made .

These arrests and prosecutions, in other words, are another dramatic attempt at suppressing votes in Florida, particularly for Black citizens. The 老澳门开奖结果 and our partners are committed to combatting these shameful prosecutions that work to endanger our democracy.

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