Delivering a harsh rebuke to Gov. Ron DeSantis, an appeals court on Wednesday upheld a federal judge’s decision that the state cannot bar voting by felons who can’t afford to pay court-ordered fees and fines.
A requirement that felons pay “legal financial obligations,” such as fees, fines and restitution, to be eligible to vote was part of a state law passed by the Republican-dominated Legislature last year. The law was aimed at carrying out a 2018 constitutional amendment that restored voting rights to felons who have completed their sentences.
U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle ruled in October that it is unconstitutional to deny the right to vote to felons who are “genuinely unable” to pay financial obligations. In a preliminary injunction, Hinkle said state officials need to come up with an administrative process in which felons could try to prove they are unable to pay financial obligations and should be able to vote. The state appealed the ruling.
Wednesday’s unanimous decision by a three-judge panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld Hinkle’s ruling.
“The long and short of it is that once a state provides an avenue to ending the punishment of disenfranchisement — as the voters of Florida plainly did — it must do so consonant with the principles of equal protection and it may not erect a wealth barrier absent a justification sufficient to overcome heightened scrutiny,” judges Lanier Anderson III, Stanley Marcus and Barbara Rothstein decided.
Requiring all felons to pay financial obligations violates equal protection rights guaranteed under the 14th Amendment because it “punishes those who cannot pay more harshly than those who can,” the panel wrote.
The state law “unconstitutionally punishes a class of felons based only on their wealth,” the Atlanta-based appeals court said.
DeSantis spokeswoman Helen Ferré said in an email the governor does not agree with the ruling and intends to seek a review by the full appeals court, known as an “en banc” review.
But voting- and civil-rights advocates who challenged the state law hailed Wednesday’s decision.
“The court unanimously ruled that a person’s right to vote is not contingent upon their ability to pay,” Julie Ebenstein, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union’s Voting Rights Project, said in a prepared statement. “This law is a modern-day poll tax. This ruling recognizes the gravity of elected officials trying to circumvent Amendment 4 to create voting roadblocks based on wealth.”
Desmond Meade — a felon who garnered international acclaim for his advocacy for the constitutional amendment — warned that the appeals-court ruling and Hinkle’s preliminary injunction applied only to the 17 plaintiffs in the case.
“There’s many more steps in this journey. There are many more levels that have to be reached before we can actually claim some type of victory,” Meade, executive director of the Florida Rights Restoration Coalition, said. “We are cautiously optimistic … because we don’t want to create an environment to where people are thinking that this thing applies to them and that it’s all smooth sailing from now, for them to only get disappointed again.”
He warned: “This can go on not only for months, but this can go on over a year or beyond. Right now we’re left with dealing with the now.”
All three judges who ruled on the matter were appointed by Democratic presidents: Barbara Rothstein, a senior district judge from Washington, D.C., “sitting by designation,” and and Appeals Court Judge Robert Anderson, a senior judge, were appointed by President Carter. Stanley Marcus was appointed by President Clinton.
Backers of the constitutional amendment contend that last year’s law could prevent hundreds of thousands of felons from registering to vote.
Before and after the passage of the amendment, felons could ask the state Board of Executive Clemency to restore their civil rights, including the right to vote. But as of Feb. 1, more than 23,000 cases were pending decisions by the board, including 10,710 cases seeking restoration of rights, according to the state Commission on Offender Review.
The constitutional amendment restored voting rights to felons “who have completed all terms of their sentence, including parole or probation,” excluding people “convicted of murder or a felony sexual offense.” Lawmakers during the 2019 legislative session then approved the requirement to pay “legal financial obligations.”
Hinkle’s preliminary injunction prohibited the state from taking any action to prevent the 17 plaintiffs in the case from registering to vote. But the judge agreed to a state request to put on hold part of the injunction that would allow felons to vote if they can show they are unable to pay fines or fees.
Hinkle, who has scheduled two-week hearing in April in the case, agreed to place a stay on that part of his decision until the Atlanta-based appeals court ruled or until Feb. 11, depending on which came first. The state asked the appeals court to extend Hinkle’s stay, but the court had not ruled on that request prior to Wednesday’s decision.
In the 78-page decision, the appellate judges said it is “rational” for the state to withhold benefits for felons who have the ability to pay fines and restitution.
“However, as for these 17 plaintiffs, who are indigent and genuinely unable to pay despite good faith efforts, collection is obviously futile and further punishment makes collection no more likely,” they added. “The state cannot draw blood from a stone.”
The judges rejected a state argument that requiring payment of financial obligations provides an incentive for felons to pay.
The state’s position, they wrote, “relies on the notion that the destitute would only, with the prospect of being able to vote, begin to scratch and claw for every penny, ignoring the far more powerful incentives that already exist for them — like putting food on the table, a roof over their heads, and clothes on their backs.”
The appellate judges relied in part on previous U.S. Supreme Court rulings, including what is known as the “Griffin-Bearden” line of cases that established the state may not treat criminal defendants more harshly on account of their poverty.
The Supreme Court has also determined that states may not extend punishment on account of inability to pay fines or fees, the judges wrote, pointing out that Florida’s “disenfranchisement” is a punishment that “visits the felon at every election.”
“The felon with money in the bank will be re-enfranchised. But the felon who can’t will continue to be barred. Merely because the state could strip the rights of both felons does not mean it can continue punishment for some and not others,” they wrote.
Defending the statute, the state’s attorneys argued that it gives felons avenues to regain their voting rights. Under the law, victims can agree to waive restitution and other costs; courts can convert the fees and fines into community service hours; and felons can seek restoration of rights by the Board of Executive Clemency.
But the judges wrote that all three options “suffer from a common and basic infirmity” by being “entirely discretionary in nature.”
In urging the court to keep Hinkle’s ruling on hold, the state argued his decision would create difficulties and be expensive for state and county elections officials. The state also argued that the injunction “could change the outcome of the upcoming elections.” And the state’s lawyers expressed concern about the integrity of the electoral process if Hinkle’s ruling took effect.
“We think these interests, while significant, are unavailing as compared to plaintiffs’ interest in their opportunity to exercise the core democratic right of voting,” the judges wrote.
The injunction only applies to the 17 plaintiffs, they pointed out.
“As close as Florida elections may be, the votes of these 17 are vanishingly unlikely to be outcome dispositive,” they wrote.
The appeals court left it up to the state to decide how to comply with Hinkle’s order, noting that officials already make decisions about criminal defendants’ finances when determining whether they qualify for representation by public defenders.
“Moreover, and perhaps most important, at the end of the day, it is Florida’s voters who have chosen to automatically re-enfranchise the state’s felons, and that decision has necessarily created an administrative burden on the state,” the judges wrote. “In sum, we think that the harms the state may suffer as a result of the preliminary injunction are demonstrably outweighed by those imposed on the plaintiffs.”
–Dara Kam, News Service of Florida, and FlaglerLive
John R Brady says
I guess these guys would not have a chance that that the Pardon and Chief would pardon them. Just a WAG wild ass guess
Stanley Hardy says
Barry’s no longer in office. PS I used Vox so even liberals would believe it… https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2016/11/23/13731448/obama-pardon-clemency-commutation
CB from PC says
The Amendment, as WRITTEN on the ballot, and as APPROVED by the VOTERS, REQUIRES all restitution and court costs under terms of sentencing be paid.
TIME TO PUT IT ON HOLD WHILE IT GOES THROUGH THE COMPLETE PROCESS OF BEING PUT ONCE AGAIN BEFORE THE VOTERS AFTER BEING RE-WRITTEN WITH THE NEW CONDITIONS.
Voting is a privilege, not a right.
Convicted Felons wasted that privilege by choice.
We all know who once again is attempting to pad the voter registration roles in order to keep themselves in office.
Never mind their decades of failed policies which are proven so with every passing day.
Mmpatiant says
Most ppl that have not been convicted of a felony merely was not charged.the average American commits muiltiple felonys every day with out knowingly doing so.and another 30% of Americans are just not charged with felonys because of age race wealth ect.every time you drink a glass of wine and drive you committed a felony.every time you buy medical marijuana you are committing a federal felony.every time you spank your child you are committing a felony.many ppl are felons because they are not wealthy or look diffrent.i myself am a convicted felon from 20 years ago because I beat up a child molester that was giving kids drugs for sexual favors.i did 15 years because I could not afford a attorney.my original sentence was 18 years to life.the federal court actually overturned my charge with out even me asking.some ppl who are convicted felons are actually way better people then most of you that have not been properly charged or cought.where as I can openly admit prison saved my life.maid me a better person and I actually had the opportunity to pay for my actions and become a great person.where the ppl that where never cought or under charged will never have the opportunity to correct there wrongs and actually do worse because they know there race age or wealth will always protect them from being a convicted felon.those are the scum of earth.always remember even the Bible says “the meek shall inhearit the earth” a meek person is one who can and is able to do things but chooses not to because they know it’s wrong,not those who don’t do things because they are not capable.i am by the way a die hard Republican and firmly believe in the death penalty .where I’ve seen evil in person and witnessed many things the average person could never survive
Gus Rumpf says
“The Amendment, as WRITTEN on the ballot, and as APPROVED by the VOTERS, REQUIRES all restitution and court costs under terms of sentencing be paid.
TIME TO PUT IT ON HOLD WHILE IT GOES THROUGH THE COMPLETE PROCESS OF BEING PUT ONCE AGAIN BEFORE THE VOTERS AFTER BEING RE-WRITTEN WITH THE NEW CONDITIONS.”
And to me that’s the way it shall be. No if’s and’s or but’s. And if it cannot be this way, then we need to go back to felons never being able to vote at all. The original intent, that I believed I voted on, was that felons would be able to vote only after justice is served and their “debt to society” paid. And I believe all rational, logical thinkers believed the same.
Mmpatiant says
All rights should be restored after you pay your “debt to society” there’s never been a mass shooting or a serial killer that was a convicted felon,and regardless of what the ignorant ppl believe,it’s easier for a criminal to get a gun then a non criminal.laws don’t stop gun violence in any way, it only restricts and makes it harder for someone who is actually a law abiding citizen to get a legal fire arm.