Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Home News Broward Palm Beach Sports Entertainment Travel Lifestyle Money Health Opinion Search Go!
HOT TOPICS Win A Free Dinner Golden Globes Get Tax Help Super Bowl XLIV Scott Rothstein Database: ER Injuries
Home > News > News
More than 30,000 Florida felons who by law should have been
Related stripped of their right to vote remain registered to cast ballots in
this presidential battleground state, a Sun Sentinel investigation
Should felons be has found.
allowed to vote? Many are faithful voters, with at least 4,900 turning out in past
elections.
j No, they gave up their
k
l
m
n
Another 5,600 are not likely to vote Nov. 4 — they're still in prison.
rights when they decided to
become criminals.
Of the felons who registered with a party, Democrats outnumber
Republicans more than two to one.
j Yes, but only on a case-
k
l
m
n
by-case basis.
Florida's elections chief, Secretary of State Kurt Browning,
acknowledged his staff has failed to remove thousands of
j Yes, if they've finished
k
l
m
n
ineligible felons because of a shortage of workers and a crush of
their sentences.
new registrations in this critical swing state.
j They should never lose
k
l
m
n
Browning said he was not surprised by the newspaper's
their voting rights.
findings. "I'm kind of shocked that the number is as low as it is,"
Vote he said.
Florida's felon ban originated before the Civil War, and today the
state remains one of 10 that restrict some felons from voting
even after they've served their time. The law requires state and
county elections officials to remove felons from voter rolls after
conviction and add them only when they've won clemency to
restore their voting rights.
Florida registers voters largely on an honor system, asking applicants to affirm on a signed form that they are
not convicted felons or that their rights have been restored. State law requires the Elections Division to conduct
criminal records checks only after voters are added to the rolls, and it takes months or even years to remove
those who are ineligible, the Sun Sentinel found.
"It's scandalous, really," said Lance deHaven-Smith, professor of public policy at Florida State University. "Why
do they have to cull the rolls after they get registered? They shouldn't get on the rolls in the first place."
Felons confused
Several felon voters interviewed by the Sun Sentinel expressed confusion over automatic clemency and said
they thought their voting rights had been restored. Some said they merely signed registration forms that were
filled out by volunteers.
"If I wasn't able to vote, they wouldn't have given me my [voter registration] card," said John A. Henderson, 55, a
Hallandale Beach Democrat. "I voted the last time and the times before that."
Henderson served about a year in prison in the late 1990s for battery and trafficking in cocaine. He said he was
unaware he needed to formally apply to restore his rights when he successfully registered to vote in 2002.
Henderson has since cast ballots in at least six elections and received three updated voter ID cards from the
Broward Supervisor of Elections Office, records show.
Broward elections officials were unaware of Henderson's criminal record and did not check it when he
registered, said county elections spokeswoman Mary Cooney. Nonetheless, she said he will remain on the rolls
"until we are directed otherwise to remove him."
Maintaining accurate voting rolls is up to the state Division of Elections, which has failed to effectively remove
felons for years.
Most recently, in 2006, the Auditor General recommended the division conduct a "comprehensive check" of all
registered voters against lists of convicted felons, a step the state still has not taken, Browning acknowledged.
In response to auditors, the division said running the search "would not be a problem," but it lacked the
manpower to verify possible matches. "Staff further stated that they were busy full-time" checking newly
registered felons.
Once voters are added to the rolls, the state's procedure for removing them is tedious and labor-intensive. The
Florida Department of Law Enforcement runs daily checks of criminal records against new voters and those
who have made changes to their registrations, sending possible matches to the Elections Division.
Elections staff then manually check each one, a process that involves three to five workers reviewing records,
comparing driver's license and prison photos and verifying convictions. Confirmed matches are sent to the
counties for removal.
Since January 2006, more than 1.6 million new voters have registered in Florida. FDLE identified more than
124,000 possible felons.
In that time, elections workers removed about 7,200 from voter rolls statewide. Broward County took off just 232
and Palm Beach County 31.
"We do want to make sure ... that we have the right voter," Browning said.
Elections workers are now reviewing more than 3,800 possible felon voters but have more than 108,000 others
still to be checked. "We've not touched those records yet," Browning said.
Asked how long it will take to review them all, he said, "I don't have a clue. I really don't."
Recently registered
John Teate, who lives west of Boca Raton, remains on the voter rolls after registering as a Democrat in July
despite felony drug and theft convictions dating to the early 1990s. He said someone he thinks was a
Democratic supporter signed him up while he waited for a bus at the central terminal in downtown Fort
Lauderdale.
"I said, 'I'm a convicted felon. I can't vote,'" recalled Teate, 45. "I figured when the paperwork came in, there would
be a red flag."
A spokesman for Barack Obama's campaign said it is unlikely his volunteers signed up Teate because his
name is not in a database of new voters they registered.
It's a third-degree felony for ineligible voters to knowingly cast ballots and for campaign workers and voters to
submit false registration forms. Prosecutors and elections officials in South Florida could not recall any
prosecutions related to felons registering or voting in recent years.
Henderson, the Hallandale Beach voter, said he does not think his criminal record should keep him from voting.
"I paid my debt," Henderson said. "Just because I was incarcerated, that means I'm nothing now? I'm still a
father. I got two kids I'm raising."
Evan Snow, a West Palm Beach Republican, agrees. Convicted of burglary, battery and other crimes dating to
the 1980s, Snow said he sought clemency several years ago but was discouraged by the lengthy process and
gave up.
Snow, 46, registered to vote in June. He said he plans to cast a ballot Nov. 4 but hasn't decided which
presidential candidate to support.
"Everybody is getting interested in politics right now," he said. "We are all here together. Shouldn't we all be able
to make a decision about who runs the place?"
To civil rights advocates, the troubled system is an argument to change the state's constitution to automatically
restore voting rights to all felons who complete their sentences.
As of mid-September, about 118,000 mostly nonviolent offenders had received automatic clemency under the
2007 change. For more than 9,700 of them, it didn't matter — their names had never been removed from the
voter rolls.
Click here to see best and worst from the Golden Globe Awards
Terms of Service Privacy Policy Articles collection Advertise with us Subscriptions Paid Archives Questions or comments
Baltimore Sun Chicago Tribune Daily Press Hartford Courant Los Angeles Times Orlando Sentinel Sun Sentinel The Morning Call
Sun Sentinel, 200 E. Las Olas Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301