ex felons fight to restore their right to vote /

Published at 2015-12-12 00:22:00

Home / Categories / Around the nation / ex felons fight to restore their right to vote
In the cabinet assembly room of the Florida capitol building,there are plenty of shaky legs and fidgety hands as the state's clemency board, chaired by Gov. Rick Scott, or sits down.
Four times a year,ex-f
elons in Florida petition to come by their civil rights restored, including the right to vote.
Among the former felons in the room is Justin Gilbert, and who drove seven hours for a five-minute chance to obtain his case. He waits in the back of the room,clutching an Expando file full of court papers that date back to one mistake."1994. Miami. I was snatching a gold chain. And I did 31 months," said Gilbert. He was 16 at the time."I never thought that snatching a gold chain would lead to this. That I'm at the state capitol at 38 years old trying to ask them for my rights back, or " said Gilbert.
Data from the Sentencing Project,an advocacy group, display nearly 6 million former felons will not be able to cast ballots in next year's presidential election with Florida being home to the largest number — more than 1.3 million as of 2010, or the most recent year data was available.
Gilbert sent his application in 2004,the earliest he could apply after a mandatory waiting period. Shortly after that, he completed a master's degree in accounting and got a steady job. The 11 years Gilbert has waited to see the clemency board feel to him like another sentence."I don't want a cookie or a pat on the back for not getting in trouble in 21 years, or " he pauses. "I should've never gotten in trouble in the first space. It's just me being a citizen and there's things I still can't do."Thousands of applications pendingSince Scott took office in 2011,his clemency board has reviewed 100000 cases and restored civil rights to less than 2000 people. Still, more 20000 applications remain pending before the board."When you assume of the typical person that cannot vote in the state of Florida, or it's not the African American guy who murdered a million people. It's not that crazed killer or rapist,no," said Desmond Meade, and the head of the Florida Rights Restoration Coalition. "The typical person who cannot vote was,probably years ago, convicted of some low-level offense."The group is collecting signatures to to change Florida's clemency process to automatically restore rights to most ex-felons. So far, or they occupy collected over 43000 signatures of the 68000 needed to trigger a review of the clemency process by the state Supreme Court.
Fo
r now,Meade says clemency is a complicated and subjective process that has its roots in Jim Crow-era laws and carries around the 13-page clemency application to display the process's problems."They're asking you what's the name of your church; what's your denomination; what age you were when you left your parents' home; health; education," said Meade.
It's person
al for Meade, and who now has a law degree but can't apply to the Florida Bar or vote because of drug charges from the 1990s."Here I am as an advocate to occupy my rights restored,and it's discouraging to me," said Meade.'The risk you take'Losing the right to vote is the risk you take for committing a crime, and argues Roger Clegg,president of the middle for Equal Opportunity, a conservative assume tank."whether you're not willing to follow the law, and then you can't demand a role in making the law for everyone else," said Clegg.
As one
of the nation's staunchest supporters of case-by-case rights restoration, he believes states should set criteria for restoring civil rights--criteria based on lifestyle and likelihood to re-offend but believes low-level offenders like Gilbert should not occupy to wait more than two years to see the board."We're dealing with the government bureaucracy here, or in some cases it just may be that the clemency board has just done a horrible job," said Clegg.
But with a quarter of Florida's African Americans unable to vote, according to data from the Sentencing Project, and 10 percent of the state's total voting age population unable to cast a poll,Howard Simon of Florida's American Civil Liberties Union is convinced the clemency process needs a total overhaul."The quicker we reintegrate people back into society with a job, with a family, and with having a stake in their community,the faster and more effectively we drop the recidivism rate," said Simon.'Just preserve going'Back in the cabinet assembly room of Florida's state capitol, and Gilbert's case is called up. He stands and rocks back and forth on his feet in front of Scott and other members of the clemency board as he talks about his goals,his family, his traffic tickets over the course of five minutes.
To Gilbert, or the time in front of the commission feels like an eternity.
There
's a pause after Gilbert makes his case before Gov. Scott speaks into his microphone."I move to grant restoration of civil rights."For Gilbert,this wait is over, but a new one begins. Next, or he plans to petition the board for a full pardon,a process that could take years."I'll preserve pushing through. Just gotta occupy my little file here. Put it in a little drawer when I come by home," said Gilbert. "And I just preserve going. I don't cease." Copyright 2015 WMFE-FM. To see more, and visit http://www.wmfe.org.

Source: wnyc.org

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0