Monday, October 6, 2008

Who's The Victim Now!!!

Birmingham News Confusion reigns in Alabama over ex-felons' ability to vote
Monday, October 06, 2008
KIM CHANDLER
News staff writer
MONTGOMERY - When James Solomon went to register to vote earlier this year, he said he was told he couldn't vote because of a past conviction for cocaine possession.

That was in direct contrast to advice given by the Secretary of State's Office that drug possession is not a crime that strips someone of their voting rights.

"I just wanted to vote. When you got a felony, they treat you like you're nobody," said Solomon, an Enterprise welder and the widowed father of seven.

Less than a month shy of a historic election expected to bring record turnout, there still is uncertainty over who is eligible to vote in Alabama. State officials have given boards of registrars conflicting lists of felony convictions that bar a person from voting.

And registrars, already swamped with new voter applications, have the difficult task of sorting out who is and who isn't eligible to vote.

"We don't want to be in a multiple choice situation. You want to know the answer," Montgomery County Elections Director Trey Granger said.

A statewide computer system for the past 11 months has been noting convictions for more than 400 crimes that Gov. Bob Riley's administration deemed to be felonies of moral turpitude - even though officials with the Administrative Office of Courts said they were assured by Riley's office only a shorter list of 70 felonies developed by the attorney general's office were being checked.

"I know there is confusion. The computer system is flagging people who ought to be able to vote," said Kenneth Glasgow, a former drug offender turned pastor who works to help former felons to register to vote.

Secretary of State Beth Chapman said she's been trying to sort out the confusion through a series of conference calls and memos with county registrars over the past several months.

"They must first go to the AG's opinion. If that doesn't answer their question, they should seek guidance from their county attorney, their district attorney or my attorney," Chapman said, describing the advice her office has given local boards.



How big the problem is depends upon whom you ask.

"We don't know if it's a big, widespread problem. We're looking at a potential problem," said Adam Thompson, who oversees compliance with federal voting laws for Chapman. Thompson said his office found out last month that the lists hadn't been swapped, but Thompson said there are safeguards in place to make sure people eligible to vote can register.

Chapman for months has told county registrars to hand-check any convictions flagged by the computer system. Thompson said people who are denied voter registration are told they can appeal the decision.


Democratic Party Chairman Joe Turnham said he's concerned tens of thousands of would-be voters could have been affected.

"Absolutely, there has been confusion. I think a lot of damage has been done to a lot of people," Turnham said.

Turnham said he's also concerned people have been improperly purged from the voter rolls.

"We have less than three weeks now to find the people who have been disenfranchised and get them back on the rolls," Turnham said.

The dispute centers on the definition of a crime of "moral turpitude." The state constitution says people convicted of felony crimes of "moral turpitude" cannot vote until they get their rights restored, but it does not define the term.

Alabama Attorney General Troy King in a 2005 opinion named 28 felonies - which add up to about 70 crimes if each of the degrees of the offenses are counted - that have by statute or appellate decision been defined as crimes of moral turpitude.

Riley, serving as court-appointed chief of Alabama elections, in 2007 created a list of more than 400 disbarring felonies and gave it to Election Systems & Software, the company hired to create a voter registration database for the state. Riley's list includes crimes ranging from terrorism and homicide to starting a brush fire and drug possession.



AOC Legal Director Griffin Sikes Jr. said the governor had no legal authority to classify so many crimes as crimes of moral turpitude. Sikes said that, for months, the governor's office had assured the AOC that only the shorter list was being used, but Sikes found out last month those assurances were given "in error."

Riley Communications Director Jeff Emerson said the governor's office was forced to come up with its own list because the AOC initially refused to provide one.

Emerson said that, although the governor's office agreed to let the shorter list be used, it believes its own research is more comprehensive and accurate.


Emerson said that, until last month, crimes on both lists were being flagged by the computer system. Cost was a factor in not swapping the lists, he said.

"We were told to remove the larger list would be very, very expensive," Emerson said.

Emerson said new software is being added this month to make convictions clearer to the registrars. The change was planned and won't be a significant cost to the state, he said.

"If there is confusion out there, it will end it. It's designed to," said Emerson, who pointed out that local registrars had the ultimate authority in deciding who to deny registration, and those people were given the opportunity to appeal.

The disagreement over the felony lists isn't the only one of the state's voting procedures being challenged less than a month shy of the election. One lawsuit also has been filed on the behalf of three former inmates who weren't allowed to register to vote, and another has been filed on behalf of Glasgow's efforts to register inmates to vote absentee. The Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law also said last week that it wants to seek records about voter roll purges in Alabama and another dozen states.

Walker County Board of Registrars Chairwoman Terra Tidwell said there has been confusion over which felons to exclude from voting, but things have improved because of communication from Chapman's office.

Flagged by computer:

Tidwell said she hand-checks convictions flagged by the computer.

Jefferson County Board of Registrars Chairwoman Nell Hunter said she has the county attorney check criminal records after a person is flagged by the computer system. Jefferson County attorney Theo Lawson said he uses neither the governor's list nor the attorney general's, but relies on his own research which, he said, is more thorough than either list.

"I look at these on a case-by-case basis," Lawson said.


But Lawson said it would be preferable if there were a single definitive list.

"Oh my goodness, it would make life much easier," Lawson said.

Chapman and a spokesman for King said the best way to correct the problem is for the Alabama Legislature to set the rules for when former felons can vote.

" I don't make the law. The registrars don't make the law. We just abide by the law. And sometimes the law is very unclear," Chapman said.

4 comments:

Rev. Glasgow said...

If the people who make the laws and hold offices are wrong why do we suffer. It seems to me that they should be held accountable as well. This in Alabama is going to make Flaorida and Ohio in 2000 and 2004 look like a cakewalk!!!
Pastor Glasgow

Rev. Glasgow said...

So somebody tell me who's the victim now. When thousands of peoples rights has been taken illegally by those who make the law. Are we in 2008 or 1965, 1945, 1900s where are we in this place called society!!!

Anonymous said...

It is a shame that now once we have a historical election these things are coming up instead of the first time and even worse second time when Bush was elected. We as society need to check the government, especially when they take a piece of our check. Greater New Hope supports righteous movement and you are moving in the right direction Glasgow. In this case accountability is the key and I pray that those legislators and officials can give society something to stand behind them with instead of this conflict of distrust. Reading this article should reveal to others that although the systems set in place for voters and voting may not be perfect we have the right to at least hold our officials accountable and stop giving us the run around.
Lelan Washington

Rev. Glasgow said...

I'm not a Second Class Citizen, I'm a Second Chance Citizen

As I sit here and reflect on this last month's activities I don't know whether to be happy or just cry. Because I've went through so much and had so many things and people exposed.
I listened to God and committed myself to this work by His calling and I've wanted to quit so many times, and believe it or not now is definitely one of those times.
The blatant biasness, racism, and disrespect for humanity that I've witnessed in this issue or restoring People's lives by restoring their rights just overwhelmed me.
Maybe people just don't understand that when a person loses their right to vote they lose so much more of their life necessities. We can't get public housing, public assistance, student loans or pell grants to better educate ourselves, a business license, and housing and jobs are few and scarce for an ex-felon.
My real challenge is that this is supposed to be a religious, spiritual society that loves humanity and their neighbors, but for some reason those who have made a mistake are not considered citizens, neighbors, and less than human I guess. Yet these are our mothers, fathers, sisters, brothers, sons, and daughters. People who we grew up with, and people we went to school with and know.
We are talking about fellow human beings who have made a mistake and committed a crime that does not involve Moral Turpitude.
This was a term used in slavery times in order to consider a person vile or defain, not a full citizen. Now here in 2008 over a hundred years later the underlying racism and biasness of those of us who call ourselves Christians, Muslims, Methodist, Baptist, etc. seeps out when we find out that a person that has made a mistake has the same rights we have if they have not committed a crime of Moral Turpitude
Yet we read the Bible, Quran and other religious books claiming that we love everybody and want to help restore people's lives, but now that the opportunity has come our prejudices come to the forefront.
Classism steps up and we say they shouldn't have the same rights that we have they made a mistake.
My question is" what if God was like that? What if He felt the same way? would any of us be here?
Have you ever ran a stop sign or red light? have you ever got sick and went to the hospital? Why do you think that God put in Matthew 25: 33-46 " have you visited those who are sick and in prison ". He put those two together, why?
Because he knew that those in prison were sick as well and needed ministering to.
When we went to the prisons we only targeted those with possession of drug charges only. Those who would be out in about a year or two anyway. It's cost effective to give a person treatment instead of incarceration. It cost taxpayers approximately $13,000 to $29,000 a year to house a person in prison, while it only cost us $4,300 to $8,000 a year to give them treatment depending on what state you live in, and cheaper than that for college.
We have 5.3 million people in the U.S. that are disenfranchised and in the State of Ala. we have 250,046 who have lost their rights!
If we are productive citizens then shouldn't we be producing productive citizens. Every seed produces of it's own kind so what's wrong with us.
Crimes not involving Moral Turpitude are non-violent victimless crimes that does not cause any hurt, harm, danger, and suffering to anyone else. ( as close of a definition we can come up with ).
These are people who have done things that hurt themselves.
If we truly wanted to diminish crime, diminish recidivism, diminish overcrowded prisons, and diminish parent less children, then we would start engaging those incarcerated into civic participation and transforming their mind before they get out of prison.
The renewing of the mind need to come before release from jail or prison, not after they are released with a bus ticket and $10. Because when they meet these obstacles and disappointments they have no structure or substance to hold on to.
Our children are dropping out of school at enormous rates and we spend more on prisons than on education, more on prisons than our elderly and our poor.
In 1901 when they wrote the Alabama Constitution they must've had a different perception of these crimes not involving Moral Turpitude than the people of today. Or did they have more respect for human life than we do now? But our forefathers seen this differently and most of them were Republicans, conservatives and devout men of God.
After the Civil War in Oct 1864 the Sons of the Confederate went to Washington to get their rights restored and pardons for crimes of treason, and heinous acts committed to human beings ( Crimes of Moral Turpitude ), so why now when we talk about crimes not involving Moral Turpitude do we want to take people's rights hmmm!
There's always been some type of trick to keep us divided whether it was Jews and Gentiles, Black and White, and now Felon or Non Felon. When will the prejudices end or will they ever?
When an average citizen breaks the Law, they go to jail, but when those who suppose to uphold the Law break it, the people suffer and become the victims.
My cousin told me that I must realize that for 105 years anyone could have said something about this and a few did like; Dr. Rep. Yvonne Kennedy, Sen. Bobby Singleton, Ryan Haygood, Bryan Stevenson, Gabriel Sayegh and a few others. But most of those who could've didn't, so please don't get mad at those of us who do. This is a continuation of our struggle in this Civil Rights Movement and The Ministry of God.
If you're like me you have no choice but to fight for Fairness, and Equality no matter who or what the naysayers think or say!
However it is quite amusing to me when those who are against you and the work God gave you come out publicly like they were with you all the time, but wasn't anywhere around for the fight and as a matter of fact tried to stop you and wouldn't help.
But I'm glad you see the light now, and God has opened your eyes and you're here now!

We've Came From The Back Of The Bus, To The Front Of The Prison,

The Struggle Continues!!!
and that proves to me that I'm not a

Second Class Citizen

but a

Second Chance Citizen!