ACLU Sues Over Tennessee’s Felon Disenfranchisement Law (2/25/2008)
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.orgGroup Says Payment Provision Is A
Modern Day ‘Poll Tax’
NASHVILLE – The American Civil Liberties
Union and ACLU of Tennessee filed a lawsuit today in federal court challenging
the state’s 2006 law that made the restoration of voting rights for people
convicted of crimes contingent on the payment of all outstanding legal financial
obligations (LFOs), namely restitution and child support fees. According to the
ACLU’s lawsuit, requiring some individuals to bear an undue financial burden
before voting is tantamount to a poll tax in violation of the constitutional
right to vote and the Fourteenth Amendment’s equal protection clause.
“Reports
show that, nationally, over 50 percent of criminal defendants are indigent at
the time of sentencing. Therefore, requiring a person with a criminal conviction
to pay a fee before restoring their right to vote is nothing more than a modern
day poll tax,” said Nancy Abudu, staff counsel with the ACLU Voting Rights
Project. “This law locks citizens out of the democratic process when it comes to
issues of great concern to them. The result is that the political power of poor
people is further diminished and the collateral consequences of poverty
multiply.”
Today’s
legal action, filed against state and county officials, challenges a 2006 law
that changed the process by which individuals with criminal convictions may seek
the restoration of their voting rights. According to the law, “a person shall
not be eligible to apply for a voter registration card and have the right of
suffrage restored unless such person has paid all restitution to the victim or
victims of the offense ordered by the court as part of the sentence... [and]
unless such person is current in all child support obligations.”
The ACLU
brought its lawsuit on behalf of three individuals – Terence Johnson, Jim Harris
and Alexander Friedman – who have completed their terms of imprisonment, parole,
and probation for their offenses. Johnson and Harris are ineligible to vote
because they owe child support for children they currently have custody of.
Friedman applied for restoration of his voting rights in 2006, but
Tennessee denied his application, claiming
he owes over 1,000 dollars in restitution.
“My dream
is to have the opportunity to become a fully productive citizen again,
regardless of my economic status. And I have the right to participate in the
electoral process to bring about change to the issues that concern me most in my
community,” said Terence Johnson, a plaintiff in this case. “I’ve served my
time, I am a taxpaying citizen and I have custody of my daughter. It is wrong
for the state to punish me and other people while we get our lives back on
track.”
Until
recently, Tennessee’s voting rights restoration law –
a patchwork of rules, restrictions, and procedures – was the most confusing and
complicated in the country. Although a former felon no longer needs to go before
a judge to have his or her right to vote restored, the law still requires
several procedural steps before restoration is complete. The ACLU is committed
to securing additional reforms to make Tennessee’s voting laws more user-friendly
and to ensure that all people who have been incarcerated can regain their full
voting rights.
“The
ability to vote should not be based on one’s financial status,” said Hedy
Weinberg, Executive Director of the ACLU of Tennessee. “Penalizing low-income
parents by charging them a fee to exercise their constitutional right to vote is
shameful. This law has no place in a functioning
democracy.”
In
addition to the equal protection claim, the ACLU’s lawsuit charges the
Tennessee law violates the 24th Amendment’s
voting rights provision and the due process protections in the federal and state
constitutions.
Attorneys
on the case are Abudu, Laughlin McDonald and Neil Bradley of the national ACLU
Voting Rights Project, Tricia Herzfeld of the ACLU of Tennessee, and attorney
Charles Grant of the law firm Baker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell &
Berkowitz, PC.
A copy of
today’s legal complaint is available at: www.aclu.org/votingrights/gen/34203lgl20080225.html
More
information on the work of the ACLU Voting Rights Project is available at: www.votingrights.org
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