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With all the fuss about alleged Russian interference in US elections the 
question of voter suppression seems to have been largely forgotten until now.  
I hope this will change.

Chris Slee
________________________________
From: Marxism <marxism-boun...@lists.csbs.utah.edu> on behalf of Louis Proyect 
via Marxism <marxism@lists.csbs.utah.edu>
Sent: Sunday, 5 August 2018 10:07:34 PM
To: Chris Slee
Subject: [Marxism] Arrested, Jailed and Charged With a Felony. For Voting.

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NY Times, Aug. 2, 2018
Arrested, Jailed and Charged With a Felony. For Voting.
By Jack Healy

GRAHAM, N.C. — Keith Sellars and his daughters were driving home from
dinner at a Mexican restaurant last December when he was pulled over for
running a red light. The officer ran a background check and came back
with bad news for Mr. Sellars. There was a warrant out for his arrest.

As his girls cried in the back seat, Mr. Sellars was handcuffed and
taken to jail.

His crime: Illegal voting.

“I didn’t know,” said Mr. Sellars, who spent the night in jail before
his family paid his $2,500 bond. “I thought I was practicing my right.”

Mr. Sellars, 44, is one of a dozen people in Alamance County in North
Carolina who have been charged with voting illegally in the 2016
presidential election. All were on probation or parole for felony
convictions, which in North Carolina and many other states disqualifies
a person from voting. If convicted, they face up to two years in prison.

While election experts and public officials across the country say there
is no evidence of widespread voter fraud, local prosecutors and state
officials in North Carolina, Texas, Kansas, Idaho and other states have
sought to send a tough message by filing criminal charges against the
tiny fraction of people who are caught voting illegally.

“That’s the law,” said Pat Nadolski, the Republican district attorney in
Alamance County. “You can’t do it. If we have clear cases, we’re going
to prosecute.”

The cases are rare compared with the tens of millions of votes cast in
state and national elections. In 2017, at least 11 people nationwide
were convicted of illegal voting because they were felons or
noncitizens, according to a database of voting prosecutions compiled by
the conservative Heritage Foundation. Others have been convicted of
voting twice, filing false registrations or casting a ballot for a
family member.

The case against the 12 voters in Alamance County — a patchwork of small
towns about an hour west of the state’s booming Research Triangle — is
unusual for the sheer number of people charged at once. And because nine
of the defendants are black, the case has touched a nerve in a state
with a history of suppressing African-American votes.

Local civil-rights groups and black leaders have urged the district
attorney to drop the prosecution, saying that black voters were being
disproportionately punished for an unwitting mistake. African-Americans
in North Carolina are more likely to be disqualified from voting because
of felony convictions; their rate of incarceration is more than four
times that of white residents, according to the Prison Policy
Initiative, a nonprofit organization.

“It smacks of Jim Crow,” said Barrett Brown, the head of the Alamance
County N.A.A.C.P. Referring to the district attorney, he added, “I don’t
think he targeted black people. But if you cast that net, you’re going
to catch more African-Americans.”

Mr. Nadolski said that race and ethnicity are not a factor in any case
he prosecutes.

The prosecution comes even as several states are reconsidering
longstanding laws that strip voting rights from an estimated 6 million
Americans who have been convicted of felonies. A growing national
movement is encouraging former felons to register to vote, or to push to
have their rights restored, with the hope of empowering them and
shedding the stigma of criminal convictions.

The North Carolina case also has become part of a partisan war over
voting rights ahead of this November’s midterm elections. At a rally on
Tuesday, President Trump — who has made baseless claims that millions of
people voted illegally in 2016 — renewed his calls for laws requiring
voters to show photo identification. He said, incorrectly, that shoppers
need to show identification to buy groceries, while people voting for
president and senator do not.

When asked Wednesday about the president’s comments, Sarah Huckabee
Sanders, the White House press secretary, said that Mr. Trump “wants to
see the integrity of our elections system upheld.”

In separate interviews, five of the defendants in Alamance County said
their votes were an unwitting mistake — a product of not understanding
the voter forms they signed and not knowing the law.

They said they believed they were allowed to vote because election
workers let them fill out voter registration and eligibility forms, then
handed them ballots. They said they never would have voted if anyone had
told them they were ineligible.

The case began after North Carolina elections officials ran an audit
that found 441 felons had voted improperly in the 2016 election. While
most local prosecutors did not pursue these cases, Mr. Nadolski decided
to file felony charges.

“We want to maintain the integrity of the voting system,” Mr. Nadolski said.

Most of the voters did not know one another before the prosecution, but
as they attended court together and as their story spread through this
conservative county, people started referring to them as one: the
Alamance 12.

Activists have protested outside the county courthouse and asked
supporters to flood the district attorney’s office with letters and
phone calls on the defendants’ behalf.

Whitney Brown, 32, said that no judge, lawyer or probation officer ever
told her that she had temporarily lost her right to vote after she
pleaded guilty to a 2014 charge of writing bad checks. Her sentence did
not include prison time.

By November 2016, she was complying with her probation and focused on
moving ahead with her life, caring for her two sons, who are now 6 and 9
years old, and taking online classes to become a medical receptionist.
So when her mother invited her to come with her to vote for president,
Ms. Brown said she did so without a second thought.

Months later, she got a letter from state election officials telling her
she appeared to have voted illegally. “My heart dropped,” she said.

In North Carolina, people’s voting rights are automatically restored
once they finish every step of their felony sentence, including probation.

But every state is different. Vermont and Maine do not strip felons of
voting rights, according to the National Conference of State
Legislatures. Other states allow people to vote again as soon as they
leave prison. Others permanently take away felons’ right to vote or make
them ask to have their rights restored.

In North Carolina, people can be found guilty of voting as felons even
if they did not know their status or did not mean to break any voting
laws. This spring, lawmakers tried to pass a bill that would have added
intent as an element of felon-voting crimes, but the bill died.

Like other voters across North Carolina, each of the Alamance 12 would
have been required to sign a form saying they were eligible to vote and
were not serving a felony sentence. But the defendants said they did not
remember filling out any forms beyond the ballots.

“People get confused,” said John Carella, an attorney with the Southern
Coalition for Social Justice, which is representing Ms. Brown and four
other defendants. The group has also filed a motion in court arguing
that North Carolina’s original 1901 law barring felons from voting is
unconstitutional because it is steeped in racist efforts to keep
African-Americans from voting.

After the state audit that found 441 felons had voted, North Carolina’s
Board of Elections and Ethics Enforcement changed the layout of the
voter forms, adding check boxes to make them easier to understand. The
board said it was also working with courts and probation officials to
make sure people are aware that they lose their voting rights while
serving a felony sentence and probation.

Activists are now worried that the fear of prosecution may suppress
black turnout in the midterm elections. North Carolina lawmakers have
put a constitutional amendment on November ballots that would change the
state constitution to require voter identification.

An earlier law adding such a requirement was struck down in 2016 by a
federal appeals panel, which called it “the most restrictive voting law
North Carolina has seen since the era of Jim Crow.” The ruling said
Republicans had targeted “African-Americans with almost surgical precision.”

George Lettley, who runs a popular catering hall in Alamance County with
his wife Elois, said he saw the prosecutions as the latest example of a
pattern of discrimination against African-Americans by white leaders in
his state.

“They’re looking for any way they can find to stop any momentum we
have,” said Mr. Lettley, reflecting on the case as he and his wife
rested and polished silverware after dinner. “It’s a no-win situation
for us.”

When he and his wife heard that one of the 12 defendants had lost his
job and had been sleeping in his car, they hired him to work at their
restaurant.

Taranta Holman, 28, said he had never voted before 2016. He spent years
bouncing between low-paying jobs, criminal charges and probation, and he
saw little incentive to vote for either Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump.

But he said he voted at the urging of his mother. In December 2017, when
news of the charges appeared in the local newspaper, Mr. Holman said
that relatives called him to say there was a warrant out for his arrest.

“I thought they were playing with me,” he said.

Three of the defendants have taken deals pleading to lesser misdemeanors
that come with probation and community service. For the moment, Mr.
Holman was planning to fight the charges. He said he could not afford
the fees that come with a probation sentence and did not want to stay
under the scrutiny of the legal system.

“I feel like I’ve got a better chance with a jury than the D.A.,” he said.

But Mr. Holman said that, win or lose in court, he will never cast
another ballot.

“Even when I get this cleared up, I still won’t vote,” he said. “That’s
too much of a risk.”
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