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(Above) Stetson Law School BLSA helped about 100 people with restoration of civil rights yesterday at a Juneteenth celebration in St. Pete on June 21, 2008. Stetson BLSA members, with the assistance of supervising attorneys, handled about 50 phone calls, assisted 50 in person, and completed 25 restoration applications. The majority of people had lost rights due to drug offenses, suspended driver?s license, and theft. Recent FRRC ClipsMore ex-cons' voting rights restored Give Florida's ex-felons a reason to stay straight Restoring rights quickly is revisited: Gov. Crist now says he is open to excluding released felons whose crimes were violent. Giving ex-offenders a chance to make good Crist: I'll restore felons' rights NewsFRRC Releases 2010 Candidate Report Card Governor's Ex-Offender Task Force Final Report to the Governor Governor's Ex-Offender Task Force Analysis of State's Responses to Executive Order News Releases<< News Archive Gubernatorial Candidates Crist and Davis: Clarify Position on Felon Restoration of Civil RightsFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: The ACLU letter, sent by Executive Director Howard Simon and Muslima Lewis, Director of the organization’s Voting Rights Project, states: “A change in the Rules of Executive Clemency can be accomplished on the first day of your new administration. It is a change that you can bring to the lives of hundreds of thousands of Floridians by a vote of you, as the new Governor, and two other members of the Cabinet.” The ACLU letter also notes that: “Anything other than exercising the authority of the Executive to modify the Rules of Executive Clemency to make the process virtually automatic would call into question the sincerity of your commitment to the restoration of civil rights.” The full text of the ACLU letter to the gubernatorial candidates follows:
October 20, 2006 Dear Attorney General Crist and Representative Davis, We are heartened by the news that both of you are now on record supporting the automatic restoration of civil rights for those who have completed all the terms and conditions of their sentence. We look forward, when a new Governor takes office in January, to measures that will address this overriding civil rights and voting rights crisis that has plagued our State – the mass disfranchisement of people with previous felony convictions. As you know, under the Florida Constitution the restoration of civil rights involves more than the right to vote. The loss of civil rights also includes the disqualification from almost 100 state occupational licenses. This latter aspect of Florida public policy is especially inexplicable as it is inconsistent with the goals of reducing recidivism, ensuring the ability of those who are released to secure productive employment in order to support themselves and their families and in other ways facilitating the successful transition of former felons from incarceration. (The loss of civil rights also includes ineligibility to serve on a jury and to hold public office.) We are aware that Congressman Davis has long supported the automatic restoration of civil rights, and we welcome the recent statement of Attorney General Crist that “If you truly do believe that if somebody has paid their debt to society, that they’ve really paid their debt to society, then why not restore their right to vote.” (Associated Press, October 17, 2006) We also note that the same Associated Press story quotes Attorney General Crist as favoring the accomplishment of this goal by either amending the Florida Constitution or the Rules of Executive Clemency: “The process doesn’t concern me.”
We applaud your commitment to the change in public policy that aligns Florida with the majority of states that automatically restore civil and voting rights after the completion of a criminal sentence. But we strongly urge that you announce that you are prepared to address this problem by the exercise of what will be the authority one of you will have as our new Governor – that is, through the modification of the Rules of Executive Clemency. A change in the Rules of Executive Clemency can be accomplished on the first day of your new administration. It is a change that you can bring to the lives of hundreds of thousands of Floridians by a vote of you, as the new Governor, and two other members of the Cabinet. Of course, the modifications in the Rules of Executive Clemency should be reflected in the Florida Constitution. It is important that we bring our State’s Constitution into the 21st Century by amending it to remove the Civil War era provisions mandating the lifetime loss of civil rights upon conviction of a felony. However, as a practical matter changing the Florida Constitution requires action by the Legislature (and, of course, a vote of the people). We are all aware of the Legislature’s record of support for the system that has created the mass disfranchisement problem with which our State is plagued and its resistance to a constitutional amendment to provide for the automatic restoration of civil rights. Anything other than exercising the authority of the Executive to modify the Rules of Executive Clemency to make the process virtually automatic would call into question the sincerity of your commitment to the restoration of civil rights. We urge that you make it clear to the voters of Florida that you are not only committed to addressing the injustice of the lifetime loss of civil rights, but that you are prepared to exercise the authority you will have as our new Governor to personally address this urgent matter. Thank you, Muslima Lewis Howard Simon cc: Mark Schlakman, Center for the Advancement of Human Rights at Florida State University XXX |