Floridians arrested for voter fraud expressed confusion, police videos
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[October 20, 2022]
By Joseph Ax
(Reuters) - Videos published by the Tampa
Bay Times show Florida ex-convicts expressing bafflement and frustration
as they were arrested for voting illegally, a result of the first
investigations by Republican Governor Ron DeSantis' new election police
agency.
In one video, Romona Oliver reacted with shock when police arrived at
her house early one morning and arrested her as she was headed to work.
"Voter fraud?" she asked. "I voted, but I ain't commit no fraud."
The videos from officers' body cameras, which the newspaper obtained
through public records requests, were taken on Aug. 18, hours before
DeSantis held a news conference to announce the arrests of 20 people for
voting illegally in the 2020 election.
DeSantis said all of those arrested had been convicted of murder or sex
crimes, which excluded them from a 2018 Florida state constitutional
amendment that restored voting rights to other felons who had finished
their sentences. Oliver was convicted of second degree murder, the Tampa
Bay Times reported.
"They do not have the right to vote," DeSantis said. "Now they're going
to pay the price for it."
The arrests marked the first cases brought by the Office of Election
Crimes and Security, which was established earlier this year at the
urging of DeSantis and includes sworn officers from the state Department
of Law Enforcement.
The office's creation was part of a broader push by Republicans around
the country for more restrictive voting laws in the wake of former
President Donald Trump's baseless claims that the 2020 election was
rigged.
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A voting booth is seen at a polling
center inside a fire station in the Coral Gables neighbourhood in
Miami, Florida, March 17, 2020. REUTERS/Marco Bello
DeSantis, widely seen as a presidential contender in 2024, has said
the office will restore public trust in election integrity. His
office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on
Wednesday.
Democrats and civil rights groups have said the investigations could
intimidate voters, particularly those of color, while perpetuating
the false notion that voter fraud is a significant concern in U.S.
elections.
The videos show at least some of the people arrested did not appear
to have realized they were ineligible to cast a ballot.
"I thought...felons were able to vote," said Tony Patterson,
described by the newspaper as a registered sex offender, as he was
placed in handcuffs. "Why would y'all let me vote if I wasn't able
to vote?"
Florida law requires that a defendant "willfully" commit voter fraud
in order to be guilty of the crime.
In some cases, the defendants said they were not informed by local
officials that they could not vote. Oliver, for instance,
successfully registered to vote twice after her release from prison,
the Tampa Bay Times reported.
Another defendant, Nathan Hart, also described as a registered sex
offender, told officers an employee at the motor vehicle department
told him to fill out a registration form after learning he was off
probation, and assured him that he wouldn't be allowed to vote if he
were ineligible.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by Peter Graff)
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