Former inmates struggle to resolve financial obligations before November’s election

desmond meade
Documents show errors and typos hinder felons paying their financial obligations.

Members of the Florida Rights Restoration Coalition were in Tallahassee last week to lobby lawmakers to support re-enfranchising former inmates. But the fight for them to get the right to vote back is not playing out in the Legislature this year. The action is in the courts.

Republican lawmakers passed (SB 7066) last year, which requires felons to pay fines, fees and restitution as part of “all terms of sentences.” But some of the FRRC members visiting the Capitol say it’s been difficult to figure what they owe and finding it out is frustrating and time consuming.

Nearly two-thirds of Floridians voted for Amendment 4, which ostensibly restored the right to vote to nearly all felons who completed “all terms of sentence,” the meaning of which has been vehemently debated. 

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit in Atlanta recently ruled that it was unconstitutional to force Florida felons to first pay off their financial obligations before registering to vote, siding against Republican lawmakers. But that narrow ruling only applies to 17 plaintiffs, something FRRC President Desmond Meade noted in a February 19th video on Facebook.

“We are cautiously optimistic,” he said. “And the reason why we’re using the word cautiously is because we don’t want to create an environment to where people are thinking that this thing applies to them and that it’s all smooth sailing from now for them to only get disappointed.”

 That leaves formerly incarcerated people like Tashenia Owens trying to chase down everything she has been charged so she can pay it all and vote in November’s general election. 

Owens said she has been running around in circles contacting different agencies after learning she also owed money in Orange County for a misdemeanor offense she says she did not commit. She served about two years for a drug offense committed in Sumter County and was released in 2012.

“I went to my county, they referred me to my supervisor of elections office, they didn’t even have an answer, that’s when they referred me here (the Capitol),” she said. “They didn’t have an answer. Orange County didn’t have an answer. So who do we call to find out?” 

Owens finally contacted the collection agency that holds her debt for the Orange County misdemeanor charge. She has already paid or has gotten waived $55,000 related to her incarceration eight years ago. 

Emails obtained by American Oversight, a government watchdog group, through open records requests show state agencies were giving conflicting directions to people trying to regain their voting rights. They also show things like misspelled names and missing information hindering attempts by former inmates to determine if they’re eligible to regain their voting rights and determine how much they owe.

Documents from late 2018 and early 2019 show the Division of Elections’ difficulty working with the Florida Law Enforcement in some counties, including “nonsense case numbers we frequently receive from FDLE (e.g.,Orange, Duval, and Monroe).” It also notes that while overall counties have been very helpful, many counties don’t send all of the requested documents and don’t include a response that addresses the missing items. 

Starting in August 2019, dozens of counties reviewed 10 case types. Several counties reported no issues, but several others did. The types of issues included restitution was payable to the Department of Corrections, so it wasn’t in the clerk of courts system; computer system errors; old addresses for released inmates, and fees listed don’t include charges imposed by collection agencies.

Neil Volz is deputy director of FRRC. He says he has seen some positive steps being taken. He says the clerks of court have recently developed a shared document to help those trying get their voting rights back know what they owe. It allows a former inmate to go into any clerk’s office and get the most up-to-date information on their case as possible.

Volz says whether the process is easy or difficult to navigate depends on the individual. They have staffers and attorneys that can help them work to regain their rights and try to help pay the costs. 

“There isn’t a day that goes by that I don’t get a phone call or a text from somebody who’s getting registered to vote in the state of Florida and it’s a celebration,” he said. “At the same time, there are people trying to navigate a system that isn’t as clear as it will be in the future. And that can be frustrating. 

Owens says she’s determined to vote this year. 

I’m going to vote one way or the other,” she said. “I just feel like I shouldn’t have to take money from my family to do something that I really was wrongfully charged for.”

Owens says she thinks she owes $1,100 to the collection agency. But if the collection agency imposes its own fees, it could be more.

Sarah Mueller

Sarah Mueller has extensive experience covering public policy. She earned her bachelor’s degree in journalism in 2010. She began her career covering local government in Texas, Georgia and Colorado. She returned to school in 2016 to earn a master’s degree in Public Affairs Reporting. Since then, she’s worked in public radio covering state politics in Illinois, Florida and Delaware. If you'd like to contact her, send an email to [email protected].


3 comments

  • Milly Krause

    February 25, 2020 at 10:47 am

    I have 3 suggestions –
    One – Establish a list of those ex-felons being asked to pay restitution and ask for supporters to pay their fees.
    Otherwise, the powers that be will CONTINUE to use this as a reason to suppress voting.

    Two – Create a Go Me Fund or something similar to raise money to pay these fees.

    Three – Solve this problem for the future by making sure a plan for restitution is created before a
    felon’s release from prison or clearly state that restitution isn’t required upon release from prison.

    I also wonder how much money is being spent on court fees and other fees that could more wisely be used
    to pay fees.

    Voters Voted Overwhelmingly for Amendment 4 – Settle this matters so ex-felons are able to vote in the 2020 Election.

    • Ian

      February 25, 2020 at 9:19 pm

      Milly, Amendment 4 pertains to felons, not ex-felons.

  • Ian

    February 25, 2020 at 9:35 pm

    This article makes me wonder if anyone involved has even read SB 7066.

    Under the Florida Constitution and SB 7066, sentences imposed for felony convictions are the only ones that matter. Why is Tashenia Owens worried about anything relating to her misdemeanor charge? Her misdemeanor is not a felony and does not in any way keep her from voting or registering to vote.

    The reporter obviously spoke with Ms. Owens. Didn’t the reporter tell her that past misdemeanors do not prevent her from voting? If not, why not?

    On the question of how a felon is supposed to know how much they owe, can they not check the sentence that was imposed by the court for their felony conviction(s)? The amount they still owe equals the amount imposed in the sentence minus what they’ve paid so far.

    I kid you not. SB 7066 clearly indicates that the financial obligations a felon must pay to regain voting rights include only the amount specifically ordered by the court as part of the sentence and do not include any fines, fees, or costs that accrue after the date the obligation is ordered as a part of the sentence.

    See lines 1353-1357 of the enrolled version of the bill. It’s available at the Senate or House websites. This is not rocket science.

Comments are closed.


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