Appeals court rules Mason, now 49, did not know she was ineligible when she voted in 2016 and throws out conviction
A Texas appeals court has thrown out a five-year prison sentence for Crystal Mason, a Texas woman who was sentenced for trying to cast a provisional ballot in the 2016 presidential election that was rejected.
Mason, now 49, attempted to vote in Fort Worth in the 2016 even though she was ineligible because she was still on supervised release – which is like probation – for a tax felony. She has always maintained she had no idea she was ineligible and only tried to cast a ballot because her mother urged her to.
A judge convicted her in a 2018 trial that lasted just a few hours.
So what? That's six years of a major life problem she did not deserve. 40k is horseshit (if she's even successful in getting it awarded), no matter how it may compare to options in other states.
And I'll say it - I don't believe for one second she'd have had this over her head all this time had she been a white registered Republican.
After Mason was arrested in 2017, she lost her job at a bank. She was also sent back to federal prison for several months for being arrested while on probation for a federal crime. During that time, she almost lost her home to foreclosure.
“Although I’ve cried for seven years straight, seven nights a week … I’ve also prayed for seven years straight, seven nights a week. Prayed that I would remain a free black woman,” she said in a statement.
The first vice chairman of the Georgia Republican party, Brian Pritchard, just got convicted of deliberately voting illegally nine times, and got sentenced to...
Agreed. Felons should be allowed to vote. Pirsoners should be allowed to vote. Just because you committed a crime doesn't mean you shouldn't be allowed to participate in a democratic election. There is, as far as I can remember, nothing in the Constitution that bars felons or the incarcerated from voting.
Not to mention that people in jail waiting for trial who can't afford bail aren't allowed to vote either if the election happens while they're in jail, even though there's been no conviction.
In Germany there are only a few crimes that take away your voting rights and I am fine with these:
preparation of a war of aggression and high treason against the Federation
treason and disclosure of state secrets with intent to cause damage
attacks against organs and representatives of foreign states
disruption of election process and falsification of election documents
bribing delegates
sabotage against means of defence or intelligence activity endangering national security (provided that a sentence of imprisonment is imposed for at least one year in this case).
Especially when prisoners are counted toward a state's apportionment. Now you end up with evil conservative scumbags petitioning to have prisons in their states/districts so they get those extra resources, without all of those damn liberal votes.
Mason’s case became well known nationally and struck a chord as an example of an egregious punishment for a voting mistake. Many saw it as a thinly veiled effort to intimidate Black voters.