Return to Sept. 11th Archives
THE GREAT FLORIDA EX-CON GAME
How the “felon” voter-purge was itself felonious
Harper's Magazine
Friday, March 1,2002
by Greg
Palast
Some counties
defied Harris' directives; Madison County's elections
supervisor Linda Howell refused the purge list after she found
her own name on it.
In November the U.S. media, lost in patriotic
reverie, dressed up the Florida recount as a victory for
President Bush. But however one reads the ballots, Bush's win
would certainly have been jeopardized had not some Floridians
been barred from casting ballots at all. Between May 1999 and
Election Day 2000, two Florida secretaries of state - Sandra
Mortham and Katherine Harris, both protégées of Governor Jeb
Bush- ordered 57,700 "ex-felons," who are prohibited from
voting by state law, to be removed from voter rolls. (In the
thirty-five states where former felons can vote, roughly 90
percent vote Democratic.) A portion of the list, which was
compiled for Florida by DBT Online, can be seen for the first
time here; DBT, a company now owned by ChoicePoint of Atlanta,
was paid $4.3 million for its work, replacing a firm that
charged $5,700 per year for the same service. If the hope was
that DBT would enable Florida to exclude more voters, then the
state appears to have spent its money wisely.

Click here to
view full size
Two of these "scrub lists,"
as officials called them, were distributed to counties in the
months before the election with orders to remove the voters
named. Together the lists comprised nearly 1 percent of
Florida’s electorate and nearly 3 percent of its
African-American voters. Most of the voters (such as "David
Butler," (1); a name that appears 77 times in
Florida phone books) were selected because their name, gender,
birthdate and race matched - or nearly matched - one of the
tens of millions of ex-felons in the United States. Neither
DBT nor the state conducted any further research to verify the
matches. DBT, which frequently is hired by the F.B.I. to
conduct manhunts, originally proposed using address histories
and financial records to confirm the names, but the state
declined the cross-checks. In Harris’s elections office files,
next to DBT’s sophisticated verification plan, there is a
hand-written note: “DON’T NEED.”
Thomas
Alvin Cooper (2), twenty-eight, was flagged
because of a crime for which he will be convicted in the year
2007. According to Florida’s elections division, this intrepid
time-traveler will cover his tracks by moving to Ohio, adding
a middle name, and changing his race. Harper's found 325 names
on the list with conviction dates in the future, a fact that
did not escape Department of Elections workers, who, in June
2000 emails headed, “Future Conviction Dates," termed the
discovery, "bad news.” Rather than release this whacky data to
skeptical counties, Janet Mudrow, state liaison to DBT,
suggested that “blanks would be preferable in these cases."
(Harper's counted 4,917 blank conviction dates.) The one
county that checked each of the 694 names on its local list
could verify only 34 as actual felony convicts. Some counties
defied Harris' directives; Madison County's elections
supervisor Linda Howell refused the purge list after she found
her own name on it.
Rev. Willie Dixon
(3), seventy, was guilty of a crime in his youth;
but one phone call would have told the state that it had
already pardoned Dixon and restored his right to vote. On
behalf of Dixon and other excluded voters, the NAACP in
January 2001 sued Florida and Harris, after finding that
African-Americans—who account for 13 percent of Florida's
electorate and 46 percent of U.S. felony convictions —were
four times as likely as whites to be incorrectly singled out
under the state's methodology. After the election, Harris and
her elections chief Clay Roberts, testified under oath that
verifying the lists was solely the work of county supervisors.
But the Florida-DBT contract (marked "Secret" and
“Confidential”) holds DBT responsible for “manual verification
using telephone calls.” in fact, with the state’s blessing,
DBT did not call a single felon. When I asked Roberts about
the contract during an interview for BBC television, Roberts
ripped off his microphone, ran into his office, locked the
door, and called in state troopers to remove
us.
Johnny Jackson Jr. (4),
thirty-two, has never been to Texas, and his mother swears he
never had the middle name “Fitzgerald.” Neither is there
evidence that John Fitzgerald Jackson, felon of Texas, has
ever left the Lone Star State. But even if they were the same
man, removing him from Florida’s voter rolls is an
unconstitutional act. Texas is among the thirty five states
where ex-felons are permitted to vote, and the "full faith and
credit" clause of the U.S. Constitution forbids states to
revoke any civil rights that a citizen has been granted by
another state; in fact, the Florida Supreme Court had twice
ordered the state not to do so, just nine months before the
voter purge. Nevertheless, at least 2,873 voters were wrongly
removed, a purge authorized by a September 18, 2000 letter to
counties from Governor Bush's clemency office. On February 23,
2001, days after the U.S. Commission of Civil Rights began
investigating the matters, Bush's office issued a new letter
allowing these persons to vote; no copies of the earlier
letter could be found in the clemency office or on its
computers.
Wallace McDonald (5),
sixty-four, lost his right to vote in 2000, though his sole
run-in with the law was a misdemeanor in 1959. (He fell asleep
on a bus-stop bench.) Of the "matches' on these lists, the
civil-rights commission estimated that at least 14 percent -
or 8,000 voters, nearly 15 times Bush's official margin of
victory - were false. DBT claims it warned officials "a
significant number of people who were not a felon would be
included on the list"; but the state, the company now says,
"wanted there to be more names than were actually verified."
Last May, Florida's legislature barred Harris from using
outside firms to build the purge list and ordered her to seek
guidance from county elections officials. In defiance, Harris
has rebuffed the counties and hired another firm, just in time
for Jeb Bush's reelection fight this fall.
###
Special thanks to Fredda
Weinberg for cracking the Florida computer files and crunching
the numbers as well as to all the volunteer researchers who
contributed to this investigative effort.
Read
the complete and latest material on the ethnic purge that
fixed the election in Palast's new book, The Best Democracy
Money Can Buy, out this week from Pluto Press.
At
http://www.gregpalast.com/
you can read and subscribe to Greg Palast's London Observer
columns and view his reports for BBC Television's Newsnight.