Felons released from prison in Florida can be
forced to wait years before getting three minutes to explain why they
should have their rights restored. Gov. Bush, whose vote is required to
grant clemency, can reject a felon's plea without explanation. As The
Miami Herald reported, he has toughened the rules, slowing an already
overtaxed system to a near halt. Before Gov. Bush took office in
January 1999, the average felon regained voting rights with a hearing
five years after being released, the Herald found. Now, the average is
eight years. Recently released felons who don't qualify for
administrative review won't vote for president until 2012 -- if their
three minutes goes well. If clemency is rejected, the applicant won't
be told why. Under laws designed to protect witnesses, he can't review
his own file to find out if it is accurate. Viewing those files is
critical because the system is so fraught with error. The Herald found
that computer glitches and poor communication dropped 100,000 felons
from the clemency process from 1992 to 2001. It found that another
50,000 felons who served time in county jails were never offered a
chance to apply. Florida is one of just seven states that don't
automatically restore felons rights. About a half-million Floridians
have not had their rights restored. [more]
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