Monthly Archives: March 2022

Elections Office Cleared…

Alachua County Supervisor of Elections office employees cleared of wrongdoing in voter fraud probe

By and

 

An eight-month, Florida criminal voter fraud investigation has cleared all current and former employees at the Alachua County Supervisor of Elections Office, prosecutors said Thursday.

The only people being charged in these cases are the inmates who registered to vote while they were ineligible to do so, said Darry Lloyd, chief of investigations at the State Attorney’s Office for the Eighth Judicial Circuit.

“Nobody from the supervisor‘s office will be charged,” he said. 

The number of those charged now stands at nine after four more indictments were revealed late Wednesday.

The four include a Democrat, a Republican and two not affiliated with a political party. Three of those charged Wednesday voted in the November 2020 presidential election, voting records showed. Cases opened earlier this week included two Democrats, one Republican and two who did not affiliate themselves with a political party.

The results of the investigation reveal a flawed voter registration system in Florida, nearly two years after dueling court battles over how to implement a state constitutional amendment that allowed felons to vote legally without going through a complex process to have their rights restored. Felons, who prosecutors said were ineligible, registered to vote without being flagged by Tallahassee elections officials for years.

Three of the four men in the latest cases registered to vote from inside the county jail during registration drives organized by Alachua County’s Democratic elections supervisor, Kim A. Barton, in February and July 2020.

Two of the men indicted Wednesday said they were surprised to learn they had been charged. When interviewed by investigators, both men said they were told the target of the investigation was an employee with the Supervisor of Elections Office.

Daniel Dion Roberts, 48, of Hawthorne said someone visited him in jail identifying themselves as a voting official. He said he did exactly what the official told him to do and even helped him fill out the registration form.

“I had officers come and speak with me about something about them investigating the man that came to the jail,” he wrote from prison. “I haven’t heard about charges. Now I’m worried I don’t have a lawyer and can’t afford one. I’m in prison for three more years at least.”

John Rivers, 44, of Alachua, reached by phone Thursday morning, recounted a similar encounter with investigators last year.

“I was contacted by the Federal Department of Law Enforcement last year, [they said] they were investigating the supervisor of elections, not the people that actually voted,” he said.

Rivers said a man — who identified himself as a Supervisor of Elections office employee —  visited the Alachua County jail and made several announcements encouraging felons to register to vote.

“They actually helped us fill out the voter rights registration forms. They came in and recruited us to vote, and then you know, told us that we could vote and now they’re charging us for voting,” Rivers said.

Rivers said the man informed him he could still vote as felon, as long as he wasn’t accused of burglary or murder, and did not mention anything about restrictions for owing court fines. 

Rivers said he had not voted in the three previous elections because he knew he was ineligible. But after speaking to the Supervisor of Elections representative, he believed that he was cleared and now blames the employee for his latest legal woes.

“He shouldn’t have been in there signing people up and telling them stuff if he didn’t know what he was talking about.”

Ongoing investigations have also focused on Duval, Gadsden, Lake and Leon counties. Although Lake County is reliably red, those others are among the few in Florida that lean heavily Democratic. Reliably blue, Alachua County – home to progressive Gainesville and the University of Florida – was among only 12 of Florida’s 67 counties that voted Democratic in that election.

All nine men charged this week completed their voter registrations in 2020, listing the Alachua County Jail as their home or mailing addresses. None were serving time in prison at the time of the election but all still owed fines from previous charges, according to court records.

Many of the voter registrations in question corresponded with visits to the jail on at least two occasions in 2020 by T.J. Pyche, the former director of communications and outreach for the county supervisor of elections. Pyche declined this week in a phone interview to discuss the case. He resigned from the agency in July, shortly after the state investigation began.

Pyche’s lawyer, Ron Kozlowski, said his client was not aware that any of the men charged this week were ineligible to vote.

Not all of those indicted blamed Pyche for their charges.

“I did vote and some people came to talk to me,” said Therris Lee Conney Jr., 33, of Gainesville, in an email from a Florida prison where he is serving a five-year sentence on unrelated drug and weapons convictions from October 2020, weeks after he registered to vote as a Democrat.

“About the guy who help us vote he did nothing wrong tho,” Conney wrote. He said he was unaware of the voter fraud charge levied against him this week until contacted by Fresh Take Florida, a news service operated by the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communications.

Conney said he believed he was legally eligible to vote.

Florida’s rules place the burden on felons who have finished serving their prison sentences to research whether they still owe any unpaid court fees that would make them ineligible to register as voters or cast ballots.

In one of those legal disputes, a federal judge in Tallahassee noted there is no centralized office tracking fines and fees across courts in Florida’s 67 counties. Amounts owed in older court cases – or in felony cases in other states – can be especially difficult to determine because court records might not be immediately available.

If felons can’t determine on their own, they can request an advisory opinion from the Florida Division of Elections, where government lawyers would investigate to look for unpaid debts and tell a potential voter whether they can legally register.

“It’s really difficult to know if you’ve paid these things off,” said Daniel Smith, the chairman of the political science department at the University of Florida who has testified in voting rights cases against the DeSantis administration. “The system is a disaster. People think in good faith they’re eligible and find out they’re not.”

Those charged late Wednesday include: 

  • John Boyd Rivers, 44, of Alachua, released Nov. 2021 after being sentenced to 53 weeks confinement for simple battery. He still owes at least $1,223 for the case, according to court records.
  • Daniel Dion Roberts, 44, of Hawthorne is serving a six-year sentence for domestic battery, aggravated assault, witness intimidation and various weapons charges. He was ordered to pay $1,742 in medical bills for his victim, plus $1,123 for overall fees related to the conviction.
  • Leroy James Ross, 63, of Gainesville, released from prison Sep. 2021 after serving a year and five months for cocaine possession and obstruction of a criminal investigation. He still owes $871 on that case and $549 for a 2020 charge of driving under the influence.
  • Christopher Timothy Wiggins, 54, of Gainesville, was convicted in June 2021 for robbery with a firearm and is now serving an eleven-year sentence in prison. He still owes $671 for the felony charge, according to court records.

Indictments Announced

Five inmates indicted on voter fraud charges following jailhouse registration drive in Alachua County

By and

 

A Florida prosecutor has filed felony voter fraud charges against at least five inmates in what is believed to be the first cases resulting from a state investigation into a voter registration drive conducted inside the jail in July 2020 by Alachua County’s Democratic elections supervisor.

All the men charged this week had listed the county jail on their voter forms as their home address, according to registration records. At least four voted in the 2020 elections. Each owed a few hundred dollars in unpaid court fees in prior felony cases when they registered as voters or cast ballots in the last presidential election, according to court records, which would have made them ineligible under Florida law.

The men included two Democrats, one Republican and two who did not affiliate themselves with any political party.

“I just knew it was to good to be true and the guy told me it was OK to vote as a felon,” said one of the men, Henry Thomas Shuler III, 38, of Gainesville. In his email from state prison on unrelated charges, Shuler was referring to a former Alachua County election worker, T.J. Pyche, 27, of Gainesville who visited the jail for roughly two hours during a registration drive, according to jail visitor logs.

Pyche, the former director of communications and outreach for the Alachua County supervisor of elections, declined Wednesday in a phone interview to discuss the case. He resigned from the agency in July, shortly after the state investigation began.

Shuler said he was unaware he was being charged with voter fraud until contacted by Fresh Take Florida, a news service operated by the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communications. 

“I would like to apologize to the voters, poll and to you,” Shuler wrote. He added: “If there anything else I need to do you can let me know.”

In another message he sent Wednesday, Shuler appeared angry and confused: “How I’m being charge with a felony,” he asked.

The other men charged this week did not respond to messages sent to them in prison or jail asking to talk.

The criminal cases offered Republicans in Florida – including Gov. Ron DeSantis – some of the first allegations about very limited numbers of possible fraud involving Democrats. 

In a handful of investigations since 2020, most cases have involved Republican voters, including four residents of The Villages, a GOP stronghold, recently arrested and charged with voter fraud, and accusations that Republican canvassers in South Florida illicitly changed the party registrations of elderly, Hispanic Democrats to the GOP last year.

Ongoing investigations have also focused on Duval, Gadsden, Lake and Leon counties. Although Lake County is reliably red, those others are among the few in Florida that lean heavily Democratic.

The voter registrations for all the men charged in Alachua County have been revoked. Four of the five are serving unrelated sentences in Florida prisons. The fifth was in jail Wednesday in Hamilton County along Florida’s northern border on a misdemeanor charge related to a missed court date.

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement had been investigating complaints since the middle of last year about jail inmates who may have been improperly registered as voters by the office of Kim A. Barton, the supervisor of elections in Alachua County, home to progressive Gainesville and the University of Florida.

Barton, a Democrat, organized a voter registration drive July 15, 2020, at the Alachua County Jail, ahead of that year’s presidential race between Donald Trump and Joe Biden. Months later, Trump won Florida by a percentage of 51-48, or 373,231 votes, but Biden won the overall presidential election nationwide.

Reliably blue, Alachua was among only 12 of Florida’s 67 counties that voted Democratic in that election. Biden carried 63% of the 142,323 votes in Alachua County, one of his strongest performances in the state.

Amid complaints submitted last year to the state attorney and sheriff’s office about 18 inmates who registered to vote in 2020, Barton said it was the responsibility of the inmates filling out registration papers to confirm they were eligible. In a statement at the time, she called it “categorically false” that anyone from her office intentionally registered ineligible voters.

“He told me it was OK to vote as a felon, and I ask him would I be in trouble or anything else,” Shuler wrote from prison. He said he was told it was legal for him to register and vote.

Pyche’s lawyer, Ron Kozlowski, said his client was not aware Shuler or the others who registered from the jail that day were ineligible. 

The county elections office has not been contacted by prosecutors as of Wednesday, said Aaron Klein, who took over Pyche’s job as director of communications and outreach.

The prosecutor’s office did not immediately respond to phone messages asking about the cases.

After the complaints, the Democratic sheriff, Clovis Watson, referred the case to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, a state agency that is part of the DeSantis administration.

Under Florida law and court rulings, most felons – except those convicted of murder or sexual offenses – can register and vote after they completed their prison terms and no longer owe any unpaid fines or court fees. It would have been permissible to register jail inmates as voters at the time who were awaiting the outcomes of other criminal cases if their previous felony cases had already been wrapped up.

“If they are not convicted felons, or if they are and meet the requirements provided by Florida statute, they perhaps have the right to vote,” said Klein, the county voting office spokesman. “They absolutely have the right to vote if they are legally able to.”

Florida voters approved a constitutional amendment in 2018 that allowed felons to vote legally without going through a complex process to have their rights restored. But the law underwent legal challenges that took months to resolve in 2020. The five inmates registered to vote in the middle of that dispute.

In May 2020 – just before the registration drive in the jail – a  federal judge in Tallahassee, Robert Hinkle, ruled against Florida’s Republican governor and Legislature and dramatically expanded the number of eligible voters in the state to include former felons unable to pay their court fines and fees.

Among other reasons, Hinkle said it was “not as easy as one might expect” for felons – or Florida election administrators – to know whether or how much they owe in court cases, especially for criminal convictions decades ago. 

A federal appeals court on July 1 – days before the jail visits – blocked the trial judge’s ruling, effectively reinstating the ban on convicted felons who hadn’t repaid their financial debts. The same appeals court in September 2020 overturned Hinkle’s decision and said Florida was allowed to restrict voting by felons who still owed unpaid fines and fees.

Despite a lack of evidence of large-scale voter fraud in the 2020 election, Florida Republicans pushed for more regulation of elections and a full audit of the presidential election. In response, DeSantis proposed a new Office of Election Crimes and Security to investigate election crimes. The Legislature passed a bill creating the unit in March, and DeSantis is expected to sign it soon.

All but one of the men in Gainesville charged this week registered to vote on July 15, 2020. The fifth registered to vote from the jail on Sept. 30, 2020. That was 19 days after the appeals court ruling that restored voting restrictions on felons with unpaid fines or fees.

Submitting false voter registration and illegal voting are third-degree felonies punishable by up to five years in prison and a $5,000 fine. 

Barton was first elected in 2016 to a four-year term and ran for re-election unopposed in 2020. Klein, the spokesman for her agency, said the office has been working with the sheriff to provide voter registration and education for those in jail since 2014.

Those charged include: 

  • Xavier Lavonne Artis, 22, of Gainesville pleaded guilty in March 2019 to felony burglary and auto theft charges in Duval County. The judge withheld his guilty sentence, but he still owes $668 in court fees, according to court records. He was charged this week with providing false voter information when he registered as an unaffiliated voter. He is serving a five-year sentence in prison on the 2019 charges. He was convicted of those crimes in Alachua County and fined more than $16,000 six days before the 2020 primary elections, according to voting records. He still owes $5,764 in that case, court records showed. He voted in the primary in 2020 by absentee ballot from jail, and voted in the general election by absentee ballot that year while he was in prison, records showed.
  • Kelvin Bolton, 55, of Gainesville, who has a lengthy criminal history on drug and theft convictions back to 1988, pleaded no contest and was convicted of felony theft in Alachua County in January 2018. He was sentenced to one year in prison and still owes $671 in court fees, according to records. He has been released from state prison after serving two years on additional charges of theft and battery, and was in the Hamilton County jail this week. He was charged this week in Alachua County with providing false information when he registered as a Republican, and two counts of illegal voting. He voted in the 2020 primary and submitted an absentee ballot in the general election that was not counted, according to voting records.
  • Therris Lee Conney Jr., 33, of Gainesville, who also has a criminal record over more than a decade, pleaded no contest in August 2011 in Alachua County to felony burglary and cocaine charges. He was sentenced to six years in prison and fined $674, court records showed. He still owes $38.84 in that case. He is serving a five-year sentence on drugs and weapons convictions from October 2020, just weeks after he registered to vote. He still owes $621 in those cases. He was charged this week with providing false voter information when he registered in September 2020 as a Democrat, and one count of illegal voting. He voted in the 2020 general election, records showed.
  • Arthur Leonard Lang, 43, of Gainesville was convicted in January 2013 on felony charges of fleeing police after a traffic stop and driving with a suspended license. He was sentenced to 22 months in prison and still owes $1,464 in court fees. He also still owes $671 more after he was sentenced in December 2020 in Alachua County to four years in prison on other felony drug and resisting arrest charges. He was charged with two counts of providing false voter information when he registered as a Democrat, and one count of illegal voting. He voted in the 2020 November election. He is servinga four-year sentence on theft, fraud and drug charges in state prison. 
  • Shuler was charged with providing false voter information when he registered as an unaffiliated voter. He never cast a ballot. He is serving a six-year robbery sentence in state prison.

Welcome Coach Golden!

 

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University of Florida athletic director Scott Stricklin officially announced the new head coach of the men’s basketball team on Friday, anointing San Francisco Dons’ bench general Todd Golden as the program’s latest leader. He will become the 22nd to hold the position for the Orange and Blue since 1915.

The 36-year-old basketball brain replaces Mike White, who was just under a couple of years older when he took over the helm in Gainesville, possibly signaling a trend for Stricklin. Golden’s background includes the position of director of basketball operations at both Columbia University and Auburn for one year before taking over as assistant basketball coach at the same schools the following years.

After his two two-year stints, he headed west to be the head coach of the San Francisco Dons for the past three seasons, earning San Francisco its 26th NCAA Tournament appearance in 2022. Golden put together a 57-36 record over the three campaigns, going 22-12 in his debut and struggling to an 11-14 record during the COVID-19 season. He bounced back with a 24-10 record this year to earn that ticket to the Big Dance.

Golden is originally from Phoenix, Arizona, and started as a walk-on with the Saint Mary’s Gaels from 2004 to 2008. He earned a scholarship and was eventually named team captain. He ranked second in the nation during his senior season in assist-to-turnover ratio and finished his collegiate career as the school’s all-time leader in free-throw percentage with a .832 mark.

He also played professionally for two seasons in Israel’s top division for Maccabi Haifa and competed in the 2009 Maccabiah Games with the USA Open Team before embarking on his coaching career.

Golden is known for his heavy reliance on analytics and has a reputation as an offensive guru. However, he has an ability to get things done on the defensive end as well. His mild-mannered profile will fit well with what Stricklin seems to be targeting lately, and his modern approach should be a breath of fresh air in the O’Connell Center in the coming seasons.

The Tragedy worsens……

RUSSIA-UKRAINE WAR

Survivors Rescued From Ukrainian Theater That Was Hit by Russian Airstrike

More than 100 people were evacuated from building in Mariupol, as Russian forces continue to shell cities across Ukraine 

LVIV, Ukraine—Workers evacuated 130 people from the wreckage of a theater in Mariupol following a Russian airstrike on the southern port city, Ukraine’s ombudsman said Friday. 

About 1,300 remained trapped in the basement of the theater, Lyudmyla Denisova said. She said it was difficult to be certain of the number of survivors and she declined to confirm any casualties. 

“We hope that they will be alive but as of now we have no information about them,” she said during a local television interview. 

An assistant for Mariupol Mayor Vadim Boychenko declined to comment on the theater rescue effort or provide casualty figures.

Efforts to sort through the wreckage and rescue any survivors are being hampered by the fact rescue services have been decimated by the attack on the city. 

Getting medical treatment to those injured could be difficult, because “a lot of doctors have been killed,” said former governor Sergiy Taruta in a statement overnight.

Ukrainian civilians sought shelter at the theater as Mariupol has been the target of relentless shelling by Russian forces seeking to advance along Ukraine’s southern coast.

Moscow has long coveted Mariupol for its strategic location 35 miles west of the Russian border on the Azov Sea. Russia’s Defense Ministry denied its forces conducted an airstrike on the theater.

Elsewhere in Ukraine, Russian missiles hit an aircraft-repair facility in the western part of the country on Friday, striking a long-range target far from the battlefield while attacks continued on other cities.

The Ukrainian Air Force said six cruise missiles were fired from the Black Sea. Two were intercepted, preventing them from reaching the target near the airport in the western city of Lviv.

A building was destroyed, according to Lviv’s mayor, Andriy Sadovyi, who said work at the facility had been suspended before the strike. One person was wounded, and rescue workers were on site putting out fire, said Maksym Kozytskyi, the head of the Lviv regional military administration. 

The attack near Lviv comes less than a week after a Russian airstrike on a Ukrainian military training center in a western area about 10 miles from the Polish border. Lviv is about 50 miles from the border. Polish immigration authorities said Friday that the number of people who have fled Ukraine for Poland has now surpassed two million. 

Most of the fighting between the invading Russian forces and Ukrainian troops has been concentrated further east and south. In the eastern city of Kramatorsk, at least one missile hit a residential building overnight, killing two people and wounding 16, said Pavlo Kyrlyenko, head of the regional military administration in the eastern region of Donetsk.

The thud of artillery exchanges and small-arms fire was audible in the outskirts of the capital city of Kyiv overnight. A Russian rocket, reportedly shot down by Ukrainian air defense forces, landed in a downtown neighborhood, injuring a half dozen people who were cut by flying glass. 

Standing by the crater next to scorched apartment blocks, Mayor Vitali Klitschko said one person had been killed and four children were among the wounded. “These are the results of this awful situation,” he said.

Women’s Basketball a 10 seed.

GAINESVILLE, Fla. – Florida women’s basketball is officially heading to the NCAA Tournament after being selected as a No. 10 seed on Sunday evening.
 
The Gators will be headed to Storrs, Conn. to matchup with No. 7-seeded Central Florida on Saturday, Mar. 19. Connecticut will serve as the host during the first and second rounds, holding a No. 2 seed and matching up with No. 15 seed, Mercer.
 
Central Florida and Florida have never met in the postseason, but the Gators hold a 25-0 series advantage over their in-state rival, last meeting in 2015 for a 93-79 Florida victory.
 
Saturday will mark the Orange & Blue’s 16th NCAA Tournament appearance, with their last coming in 2016 when the Gators earned a five-seed with an at-large bid. Overall, Florida holds a 12-15 record in the tournament, including a 9-6 clip in the first round and 2-7 record in the second round.
 
This season, the Gators defied expectations after winning 20 games for the first time since the 2015-16 campaign, finishing the year 21-10. During the season, Florida downed five top-25 squads, including a top-10 victory over No. 7 Tennessee, en route to securing the fifth-seed at the Southeastern Conference Tournament.
 
Multiple Gators also earned postseason honors, as veteran point guard Kiara Smith was named First Team All-SEC and Alberte Rimdal was placed on the SEC All-Freshman Team. Kelly Rae Finley, now officially the head coach of the Gators, has been named a semifinalist for the Naismith Women’s Coach of the Year.
 

Coach White to Georgia

The Florida Gators and head basketball coach Mike White parted ways Sunday with White being hired away from Florida by the SEC rival Georgia Bulldogs. The move comes just a few days after the Gators were bounced in the second round of the 2022 SEC Tournament, their earliest exit from the postseason event since 2009.

Sources close to the situation told OnlyGators.com that Florida was expecting to move on from White at the conclusion of the season, perhaps after the NIT. The Gators believed other programs would have interest in White’s services and thought a separation could come without needing to buy out his contract as they did with head football coach Dan Mullen less than four months ago. Instead, Florida will actually receive around $1 million from Georgia for White.

It was thought that Ole Miss, White’s alma mater, would be in play given the team’s poor performances across the last three seasons. However, the Rebels appear set to retain coach Kermit Davis despite not having a winning campaign since 2018-19. Whether that job opens or not, White had an opportunity to get out from under his toxic tenure at Florida by accepting a job with plenty of potential. It just so happens to be with UF’s biggest rival.

“Mike White informed me [Sunday] afternoon that he was accepting another job,” said athletic director Scott Stricklin in a press release. “It’s been a pleasure having Mike, Kira and the White family with us in Gainesville, and we wish them well. They are a wonderful family who always represented the Gators in a first-class manner.

“The search for the next Gator men’s basketball coach has already begun, and I look forward to identifying a leader who will embody the [University Athletic Association’s] vision of providing a championship experience with integrity.”

The loss in the SEC Tournament was Florida’s fifth in the last eight games, and it capped a third straight season in which the Gators were unable to amass 20 wins. Based on its resume, UF was not a candidate for selection in the 2022 NCAA Tournament, an event it will miss for the first time since 2016 (White’s inaugural season). The Gators went 2-8 against the 68-team field, 1-7 against such teams from the SEC, when it was announced Sunday night. Their two wins were by a combined four points.

Florida finished 19-13 overall this season and 34-23 across White’s final two campaigns, the program’s worst record over consecutive seasons by the same coach since Billy Donovan’s first two years (27-32). The Gators also finished 9-9 in SEC play for the third time in seven years under White; Donovan was .500 or worse in league play just four times across 19 seasons, including his first two.

The long-embattled White led Florida to the Elite Eight round of the 2017 NCAA Tournament, but the Gators fell to a higher seed in SEC rival South Carolina and have failed to advance past the second round as no better than a No. 6 seed in three appearances since.

Florida has not finished better than fourth in the SEC standings since 2018. The Gators became a middle-of-the-road team under White’s tenure during a time in which SEC basketball is stronger than its been in years thanks to a concentrated effort throughout the league. Six teams received bids to the NCAA Tournament, and there are star coaches and players littered throughout the conference.

Florida used to battle Kentucky for top billing in the SEC every season; it has become a complete afterthought in the league. Furthermore, the Gators were neither playing nor recruiting well enough for White to be thought of as the future of the program.

Though White and the team were unable to capitalize on the talent of star Keyontae Johnson across the last two seasons — Johnson collapsed on the court with a heart issue early in the 2020-21 campaign — White had plenty of time to build and rebuild his roster. This past offseason, Florida lost four players to transfer. While White did recruit acclaimed transfers to replace those departures, the team was built without a second ball-handler or strong post player; instead, he added a swath of inefficient spot shooters who contributed heavily to poor offensive performances throughout the campaign.

White was hired out of Louisiana Tech after he led the program to 27+ wins in three straight seasons. He was seen as bright, youthful hire for Florida who many compared to Donovan given his success at a lower league, young age, personality and potential.

However, White never led the Bulldogs to the NCAA Tournament, and detractors believed that the Gators should have swung bigger for Donovan’s replacement given the basketball program was far more established and successful compared to when Donovan took over two decades earlier.

Florida will now begin a national coaching search. If it goes the way of its effort to replace Mullen with a specific target in mind, Stricklin may be able to act quickly. However, with the NCAA Tournament set to begin, many of the nation’s top coaches could be busy for the next few weeks.