Pamela Moses sentenced to six years in prison over a voting error

lightbright

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The Black woman sentenced to six years in prison over a voting error
Pamela Moses was sentenced to six years in prison for trying to register despite a felony conviction but officials admitted making a series of mistakes

For the last few months, I’ve been following the case of Pamela Moses, a 44-year-old activist in Memphis who was convicted in November for trying to register to vote while she was ineligible. On Monday, Moses, who is Black, was sentenced to six years and one day in prison.
To my eye, the case is far more complex than it seems.

Amy Weirich, the local prosecutor, has trumpeted both the conviction and the sentence in press releases. She has highlighted that Moses has an extensive criminal record, and she told a straightforward story about Moses’ voting crime. In 2015, Moses pleaded guilty to perjury and tampering with evidence in connection to allegations that she stalked and harassed a local judge. Tampering with evidence is one of a handful of felonies that causes someone to permanently lose their voting rights in Tennessee. Nonetheless, Moses, still on probation, knowingly tried to register to vote in 2019.

The case caught my attention for a few reasons. First, it is rare to see a prosecutor bring criminal charges against someone for election crimes, and I was curious whether this was a bona fide case of fraud or of someone who had made a mistake. Second, there has been growing awareness of racial disparities in punishments for election-related crimes. Black people such as Crystal Mason and Hervis Rogers have faced years in prison for making mistakes about their voting eligibility. White voters have received much lighter sentences for election-related crimes.

Weirich’s office did not respond to interview requests, but the more I looked into Moses’ case, the more I realized the case wasn’t straightforward at all. Behind the scenes, Tennessee officials conceded that they had made a series of mistakes concerning Moses’ voting eligibility.

In 2015, when Moses pleaded guilty to her felony, she says no one told her she couldn’t vote. “They never mentioned anything about voting. They never mentioned anything about not voting, being able to vote … none of that,” Moses told me last year. (She added she hadn’t discussed the case with her two sons, 24 and 13, but described it as “traumatic”.)

At the time, election officials should have removed her from the rolls, but the court never sent election officials in Memphis the documents they needed to do so, according to a letter from an election official I obtained.

Moses didn’t know anything was amiss until 2019, when she launched a long-shot mayoral campaign. Election officials said she couldn’t appear on the ballot because of her felony. When they began to look into her eligibility, they also realized she had never been taken off the voter rolls. Moses went to court and asked a judge to clarify whether she was still on probation, and the court confirmed that she was. What happened next is at the crux of the case against her.

Moses did not believe the judge had correctly calculated her sentence. So she went to the local probation office and asked an officer to figure it out. An officer filled out and signed a certificate confirming her probation had ended. In Tennessee, people with felony convictions who want to vote need that document from a correction official. Moses submitted it to local election officials along with a voter registration form.

But the day afterwards, an official at the corrections department wrote an email to election officials saying a probation officer had made an “error” on Moses’ certificate. Moses was still serving an active felony sentence, they wrote, and was not eligible to vote. The department offered no explanation for the mistake.

Such errors are actually fairly common in Tennessee, where the voting rules are extremely confusing for people with felonies, Blair Bowie, an attorney at the Campaign Legal Center, told me. A 2017 study found that about 8% of the certificates submitted were rejected because the voters remained ineligible. Bowie said she was unaware of any voter in the state ever facing criminal charges for submitting a certificate but later turning out to be ineligible to vote.

During Moses’ trial, prosecutors argued that she knew she was ineligible to vote when she submitted the certificate. They pointed to the fact that she submitted it even though a judge had recently told her she was ineligible.

“Even knowing that order denied her expiration of sentence, Pamela Moses submitted that form with her application for voter registration and signed an oath as to the accuracy of the information submitted,” prosecutors wrote in their request for an indictment. “Pamela Moses knowingly made or consented to a false entry on her permanent registration.”

“You tricked the probation department into giving you documents saying you were off probation,” the judge sentencing her said last week.

“That seems absurd to me on its face,” said Bowie, who is involved in a challenge to Tennessee’s process for restoring voting rights. “The instructions on the certificate of restoration form are very clear to the probation officer or the clerk. They say you will check these records and you will sign off on this based on what the records say.

“They’re saying that she tricked the probation officer into filling out this form for her. That creates a really scary prospect for people who think they’re being wrongly told they’re not eligible.”

Moses is currently in custody and an appeal is expected. But the case highlights the byzantine maze that people with felony convictions have to go through to figure out if they can vote. And it shows the harsh consequences prosecutors can bring if people with felony convictions make a mistake.


CONTINUED:
The Black woman sentenced to six years in prison over a voting error | US voting rights | The Guardian

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bgbtylvr

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Literally, why do we still live here? We don't have to take this shit. This is fucking crazy.
We are basically “tolerated” anywhere we go, so leaving for me isn’t an option until retirement. Our mistreatment stems primarily from inaction. I vote. I’ve been to city council meetings. I’m on the board in my building, and I offer input in the removal of those damn scooters from downtown atlanta. I make moves when I can, even if small ones. Judges, Sheriffs, etc get voted in. We don’t vote in all elections. I’ve voted more in atlanta than anywhere else I’ve lived because I see these ninjas giving zero fucks about this city, but I care about my shit so I stay involved now.
 

knightmelodic

American fruit, Afrikan root.
BGOL Investor
r9TP47l-asset-mezzanine-16x9-taswLbp.jpg
 

knightmelodic

American fruit, Afrikan root.
BGOL Investor
Just a reminder, judge and DA are elected positions. Oh, that's right, don't vote until reparations or something, I forget, but just don't bother to vote.

Here's your goddamn reparations. You like apples? How you like them apples? Cause you're next.
 

Politic Negro

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BGOL Investor
From her office:
Woman Sentenced in Illegal Voting Sign-Up

Jan. 31, 2022 – A Memphis woman convicted in November of illegally registering to vote in 2019 was sentenced to six years and one day in prison Monday, said Shelby County Dist. Atty. Gen. Amy Weirich.
Pamela Moses, 44, has 16 prior criminal convictions and committed the voting offense while on probation. Criminal Court Judge W. Mark Ward said that if she completes programs in prison and maintains good behavior, he would consider placing her on probation after nine months.(Just after the election)
On April 29, 2015, she pled guilty to tampering with evidence and forgery, both felonies, and to misdemeanor counts of perjury, stalking, theft under $500 and escape. She was placed on probation for seven years.
Under the law, she also was rendered infamous because of her felony convictions and lost her rights of citizenship, including her right to vote. She was permanently deemed ineligible to register and vote in Tennessee because of the tampering with evidence conviction.
Proof at her trial last November showed that on Sept. 3, 2019, Moses filed a certificate of restoration and application for voter registration with the Shelby County Election Commission, falsely asserting that her sentence had expired and that she was eligible to register to vote. However, Moses was still serving her 2015 sentence on probation at the time she filed the restoration documents.
The case was handled by Chief Prosecutor Kirby May of the District Attorney’s Vertical Team 5 which prosecutes cases in General Sessions Division 13 and in Criminal Court Division 9.
 

Politic Negro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Just a reminder, judge and DA are elected positions. Oh, that's right, don't vote until reparations or something, I forget, but just don't bother to vote.

Here's your goddamn reparations. You like apples? How you like them apples? Cause you're next.

She beat Judge Joe Brown for this job.

Probably less than 10% turnout
District Attorney General District 30
2. Joe Brown - Democratic 50,223
1. Amy Weirich - Republican 94,324
 

knightmelodic

American fruit, Afrikan root.
BGOL Investor
Criminal Court Judge W. Mark Ward said that if she completes programs in prison and maintains good behavior, he would consider placing her on probation after nine months.(Just after the election)

Why, how very white of him. Bastard

ward_mark_2021aug.jpg


Contact Info

  • 901-222-3378 (P)

Address
Shelby Co. Justice Complex
201 Poplar Avenue, Room 519
Memphis, TN 38103
County
Shelby
 

scullydog

Rising Star
Platinum Member
We are basically “tolerated” anywhere we go, so leaving for me isn’t an option until retirement. Our mistreatment stems primarily from inaction. I vote. I’ve been to city council meetings. I’m on the board in my building, and I offer input in the removal of those damn scooters from downtown atlanta. I make moves when I can, even if small ones. Judges, Sheriffs, etc get voted in. We don’t vote in all elections. I’ve voted more in atlanta than anywhere else I’ve lived because I see these ninjas giving zero fucks about this city, but I care about my shit so I stay involved now.
I hear you, but no time in our history in America has legislation stopped this ignorant shit. Its time to move. If you create heaven in America, white folk will tear it down. What you are discussing we already tried. Time to move. I will be out of here in less than three years.
 

Politic Negro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor

Judge orders new trial for US woman sentenced to six years for trying to register to vote
Pamela Moses, who has been in prison since December but is being released on Friday, says she had no idea she was inelegible

A Memphis judge ordered a new trial for Pamela Moses, a woman who was sentenced to six years in prison for trying to register to vote.



New evidence undermines case against Black US woman jailed for voting error
Read more


The case attracted national attention in recent weeks, following a Guardian report, because of the severity of the sentence. Moses said she had no idea she was ineligible.

Moses has been in prison since December, when her bond was revoked. On Thursday, the Guardian revealed new evidence in the case that had not been produced at the trial. Moses was being released from custody on Friday, according to Claiborne Ferguson, her attorney.

“We are so excited that the motion for new trial was granted for Pamela Moses today and that she is able to return home to her family while she awaits trial. We hope that she receives justice and is found not guilty for the admitted mistakes of the state of Tennessee,” said Dawn Harrington, the executive director of Free Hearts, a criminal justice organization in Tennessee that supported Moses.

Moses was convicted last year for submitting a document in 2019 indicating she was eligible to vote. Prosecutors said she knew that this was false, because just months before a judge issued an order telling Moses she was still on probation for a 2015 felony. In Tennessee, people on felony probation cannot vote.

When she turned in the form, Moses believed that the probation for her 2015 felony had expired, and a probation officer even signed a certificate indicating that this was the case and that she was eligible. Prosecutors said that Moses deceived the officer into signing the certificate.

But evidence obtained by the Guardian this week showed that corrections officials investigated the error immediately afterwards and determined that the probation officer – identified as Manager Billington – was negligent and made an error while Moses waited in the lobby of his office.

“Manager Billington advised that he thought he did due diligence in making his decision,” Joe Williams, an administrator in the department of corrections, wrote in an email to Lisa Helton, a top department official. “Manager Billington failed to adequately investigate the status of this case. He failed to review all of the official documents available through the Shelby county justice portal”.

Ferguson, Moses’ attorney, said he had never seen the document before the Guardian showed it to him on Wednesday.

W Mark Ward, the judge who oversaw the case and sentenced Moses, cited the prosecution’s failure to disclose the letter, even if it was inadvertent, as one of the reasons he was ordering a new trial. “The document does contain information that was not addressed in the direct and cross-examinations of Billington and contained the identity of an additional possible witness for the defense.”

Ward also said the court had erroneously allowed information about a prior 2000 felony conviction and an earlier effort by Moses to get her voting rights back to be introduced at trial. “The only real issue for the jury during the trial was whether the defendant knew the certificate of voting rights restoration form was not accurate when she obtained it and utilized it to attempt to register to vote,” he wrote. “The fact that she was convicted of a felony in 2000 and had her right to vote restored in 2014 has no significant relevance” to the case at hand.

The ruling was an abrupt reversal for Ward, who yelled at Moses’ lawyer during the sentencing hearing and said she tricked the probation officer.

“This ruling is an extraordinary development. It is very rare for a judge to reverse himself like this, and it’s telling that he sentenced her so severely and summarily discounted her position before the case made national news,” said Josh Spickler, the executive director of Just City, a criminal justice non-profit. The district attorney’s office, he said, “has long had a reputation for failing to disclose material evidence that could benefit the accused. This is yet another shocking example of that”.

Amy Weirich, the district attorney, defended her office’s handling of evidence in the case.

“The Tennessee department of correction failed to turn over a necessary document in the case of Pamela Moses and therefore her conviction has been overturned by the judge,” Weirich said in a statement. “When reporters or political opportunists use the word ‘state’ they need to be crystal clear that the error was made by the TDOC and not any attorney or officer in the office of the Shelby county district attorney.”

Prosecutors can now decide to appeal Ward’s order, retry the case, or drop the charges. Larry Buser, a Weirich spokesman, did not immediately return a request for comment on next steps for prosecutors.


Statement from Dist. Atty. Gen. Amy Weirich released the following statement Friday after the new trial was granted:

“The Tennessee Department of Correction failed to turn over a necessary document in the case of Pamela Moses and therefore her conviction has been overturned by the judge. When reporters or political opportunists use the word ‘state’ they need to be crystal clear that the error was made by the TDOC and not any attorney or officer in the office of the Shelby County District Attorney.”
 

slewdem100

Rising Star
BGOL Investor

Judge orders new trial for US woman sentenced to six years for trying to register to vote
Pamela Moses, who has been in prison since December but is being released on Friday, says she had no idea she was inelegible

A Memphis judge ordered a new trial for Pamela Moses, a woman who was sentenced to six years in prison for trying to register to vote.

New evidence undermines case against Black US woman jailed for voting error
Read more


The case attracted national attention in recent weeks, following a Guardian report, because of the severity of the sentence. Moses said she had no idea she was ineligible.

Moses has been in prison since December, when her bond was revoked. On Thursday, the Guardian revealed new evidence in the case that had not been produced at the trial. Moses was being released from custody on Friday, according to Claiborne Ferguson, her attorney.

“We are so excited that the motion for new trial was granted for Pamela Moses today and that she is able to return home to her family while she awaits trial. We hope that she receives justice and is found not guilty for the admitted mistakes of the state of Tennessee,” said Dawn Harrington, the executive director of Free Hearts, a criminal justice organization in Tennessee that supported Moses.

Moses was convicted last year for submitting a document in 2019 indicating she was eligible to vote. Prosecutors said she knew that this was false, because just months before a judge issued an order telling Moses she was still on probation for a 2015 felony. In Tennessee, people on felony probation cannot vote.

When she turned in the form, Moses believed that the probation for her 2015 felony had expired, and a probation officer even signed a certificate indicating that this was the case and that she was eligible. Prosecutors said that Moses deceived the officer into signing the certificate.

But evidence obtained by the Guardian this week showed that corrections officials investigated the error immediately afterwards and determined that the probation officer – identified as Manager Billington – was negligent and made an error while Moses waited in the lobby of his office.

“Manager Billington advised that he thought he did due diligence in making his decision,” Joe Williams, an administrator in the department of corrections, wrote in an email to Lisa Helton, a top department official. “Manager Billington failed to adequately investigate the status of this case. He failed to review all of the official documents available through the Shelby county justice portal”.

Ferguson, Moses’ attorney, said he had never seen the document before the Guardian showed it to him on Wednesday.

W Mark Ward, the judge who oversaw the case and sentenced Moses, cited the prosecution’s failure to disclose the letter, even if it was inadvertent, as one of the reasons he was ordering a new trial. “The document does contain information that was not addressed in the direct and cross-examinations of Billington and contained the identity of an additional possible witness for the defense.”

Ward also said the court had erroneously allowed information about a prior 2000 felony conviction and an earlier effort by Moses to get her voting rights back to be introduced at trial. “The only real issue for the jury during the trial was whether the defendant knew the certificate of voting rights restoration form was not accurate when she obtained it and utilized it to attempt to register to vote,” he wrote. “The fact that she was convicted of a felony in 2000 and had her right to vote restored in 2014 has no significant relevance” to the case at hand.

The ruling was an abrupt reversal for Ward, who yelled at Moses’ lawyer during the sentencing hearing and said she tricked the probation officer.

“This ruling is an extraordinary development. It is very rare for a judge to reverse himself like this, and it’s telling that he sentenced her so severely and summarily discounted her position before the case made national news,” said Josh Spickler, the executive director of Just City, a criminal justice non-profit. The district attorney’s office, he said, “has long had a reputation for failing to disclose material evidence that could benefit the accused. This is yet another shocking example of that”.

Amy Weirich, the district attorney, defended her office’s handling of evidence in the case.

“The Tennessee department of correction failed to turn over a necessary document in the case of Pamela Moses and therefore her conviction has been overturned by the judge,” Weirich said in a statement. “When reporters or political opportunists use the word ‘state’ they need to be crystal clear that the error was made by the TDOC and not any attorney or officer in the office of the Shelby county district attorney.”

Prosecutors can now decide to appeal Ward’s order, retry the case, or drop the charges. Larry Buser, a Weirich spokesman, did not immediately return a request for comment on next steps for prosecutors.


Statement from Dist. Atty. Gen. Amy Weirich released the following statement Friday after the new trial was granted:

“The Tennessee Department of Correction failed to turn over a necessary document in the case of Pamela Moses and therefore her conviction has been overturned by the judge. When reporters or political opportunists use the word ‘state’ they need to be crystal clear that the error was made by the TDOC and not any attorney or officer in the office of the Shelby County District Attorney.”
Why are they wasting tax payer money on this? The legal profession is built on a foundation of Black imprisonment. Think it was Last Week with John Oliver that was contrasting her sentence with some White folks who broke election laws. It was no fucking comparison. Here we have a case where any fool can see multiple departments colluded to jam her up.
 

Camille

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Staff member
Why are they wasting tax payer money on this? The legal profession is built on a foundation of Black imprisonment. Think it was Last Week with John Oliver that was contrasting her sentence with some White folks who broke election laws. It was no fucking comparison. Here we have a case where any fool can see multiple departments colluded to jam her up.

In their eyes, white folks need guidance, Black folks need controlling and to be made examples out of from kindergarten on.
 

HellBoy

Black Cam Girls -> BlackCamZ.Com
Platinum Member
Prosecutor drops all charges against Pamela Moses, jailed over voting error
Moses, convicted last year, was granted new trial in February after Guardian revealed files that had not been given to her defense


 

Politic Negro

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BGOL Investor
Woman avoids jail for voting dead mom's ballot in Arizona

An woman charged with illegal voting for casting her dead mother’s mail ballot in Arizona the November 2020 election has avoided jail time but will serve two years probation


 

lightbright

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BGOL Investor

Politic Negro

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