Lawyers for the political committee Florida Voters in Charge, which is seeking to expand gambling in the state, have dropped a lawsuit against Seminole-linked opponents accused of allegedly trying to “sabotage” the petition gathering effort.
The political committee, which has received about $50 million from gaming giant Las Vegas Sands Corp., is seeking to allow existing card rooms to become casinos if they are located 130 miles from tribal facilities. The amendment would open the door to casinos in North Florida, along the Interstate 10 corridor, and is geared toward a facility in the Jacksonville area.
Following two months of fierce legal battling, supporters of the proposed constitutional amendment filed a notice of dismissal on Monday in Leon County circuit court, reports CBS Miami. The notice did not explain the reasons for the decision, which came a day before a deadline to submit petition signatures to the state Division of Elections.
The Florida Voters in Charge committee first filed a lawsuit on December 1 alleging that parties linked to the Seminole Tribe of Florida attempted to sabotage the petition drive by, among other means, paying people to stop gathering signatures.
An amended version of the lawsuit was subsequently filed on December 7, in which the committee alleged parties acting on behalf of the Seminole Tribe went as far as engaging in “aggressive efforts to harass and intimidate” individuals obtaining signatures for the petition drive.
In their lawsuits, Florida Voters in Charge claimed “tortious interference with business relationships.” Other alleged sabotage efforts included hiring workers to interfere with petition gatherers and running an informal signature-gathering operation, aimed at confusing voters.
However, the Seminole-backed committee Standing Up for Florida, which opposes the proposed gambling expansion, fired back at the claims, alleging that signatures gathered had mostly been “illegally” obtained.
Lawyers for the entities linked to the Seminoles accused backers of the ballot initiative of breaking the law, alleging state elections laws were violated in the petition drive. Defendants denounced attempts to hide information: heavily redacted contracts were allegedly provided during the trial to hide an “illegal compensation scheme” for how circulators are paid.
Moreover, Standing Up for Florida accused backers of the petition drive of engaging in “a widespread, election-law conspiracy” in the race to gather signatures. Documents filed on behalf of the committee alleged that petition gatherers were being paid by the signature, a violation of Florida law.
Additionally, court filings maintained that a contractor illegally disposed of petitions that were either incomplete or erroneous, in an effort to avoid being financially penalized by the Florida Voters in Charge committee.
Florida Voters in Charge’s lawsuit was dismissed “without prejudice.” This left open the possibility that the committee could refile the claims in the future, which it ultimately now decided not to do.
To get on the November ballot, the committee had to submit 891,589 valid petition signatures by a Tuesday deadline. While an official announcement has not yet been made on the total number of petitions presented, Florida Politics said the petition drive is “likely to fall short.”
The committee has now decided to sue, claiming Florida law is muddled and the process unfair: in a suit filed on Monday, in Leon County Circuit Court, the group challenged Florida law provisions regarding petition signature verification and asked a judge to waive the provisions that petition signature verification processes stop at a 5 p.m deadline Tuesday.
“We believe we have submitted the required number of voter signatures to qualify for the ballot, but unlawful delays in processing them will lead to voters not having their voices heard,” Florida Voters In Charge said in a written statement retrieved by the cited source. “This lawsuit was filed to ensure fundamental rights are not violated and every voter signature is counted.”
The suit further asks the court to order the state to resume processing signatures turned in by Tuesday’s deadline, and to continue doing so until all signatures currently in their in-baskets are either verified or rejected. As it stands, anything not processed by 5 p.m. Tuesday is thrown out.
Be the first to comment