Federal Appeals Court Strikes Down North Carolina’s Voter Prosecution Law Rooted in Racial Discrimination
A federal appeals court has invalidated a North Carolina law that criminalized voting by felony offenders unaware they were breaking the law, exposing deep-rooted racial discrimination and raising serious questions about states’ control over election integrity.
In a decision with profound implications for election integrity and national sovereignty, a federal appeals court has ruled that North Carolina’s law criminalizing voting by felony offenders—specifically those who unknowingly cast ballots before finishing their sentences—is unconstitutional. This ruling not only undermines the state’s authority to enforce its election laws but also revives concerns about racially motivated legal frameworks lingering from America’s Jim Crow era. Is This Justice or Judicial Overreach Masked as Civil Rights Protection? The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously upheld a lower court’s injunction against the pre-2024 law, which punished individuals serving felony sentences who...
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