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Earlier this summer, the North Carolina Supreme Court overturned the ban on parolees voting rights. Because I am on parole, I will finally be allowed to vote for the first time since 1983, when I voted in a local Texas election. If that was not done, I would be barred from voting until 2083. I doubt I will live to be 125 years old, but I shall finally cast my ballot this fall. The dirty voting rolls really concern me now more than ever. NCBE, clean up the rolls!

FuzzyMarineVet 8 Aug 14
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How did you become a parolee?

Long and sad story. To make it short, a pair of crack-heads murdered my wife in 1984, the police didn't want to catch the crack-heads because they were snitching out coke dealers who didn't rock it up. The prosecutor, working for Henry Wade, had never gotten a conviction for murder nor did she have an innocent person conviction under her belt. So known use of perjured testimony and prosecutorial misconduct coupled with an appointed lawyer and the jury found me guilty of a crime I was co-victim of. The prosecution wanted me to get life and $10,000 fine, but someone on the jury said that meant I would only spend 20 years in prison and then get automatic parole (not true). Creative relabeling of the evidence precluded getting a DNA test because, "It cannot be found." 32 1/2 years later I was paroled to North Carolina where the POs do their best to keep a parolee out of prison. Had I stayed in Texas I would have been re-incarcerated and by now dead. God has blessed me.

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