Deshayla Harris vs. Virginia Beach Case Moves Forward, Virginia NAACP Set to File Lawsuit on Youngkin Admin Over Voting Rights
➡️ Early voting in Virginia started on Sept. 22, 2023.
➡️ Election Day 2023 is in 21 days on Nov. 7, 2023.
DeShayla Harris Case Moves Forward
Virginia Federal Judge Preserves Right of Deshayla Harris’s Family to Sue, Deems Harris ‘An Innocent Bystander’ and Remarkably Calls Harris’s a ‘More Difficult’ Case
In June, the family of Deshayla Harris sued the city of Virginia Beach for $50 million. Harris, who has received much less attention than the case of Donovon Lynch, who was killed by a police officer near the Virginia Beach waterfront on March 26, 2021, was only 29 years old.
13NewsNow in June 2023: While a $3 million settlement was reached in the case of a VBPD officer shooting and killing Donovon Lynch, it is not yet known to this day who fired the fatal bullet that struck Harris.
Statement from Deshayla Harris’ team: While preserving her family’s right to sue in federal and state court regarding her unlawful killing — and declining to dismiss 6 of 8 counts in the Complaint — a Virginia federal judge wrote that Deshayla Harris was “an innocent bystander” and ruled that her case “is more difficult than other excessive force cases because Harris does not fit the usual analytical categories.”
Deshayla’s case is, as a federal judge has ruled, indeed “more difficult.” More than two years since she was unlawfully shot in the head near another deadly shooting — that one by a Virginia Beach Police Officer that caused the death of Donovon Lynch — the public and the Harris Family still do not know whose bullet killed Deshayla, and the Virginia Beach Police Department still refuses to share the ballistics report and other crucial information regarding her wrongful death.
“Deshayla Harris’s case is one of the most unique and important civil rights cases in America today. Deshayla’s amazing life still matters tremendously. There is a special duty for everyone involved — and for the City of Virginia Beach, the Harris Family and history — to finally bring about justice, transparency and accountability, and we will continue our vigorous fight to achieve all three,” said Justin E. Fairfax, attorney for the Harris Family and the 41st Lt. Governor of Virginia.
“And, we will continue to fight for Deshayla and her family,” said Thomas B. Martin of Martin Law PLLC, co-counsel for the Harris Family.
Virginia NAACP Set to Sue Youngkin Administration
After months of FOIA requests, public requests and press conferences, the Virginia NAACP is positioning to sue the Youngkin Administration over information around their rights restoration process.
Virginia is the only state in the U.S. that takes away voting rights from everyone who commits a felony. This Jim Crow related policy is a reflection of historic racism directed at Black citizens who are also over incarcerated, over-policed and over-sentenced.
Governor Glenn Youngkin and former Secretary of the Commonwealth Kay Coles James ended the policy of restoring the voting rights of former felons. But the details of what their specific process is for those who have paid their debt to society remains a mystery.
Governors Bob McDonnell, Terry McAuliffe and Ralph Northam collectively restored voting rights to ex-felons from 2009 to 2022 in the hundreds of thousands. Gov. Youngkin ended the policy when he took office and the number of people who had their voting rights restored plummeted.
The full Virginia NAACP press release: Early voting in Virginia NAACP Notifies Governor Youngkin of Intent to File Suit to Obtain Records on Secretive Voting Rights Restoration Process
Today, the Virginia State Conference of the NAACP (“Virginia NAACP”) notified Governor Glenn Youngkin and his administration of its intent to file a lawsuit to obtain public records related to his process for determining whether to restore the voting rights of Virginians with past felony convictions. These key records are being unlawfully withheld by the Governor following a Virginia Freedom of Information.
Act (“VFOIA”) request sent by the Virginia NAACP on May 9, 2023. Virginia NAACP is providing advance notice of its intent to file suit in compliance with the provisions of VFOIA, which stipulate a hearing must be granted within seven days of filing.
Based on its review of almost 600 documents obtained from the Governor’s office earlier this year, the Virginia NAACP identified additional key documents that were not produced and yet are not exempt from disclosure under VFOIA.
These documents contain key information regarding the factors considered by the Governor when deciding whether to restore an individual’s rights, including records of meetings, communications, and other documents relating to the implementation of the Governor’s restoration of rights policy; and documents concerning restoration of rights applicants whose completed applications were ultimately denied.
Despite making four separate requests in June and July 2023 for the Governor and his counsel to make these additional documents available for review, to date, the Governor has not responded to Virginia NAACP’s inquiries, nor has he explained the legal basis for withholding these key documents, as required by VFOIA. As a result, the Virginia NAACP has been left with no choice but to file suit in the Richmond Circuit Court to obtain these records and elucidate the process that has prevented thousands of Virginians from regaining their voting rights.
“We bring this lawsuit to continue to shine a light on the Governor’s process for restoration of rights, which disproportionately disenfranchises Black Virginians,” said Virginia NAACP President Robert N. Barnette, Jr.
“After multiple requests to the Youngkin administration fell on deaf ears, we must now look to the court system to affirm our rights and the rights of all Virginians to know what is being done behind closed doors. Virginians of all stripes deserve to know as much as possible about the rights restoration process, including who is in the room, what information is considered, and the criteria used to make decisions that cut to the core of our democracy and ultimately impact tens of thousands of returning citizens every year. This lawsuit is the next step in our fight for transparency and accountability.”
“The Governor cannot be allowed to simply refuse to comply with the Virginia Freedom of Information Act,” said Ryan Snow, Counsel with the Voting Rights Project of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Virginia State Conference of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
“Withholding these key records is not only unlawful, but also demonstrates that the Governor does not want the details of his arbitrary and slow restoration of rights process to be made public. We expect that this court action will force him to disclose these records and look forward to making sure all Virginians are aware of how this unjust process actually works.”
The Virginia NAACP submitted its VFOIA request due to grave concerns about Governor Youngkin’s new restoration of rights process, in particular the lack of clear criteria for deciding whether to restore an individual’s rights and the extremely slow pace of rights restoration under his administration, both of which could have a substantial impact on ongoing state and local elections. Despite numerous requests for information about his abrupt policy change, the Governor has repeatedly refused to explain what factors are taken into consideration when assessing whether to restore a citizen’s voting rights. Virginia NAACP demands that the Governor
1) establish a clear and publicly available set of criteria that govern his decision whether to restore an individual’s rights; 2) communicate directly with applicants about all aspects of the process, including the reasons for his decision; and, 3) establish and adhere to a clear timeline that will ensure for fair and prompt processing of all applications. Virginia NAACP further renews its demand for these and other changes as voting is already underway for the November 2023 general election. A copy of Virginia NAACP’s VOIFA complaint and exhibits can be found here. To access the documents from the FOIA on Restoration of Rights: naacpva.us/FOIA-RestorationOfRights
To access the Proposed Platform for Gubernatorial Restoration Rights Process: naacpva.us/ProposedPlatformForRestorationOfRights
Three October Events… in Photos
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