depotoo
Diamond Member
- Sep 9, 2012
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It’s an epidemic. Republican voting fraud keeps popping up everywhere.
Already a thread on this. And no she didn’t. Her home base
/residency is in Florida . Her husband plays for a team in Florida. So just stop trying to revive old conspiracies.
Right!
She was born and raised in Tampa, graduated from the University of Miami then Harvard School of law. Her husband is a pitcher for the Tampa Bay Rays.
So why does she continue to claim her parents house as her residency?
You’re not very good at this.
No, you’re not. She was in the same precinct as her parents. Unless she planned on asking for a ballot from another county, she had no need to update it.
She is not eligible to vote in Florida. Period. It’s voter fraud if Florida is not your residence. It’s provable that she resides in D.C. and her drivers license - which Florida considers your residence - was in New Jersey.
tap dance all you want. It doesn’t change the fact that she committed voter fraud.
Bullcrap. It is her permanent residence. You really need to research before you make idiotic claims.-
Legal residence-Permanent. Legal residency is not defined in law. However, over the years, the courts and the Florida Department of State/Division of Elections’ have construed legal residency to be where a person mentally intends to make his or her permanent residence.1 Evidence of such intent can come from items or activities such as obtaining a Florida driver’s license2, paying tax receipts, paying bills for residency (light, water, garbage service) and receiving mail at address, claiming the property as homestead,3 declaring the county as domicile, and doing other activities indicative or normally associated with home life. Therefore, legal residence is a convergence of intent and fact. Once residency is established for voting purposes, it is presumptively valid or current until evidence shows otherwise. See Op. Atty Gen. Fla. 055-216 (August 26, 1955). A business address is not typically a satisfactory legal residential address but if the person resides there despite the zoning ordinance, the address could become the person’s legal residential address.4
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