No. 20-887

In Re L. Lin Wood, Jr.

Lower Court: N/A
Docketed: 2021-01-04
Status: Denied
Type: Paid
Tags: civil-rights due-process election-law elections equal-protection legislative-authority signature-verification standing vote-dilution voting-rights
Key Terms:
DueProcess Securities Trademark JusticiabilityDoctri
Latest Conference: 2021-03-05
Question Presented (AI Summary)

Whether the Petitioner/voter has standing to challenge state action based on the vote-dilution

Question Presented (OCR Extract)

QUESTIONS PRESENTED FOR REVIEW The Georgia Legislature has plenary authority to set the “Times, Places and Manner” of Federal Elections and has clearly set forth the procedures to be followed in verifying the identity of in-person voters as well as mail-in absentee ballot voters. The Georgia Secretary of State usurped that power by entering into a Settlement Agreement with the Democratic Party earlier this year and issuing an “Official Election Bulletin” that modified the Legislature's clear procedures for verifying the identity of mail-in voters. The effect of the Secretary of State’s unauthorized procedure is to treat the class of voters who vote by mail different from the class of voters who vote in-person, like Petitioner. That procedure dilutes the votes of inperson voters by votes from persons whose identities are less likely to verified as required by the legislative scheme. The Secretary’s unconstitutional modifications to the legislative scheme violated Petitioner’s Equal Protection rights by infringing on his fundamental right to vote. The Eleventh Circuit has held that Petitioner does not have standing to challenge State action that dilutes his vote and infringes upon his constitutional right to Equal Protection. The questions presented are: 1. Whether the Petitioner/voter has standing to challenge state action based on the predicate act of vote dilution where the underlying wrong infringes upon a voter’s right to vote. i

Docket Entries

2021-03-08
Petition DENIED.
2021-02-17
DISTRIBUTED for Conference of 3/5/2021.
2020-12-30
Petition for a writ of mandamus filed. (Response due February 3, 2021)

Attorneys

L. Lin Wood
L. Lin Wood Jr.L. Lin Wood, P.C., Petitioner
L. Lin Wood Jr.L. Lin Wood, P.C., Petitioner