Order On Summary Judgment
Order On Summary Judgment
Order On Summary Judgment
v. No. 8:19-cv-3048-T-02CPT
Several reasons have been suggested for the 2019 Sarasota County
Plaintiffs to prevail under the controlling law, race must not only have been a
motive, it must have been the predominant motive. There is no genuine issue of
fact in this record – race was not the predominant motive for this redistricting. For
this reason the Court grants summary judgment to the County in this case.
1
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This diagram shows Sarasota County’s 556 square miles1 in area, with the five
predecessor districts on the left, and the redrawn, challenged districts on the right.
(Doc. 65-1 at 21, 65-2 at 91). The small box in both maps is the approximately
is the focus of this dispute. Newtown is less than .002 of the land area of Sarasota
County. Plaintiffs contend that the redistricting which included Newtown into new
Until late 2018, Sarasota County elected all commissioners on an at-large basis,
1
Census.gov/quickfacts/table.sarasotacountyflorida,US/LND110210, last consulted
4/27/2020. Both U.S. census data and geographic maps which are generally
available and not in contest may be judicially noticed. Fed. R. Evid. 201(b);
Moore v. Comfed Sav. Bank, 908 F.2d 834, 841 n. 4 (11th Cir. 1990).
2
UniversalMAP, Sarasota & Bradenton Florida StreetMap;
google.com/maps/place/Sarasota,=FL/, last consulted 4/27/2020.
2
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voting and imposed district-only elections to begin in 2020. Doc. 65 par. 1; Doc.
65-1; Doc. 65-2 at 91. Starting in 2020, only residents of the single district will
Districts 1, 3, and 5 will vote while 40% of the county (the even-numbered
districts) will choose their commissioners in 2022. Doc. 77-34 at 111. Each
The elimination of at-large voting and move to single-district voting caused the
County Commission to consider redistricting in 2019, id. at 19, and Florida statutes
numbered years. Fla Stats. 124.01(3). The proponents of redistricting suggested the
five districts may be insufficiently equal in population due to growth in the county
since the last redistricting in 2011. Opponents of redistricting pointed out that the
3
Fla. Const. Art. VIII, sec. 1(e); Fla. Stats. 124.01.
4
See County Charter, Doc. 77-2 at 8.
3
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national census would soon occur and would likely require redistricting anew.
potential litigation; some opponents suggested pure political and also racial reasons
undertake this effort, Doc. 77-15 at 73, which was done. The consultant produced
three maps for consideration, and five additional maps were offered by the public.
One of these maps was offered anonymously by “Adam Smith,” a person later
map was corrected by the consultant to equalize districts. Doc. 77-25 at 138 – 139.
On November 19, 2019, after prior notice and advertising, the Board first voted on
a map originating from the consultant, and voted it down. The Board then adopted
the corrected “Adam Smith” map by a vote of 3 – 2. Doc. 77-25 at 215. The
Plaintiffs filed suit in December 19, 2019 and filed the operative Amended
Complaint January 9, 2020. Doc. 9. Plaintiff Atkins is the first elected African
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2020. He asserts that the redistricting has abridged his right to vote in 2020 in the
County Commission election on the basis of race or color. Plaintiffs White and
Mack are both residents of Sarasota County who assert that their rights to vote in
the 2020 County Commission election have been abridged on the basis of race or
color. Doc. 9 at 3.
Road to the west, Myrtle Street to the north, and 17th Street to the south. Newtown
voting created something “the existing Commissioners and their money patrons
have been elected District 1 Commissioner in 2016 [because he won that District in
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The new, redrawn districts “removed Newtown from District 1 and moved it to
District 2, whose commissioner seat was not up for reelection until November
2022. It also removed Plaintiff Atkins from District 1, where he had already
declared his candidacy.” Doc. 9 at 10 par. 36. The Amended Complaint alleges
this new map is illegal as “based blatantly upon racial classifications” and “is being
race” “without sufficient justification.” Doc. 9 at 10 par. 35; Doc. 9 at 14 pars. 54,
56.
The Amended Complaint asserted three counts, but only Count 1 remains
before the Court.5 Count 1 seeks relief under the equal protection clause of the
districts along racial lines to limit minority participation in the political process.”
scheduling conference. Doc. 15. The parties had agreed to expedited discovery
5
On February 4, 2020 the Court dismissed with prejudice Count 3, based upon Fla.
Const. section 21. Docs. 26, 27. Count 2 was dismissed by stipulation of the
parties. Doc. 36.
6
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3. With the impending 2020 election, time was of the essence. Although agreeing
process will be in full swing,” Doc. 22 at 1, and candidate petition signatures had
proceeding, and they are to be complimented in carrying out this swift, yet
The test is whether the Commission’s motive in redrawing the districts “was
Court cases] the burden of proof on the plaintiffs (who attack the district) is a
‘demanding one.’” Easley v. Cromartie, 532 U.S. 234, 241, 121 S. Ct. 1452, 1458
2001). As the Supreme Court held, “[r]ace must not simply have been ‘a
“[p]laintiffs must show that a facially neutral law ‘is unexplainable on grounds
other than race.’” Id. at 242 – 243, 121 S. Ct. at 1458 (citing cases). The racial
motive must be “dominant and controlling.” Id. at 257, 121 S. Ct. at 1466.
7
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In other words, Plaintiffs must “disentangle race from politics and prove that
the former drove a district’s lines.” Cooper v. Harris, 137 S. Ct. 1455, 1473
mandated presumption that districts were drawn in good legislative faith. Miller v.
Johnson, 525 U.S. 900, 915 - 916, 115 S.Ct. 2475, 2488 (1995)(courts must
district lines on the basis of race”). Indeed, Justice Breyer’s majority opinion in
Cromartie added italics to the admonition for “extraordinary caution,” 532 U.S.
at 242, 121 S.Ct. 1458, and then repeated the admonition twice. 532 U.S. at 257,
121 S.Ct. at 1466. This extraordinary caution is required because “[f]ederal court
local functions.” Miller, supra, 525 U.S. at 915, 115 S. Ct. at 2488.
The Supreme Court has stated the basic question: “The basic question is
whether the legislature drew [the] boundaries because of race rather than because
considerations).” Cromartie, supra, 532 U.S. at 257, 121 S.Ct. at 1466 (emphasis
in original). If the answer to this basic question is “yes,” then the Court must apply
invalid. Shaw v. Reno, 509 U.S. 630, 642 – 645, 113 S. Ct. 2816, 2825 (1993).
8
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The Supreme Court in Miller noted that Rule 56’s summary judgment procedures
are one process to consider this matter. 525 U.S. at 916 – 917; 115 S.Ct. at 2488.
56(a) requires inquiry into whether “the movant shows that there is no genuine
dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter
of law.” Id. If the movant points out the absence of evidence to support an
essential, material element of non-movant’s case, then the non-movant must “make
party’s case, and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial.”
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 106 S.Ct. 2548, 2554 (1986). Although the
Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 249 – 250, 106 S.Ct. 2506, 2511 (1986). “Colorable evidence,”
id., or a scintilla, will not do. Walker v. Darby, 911 F.2d 1573, 1577 (11th Cir.
1990).
D. FACTUAL RECITATION:
To ensure equal representation, i.e. “one person, one vote,” districts should be
equal in population. See generally, Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. 533, 579, 84 S.Ct.
9
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1362, 1391 – 1392 (1964). This is also required by Florida statutes. Fla. Stats.
world. The presumptive (not legal) general rule of thumb is that districts are out of
alignment, and should be repopulated, if they vary more than ten percentage points
in population from each other, centered around the required mean.6 Doc. 77-25 at
35; Doc. 77-20 at 77 - 78. See Brown v. Thomson, 462 U.S. 835, 842, 103 S.Ct.
2019, which staff stated were “preliminary,” Doc. 77-25 at 108, showed districts to
vary just inside that ten percent guideline. Doc. 77-25 at 37, 49; Doc. 77-17 at 2.
The County Attorney and County Administrator informed the Board that mid-
decade redistricting was permissible, and suggested to the Board that it hire a
73. The consultant that was hired, Kurt Spitzer, was a qualified advisor from
redistrictings. Doc. 77-25 at 105 – 106, 125; Doc. 77-21 at 154. Spitzer, using a
points between some of the districts and later found slightly over 13 percentage
6
By way of example: If the County has 5000 residents and five districts, each
district ought to have 1000 residents, the mean. If one district has 1060 residents
and another district has 950 residents, they are in violation of this very rough rule
of thumb. For a discussion of this in the record, see Doc. 77 at 8 par. 33.
10
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points once the data was corrected, suggesting redistricting was indicated. Doc.
Spitzer, the retained consultant on the job, was a consultant with experience
working with the Florida Association of Counties, and a masters degree in public
administration from Florida State University. Doc. 65-2 at 153; see also Doc. 77-
redistrictings. Id.; Doc. 77-34 at 92 - 93. Spitzer testified that he was not given
specific instruction from the County as to specific political result, other than to
him where to draw specific lines. Doc. 65-2 at 168, 180; Doc. 77-20 at 8. He was
than those statements made to him during recorded Board meetings and conference
calls. Doc. 65-2 at 168 – 170. Spitzer testified no one mentioned Newtown or
Fredd Atkins to Spitzer or talked about candidates who might be running. Spitzer
testified no one discussed partisan or political considerations with him. Id. at 169
– 170. Spitzer testified there was not a hint or wink or anything about race
suggested to him. Id.; Doc. 77-20 at 49; Doc. 77-21 at 135. The County
Attorney told him not to consider party affiliation and Spitzer testified he did not.
He is unfamiliar with Sarasota County politics. Id. at 196 – 197; Doc. 77-21 at
100.
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Spitzer testified he thought the Board’s level of activity in this process was very
low compared to other projects he had been involved in, and the Board did not take
“we were not asked to look at Newtown” and the only time he did was late in the
map split Newtown. Id. at 194. Twice during his deposition Spitzer expressed
ignorance about where Newtown was on the map. Doc. 77-21 at 100 – 103, 131.
systems. Doc. 77-2 at 90 - 91. He was part of the agency, the University of
Florida’s Bureau of Economic and Business Research, that advised the State of
estimates to the State, all counties, and 412 municipalities. Doc. 77-22 at 7 - 10.
Doty had a strong background in demographics and is one of the top demographers
in the State. Doc. 77-2 at 90 - 97. According to the Amended Complaint, Doty is
one of the two persons assigned by the State of Florida to work with the Bureau of
Doty’s agency has a contract with the Florida Legislature. Id. at 8 -9 , 11. As part
of his job, in 2018 he had already worked a project providing population estimates
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Doty provided the relevant data for this redistricting and was not involved in
drawing redistricting lines or maps. Doc. 77-22 at 42, 60. He testified without
contradiction that no one from the County, nor Spitzer, dictated or controlled how
he did his work. Id. at 89. He testified that his sole objective was reliable data and
Doty testified race was never suggested to him as relevant to the project. Id. at
146.
Spitzer’s main point of contact with the Board was Deputy County
Administrator Brad Johnson. Doc. 77-20 at 32 – 35; Doc. 65-2 at 170 - 171.
redistricting project for the County, from its outset in April 2019. Doc. 65-1 at 8.
Johnson testified he never met or spoke with the political operative Robert
Waechter who submitted the “Adam Smith” map, although Waechter emailed the
map to him. Doc. 77-25 at 13, 17. According to Johnson, Spitzer’s reported data
showed that Districts 3 and 5 were overpopulated and District 1, 2, and 4 required
A county demographer who worked on staff with Johnson was named Tamara
Schells. She assisted in the earlier preliminary county review of the numbers and
was involved somewhat throughout the process. She testified that throughout the
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process she did not hear or see anything that led her to believe or indicated to her
that racial considerations were the motive for where the district lines were drawn.
During the past 9 years since the 2010 decennial census, the majority of
Sarasota County’s growth was in the south County, away from Districts 1 and 2.
Fairly early in this redistricting process, County data which was updated through
2018 showed the least populous district to be District 2, suggesting roughly 4000
to 5000 people would have to be added to District 2. Doc. 77-25 at 108. The
Chairman Hines. Doc. 77-33 at 2. Any redistricting would have to keep the
incumbent commissioners in their own numbered districts, Doc. 65-2 at 178, but
neither Maio nor Hines would be running for reelection (even-numbered Maio was
departing in 2022 and odd-numbered Hines was going off in 2020). Doc. 77-33 at
34, 130- 132, 136 - 138; Doc. 77-20 at 42 – 48, 55; Doc. 65-2 at 170 - 171. Spitzer
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11, 2019. Doc. 77-25 at 183. Neither of these changed the District 2 lines to
include Newtown. The maps were publicized, and five neighborhood meetings
held. Around this time, County Administration also permitted the public at large to
and Doty because some mathematical flaws were pointed out in them. Doty
several dozen census blocks, out of the over 11,000 blocks that were in the County.
He testified that 66 blocks out of 11,000 had anomalies that he corrected on the
second pass. He stated that these anomalies were “less than one half of one
percent” that “didn’t really affect the results in any noticeable way.” He stated he
fixed them because it did not look right and “it was an easy fix.” Doc 77-22 at 131,
136 – 137. Spitzer resubmitted his three corrected maps to the County in late
October.
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In late September, a total of five maps were submitted by the public. One was
submitted anonymously, using the pseudonyms Adam Smith and Agood Citizen.7
This map was authored by the Republican operative Waechter. This map redrew
Waechter also had input, was submitted by Carolyn Mason, a former District 1
the District 2 eastern boundary as Tuttle Avenue, which would include the
Newtown area into District 2. Doc. 65-2 at 91; Doc. 77-28 at 2 – 3. The record
the districts where the incumbents resided: Ziegler resided in the northwest with
his present home district number, 2. All five of these public maps thus formatted
Beyond Mason and Waechter’s maps, one and possibly two of the publicly-
setting forth two northern districts, east and west. Doc. 65-2 at 91; Doc. 77-4 at 2;
7
The record is not entirely clear, but Waechter testified he hired a lawyer to submit
a similar map to the County administration in May, around the time the Board first
discussed redistricting. He said he does not know if County personnel received it.
See Doc 77-5 at 21 – 24.
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The next Board meeting after these submissions was October 7. Before the
meeting Spitzer emailed his county contact Brad Johnson and stated about the
publicly-submitted maps: “I note tha[t] the ‘Smith’ alternative would (in theory)
require the least modification in that it already has three districts with less than a
3% deviation from the mean and no proposed district puts two commissioners in
Spitzer testified in his deposition that at the October 7 Board meeting the Board
was “having a hard time coming to a conclusion, and I just offered that if you took,
you know, the Smith map and it only – it had only two districts that were widely
disparate, and – but they were equally disparate in population, that you could work
with that.” Doc. 77-21 at 202. Spitzer testified he did not feel the Board was
moving towards the Smith map before he made that suggestion. Id. at 202 – 203.
And after his suggestion, Spitzer felt the Board seemed to coalesce around some
version of that map. Id. Spitzer testified that before he made that suggestion that
the Smith map was viable with alteration, nobody indicated to him that the Smith
map was the one the Board should move forward with. Id. at 203.
At that October 7, 2019 Board Meeting, the Board instructed Spitzer to update
or correct his three maps to resolve the errors and also to validate or equalize the
districts in the Smith map, to get it within acceptable tolerances. Doc. 77 at 4 par.
Spitzer’s memo was provided to the Board prior to the next meeting on October
30, 2019. This memo contained Spitzer’s redone maps with an explanation for
their corrections, and the Smith map that Spitzer reworked and validated. Doc. 77-
20 at 145 - 164. Spitzer’s three maps had deviations between 5.06 and 5.58
percentage points. The repopulated Smith map (now labeled 4.1) had a reported
At the October 30, 2019 meeting Spitzer explained the corrections made to his
maps. Doc. 77-33 at 6 - 14. The Board passed a resolution to consider adopting
the corrected “Smith Map” (labeled 4.1) and one of Spitzer’s corrected maps
After advertising and notice, on November 19, 2019 the Board deliberated and
took public comments. The County Attorney told them that both maps under
consideration were “defensible” but map 4.1 presents different issues than 2A.1.
Doc. 77-34 at 91 – 92. The County adopted by a 3-2 vote map 4.1, the corrected
map originally submitted by Waechter a/k/a Smith. Doc. 77-25 at 215; Doc. 77-34
at 118 – 119.
Although the record is not clear, the number of citizens in Newtown has
generally been stated in this case at roughly 10,000, out of an updated (Doty
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neighborhood about 2.4% of the county population. The records that the County
was operating with show that the estimated percentage of African Americans in old
District 1, which included Newtown, was 14.6% and in old District 2 the
percentage of black residents was 2.5%. Doc. 77-25 at 161. With the corrected
“Smith map 4.1”, the information relied upon by the County shows the percentages
of African American residents in new District 1 was 3.23% and the percent of
E. ANALYSIS:
The undersigned has read every page of this voluminous record. One searches
the record in vain for actual, trial-admissible evidence that race was the
insufficient on this record. See generally Abbott v. Perez, 138 S. Ct. 2305 (2018).
Plaintiffs’ response to the motion for summary judgment first suggests that
racial block voting exists in north Sarasota County, something that this record does
not support. Plaintiffs’ response and statement of facts state that “Historically,
77 at 5. The response then cites two examples of this, which tend to cut the other
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way. First, Mr. Atkins won the 2016 popular vote for District 1 County
Commissioner within District 1, but did not win the election because of
countywide voting. Doc. 76 at 2. But District 1 was at least 80% white, Doc. 77-
25 at 161, and Mr. Atkins, an African-American, won that District against his
Plaintiffs’ responses have twice cited the 2008 vote garnered by black
carried the Newtown precincts which shows they vote based on race. Doc. 76 at 2,
citing Doc. 77-4; 77-5 at 85:3-11; see also Doc. 77 at 5(asserting Mason’s results
candidates). But the records cited by Plaintiffs show that Mason, an African-
Democratic opponent.8 Although she lost Newtown badly, Mason won the District
8
The red/blue map filed in this record by Plaintiffs shows that the area of and
surrounding Newtown is blue and went for Mason’s white Democratic opponent,
Mr. Miller, in 2008. Doc. 77-4 at 2 (map filed by Plaintiffs). A review of the 2008
election results show that Ms. Mason lost badly the three precincts that primarily
comprised Newtown. In precinct 31 she received 26% of the vote, in precinct 76
she received 25% of the vote and in precinct 153 she received 28% of the vote. The
map which Plaintiffs filed for the Court’s consideration at Doc. 77-4 at 2 is a
picture of an interactive map, that originates from the Supervisor of Elections
current web site. See Sarasota Cty., Supervisor of Elections,
https://results.enr.clarityelections.com/FL/Sarasota/9825/185229/Web01/en/summ
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opposition in 2012.
This suggests that block racial voting in north Sarasota County is not as
portrayed, and there is no other evidence in this record. This record does not show
that voters in north Sarasota County discern their voting preferences by race;
Moreover, the Supreme Court has cautioned courts not to consider or assume or
stereotype the existence of race block voting. See Miller v. Johnson, 515 U.S. 900,
920, 115 S. Ct. 2475, 2490 (1995)(“But where the State assumes from a group of
voters’ race that they ‘think alike, share the same political interests, and will prefer
the same candidates at the polls,’ it engages in racial stereotyping at odds with
equal protection mandates.”), citing Shaw v. Reno, 509 U.S. 630, 647, 113 S.Ct.
2816, 2827 (1993); Powers v. Ohio, 499 U.S. 400, 410, 111 S.Ct. 1364, 1370
ary.html (last visited May 1, 2020). The Court takes judicial notice of this historic
data because Plaintiffs invited it to by including the map. Further, the 2008
Sarasota County Commissioners District 1 election results found in this map may
be judicially noticed as they are “can be accurately and readily determined from
sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.” Fed. R. Evid.
201(b)(2); see Support Working Animals, Inc. v. DeSantis, No. 4:19CV570-
MW/MAF, 2020 WL 1991479, at *2 (N.D. Fla. Apr. 27, 2020); Martinez v. Bush,
234 F. Supp. 2d 1275, 1307 n.36 (S.D. Fla. 2002).
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stereotype the law condemns.”). As the Supreme Court has held, “We have
race was the predominant motive for the county-wide redistricting, Plaintiffs argue
Waechter is the former head of the Republican party in the county, highly active
argue that his prior conviction for election fraud, his close ties to incumbent
provided “Smith map” help show contested issues of fact. Likewise, Waechter’s
professed habit of deleting his emails and computer files is offered for an adverse
inference. Waechter was deposed fully in this case, and the Court does not credit
or consider his testimony in any way in ruling for Defendant. However, nothing
else in that testimony suggests that Waechter considered race or caused race to be
other than Ziegler who called him to voice opposition. The county staff
demographer Ms. Schells testified that Waechter, whom she did not know, called
her early on to ask for population data, but nothing was provided to him. Doc. 77-
15 at 6 - 15. And the staff demographer testified that she did not hear or see
anything racial throughout this redistricting process. Doc. 77-15 at 79. Likewise,
Mr. Johnson, the deputy county administrator responsible for coordinating this
process, stated he received the map from Waechter via email, Doc. 77-25 at 114,
Waechter created the original map that was repopulated and corrected by
Spitzer at Board direction, which was adopted. There is simply no record evidence
that the main driver of this was skin color, rather than simple political
race motive. In this vein, Plaintiffs assert that the national decennial census will be
completed in 2021, and the redistricting was entirely unnecessary, and will have to
The offending “Smith map” was not considered by the Board on the merits until
well after redistricting was underway, and well after Spitzer was hired. So the act
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complained of, redistricting, was well started by the County and underway before
so was their prerogative, and the county system for voting had just switched in late
2018 to district-only. The districts were out of line population-wise given the near-
decade of growth experienced since 2010. The county staff provided preliminary
data showing a close to ten percent deviation. Finalized data by Spitzer and his
demographer Doty showed deviation in the old districts to exceed 13%. Doc. 77-
33 at 112 -113.
Fourteenth Amendment Equal Protection Clause and is not barred by any Florida
law cited by Plaintiffs. See. e.g., Rucho v. Common Cause, 139 S.Ct. 2484 (2019).
In other words, the County Commission was free to redraw lines for partisan
purposes like protecting allies from opponents, so long as the redistricting did not
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Finally, concerning the calendar and timing, it is not clear in this record that the
County will be required a do-over, to redistrict in 2021 after the decennial census.
Doc. 77-25 at 158 - 159. The Board asked this question of the County Attorney in
August, 2019. The Attorney advised the Board in a written opinion that in 2021:
“Following the receipt of the 2020 Census, the County Commission is required
under the Florida Constitution to review the data and make a determination that the
districts are in compliance with the state and federal law. Based on A[ttorney]
G[eneral] O[pinion] 74-359, if after a thorough review of the data, the County
Commission, in its discretion, determines that the districts are as nearly equal as
possible, in light of all the applicable factors, the County Commission is not
One other topic Plaintiffs suggest to show irregularity is that Spitzer, who is
him drawing some of the lines, and Spitzer paid him cash without disclosure. This
well outweighed by the only really probative piece present in the limited evidence
on this subject. In a September 6, 2019 email to this drafter undertaking this task
Spitzer said, “BTW…don’t worry about where someone might live who might be
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The record, and Plaintiffs, suggest strongly that a goal of the redistricting was to
Atkins in the 2020 election for District 1. Multiple public comments from the
commission meetings illustrate this. Commentators noted that the “Smith map”
carved out and removed a former, white, competitive primary opponent of Moran.
Doc. 77-33 at 46 - 47; Doc. 77-34 at 66 - 67. Others at the public commission
meeting suggested the purpose was to benefit Commissioner Moran “and his
developer allies,” id. at 47, 72, or to benefit land developers. Id. at 87; see also id.
at 40 - 41 (Smith map would “cast out the only candidate currently filed to run” in
District 1).9
9
See also Doc. 77-33 at 45-46; 86 - 87 (to benefit land developers); 71 (“seem to
guarantee your election, Mr. Moran”); 90 – 91 (“promoted by both Mike Moran
and Nancy Detert….purpose to rig an election in 2020”); Doc. 77-34 at 46 – 47 (“It
seems clear that there’s one main reason for this exercise: To ensure the reelection
of Commissioner Moran in District 1….gerrymander the district so that 4000 more
Republicans from Precinct 233 are packed into District 1”); Doc. 77-34 at 10 – 11;
45 – 46; 68 – 70; 72 – 73 (“moving bunches of voters so that an incumbent will be
sure to be reelected”); 76 – 77; 85 – 86.
Plaintiffs have cited these unsworn statements in the Amended Complaint as
part of the cause of action, and also cite them in Plaintiffs’ statement of
uncontested facts. Doc. 9 at 11; Doc. 77 at 12 – 13. Plaintiffs included them in
this record for the Court to consider as part of the pending motion for summary
judgment. Doc. 77-33, Doc. 77-34. Defendant does not contest their filing here
nor their authenticity. The Court may consider them. See Cash Inn of Dade, Inc.
v. Metropolitan Dade County, 938 F.2d 1239, 1242 – 1243 (11th Cir. 1991).
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Plaintiff Atkins testified that the entire process was racist and anybody that
supported any redistricting map was racially motivated, but “I think the County
Doc. 65-4 at p – 10, pp. 47 - 48. Plaintiff White stated that he did not hear any
express racist comments during this event, and the fact that the Board was
Republican and Atkins was a Democrat factored into the decision – they did not
A further argument that Plaintiffs offer concerning the redistricting is that the
because they mishandled some of the 11,000 plus census blocks, but also because
they miscount minority populations and because the mechanism does not follow
the County’s instructions. During this process, a citizen, now utilized by Plaintiff
as a lay expert,10 provided an extensive critique of the numbers, and Spitzer and the
10. Mr. R.N. Collins spoke at least twice to the Board, in August and September,
and provided extensive materials critiquing the math employed by Doty and
Spitzer. Doc. 77-30 at 4; Doc. 77-39 at 6, 7. He also communicated to the Board
in writing. E.g., Doc. 77-36 at 2. As noted, Doty and Spitzer resubmitted updated,
corrected maps in response to some of these points.
Mr. Collins claims a bachelor’s degree in economics from University of South
Florida, but is not skilled by education or training in this field of redistricting, and
has no significant work experience in the field. See Doc. 77-39 at 23 – 24. He
appears to be retired from the construction business. Doc. 77-39 at 24. The Board
heard him out, and was within their presumption of good faith in relying on Spitzer
and Doty. Although Mr. Collins has never testified as an expert at trial or by
deposition, and has apparently never been designated before as an expert in
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See generally, Doc. 77-2 at 87 – 137; Doc. 77-20 at 65 – 67; Doc. 77-33 at 6 – 21
(Spitzer explaining the process and methodology to the Board). The County was
well within its perimeter of good faith in accepting this finalized data from this
experienced pair and from the County Attorney who informed the Board both
that this is a race discrimination Fourteenth Amendment equal protection case, not
specific element. Nor is this case brought under the Voting Rights Act, 52 U.S.C.
motive. Here, sufficient contested facts must be shown that race was the
predominant motive for this redistricting. The math issues cited by Plaintiffs have
very little or nothing to do with the Newtown area and the District 2 border moving
east to encompass it. Critique of the math, as shown by the lay expert proffered by
Plaintiffs, Doc. 77-39, does not bear on the sole question here: is there real,
triable, admissible proof to contest that the dominant intent was race?
districts, because far-flung spiderlike districts may suggest an improper motive for
drafting them. See Cooper, supra, 137 S.Ct. at 1473. Here, the new districts are
growing area, the south county including North Port, Doc. 77-33 at 18, is all
encompassed in District 5, and no longer split. These traits were a roughly similar
encompasses most of the City proper, much more so than the old district. This is a
redistricting opponent residing in District 2 who criticized the process, stated in the
October 30 Commission meeting that “if the goal is to fundamentally redraw this
county and redraw the districts into geographically, you know, similar areas, then,
you know, that [Smith map] is the map.” Doc. 77-33 at 36. Although he had a
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self-interest, Vice Chair Moran stated in support of the adopted map, that now the
out-east district [District 1], a Venice district [District 3], a North Port district
conversation to have in this community.” Doc. 77-33 at 150 - 151. Ziegler and
Moran are correct in that the map as approved does roughly reflect those
Under the staggered terms required by Florida law, forty percent of the
electorate will not vote for county commission until 2022, and this includes some
portion of former District 1, including Newtown, that was set to vote in 2020 and
changed district numbers. As the chart above shows, this also happened to a
significant portion of Districts 3 and 5 set to vote in 2020, that became new District
4 and now votes in 2022. Commissioner Maio noticed this issue as it pertains to
District 5, and discussed it with the Board. Doc. 77-33 at 152. A Democratic
precinct captain, speaking at the Board meeting, noted that both maps under final
consideration moved some voters to a 2022 voting district. Doc. 77-34 at 68 – 70.
when district numbers change for some people and there are staggered terms in
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The Court does not find contested issues of material fact, admissible at trial,
For the foregoing reasons, the Court grants the County’s Motion for Summary
Judgment, Doc. 64. Plaintiffs’ Motion for a Permanent Injunction, Doc. 78, is
denied as moot. The Clerk will enter Judgment for the Defendant.
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