• /
  • Responsible Gambling
This site contains commercial content
  • US Sports Betting
    • Arizona Sports Betting
    • Colorado Sports Betting
    • Florida Sports Betting
    • Illinois Sports Betting
    • Indiana Sports Betting
    • Kentucky Sports Betting
    • Louisiana Sports Betting
    • Maryland Sports Betting
    • Massachusetts Sports Betting
    • Michigan Sports Betting
    • Missouri Sports Betting
    • New Jersey Sports Betting
    • New York Sports Betting
    • North Carolina Sports Betting
    • Ohio Sports Betting
    • Pennsylvania Sports Betting
    • Tennessee Sports Betting
    • Vermont Sports Betting
    • Virginia Sports Betting
  • Betting Apps
    • Best Sports Betting Sites
    • bet365 Bonus Code
    • Caesars Promo Code
    • BetMGM Bonus Code
    • Fanatics Sportsbook Promo Code
    • Borgata Promo Code
    • BetRivers Promo Code
    • ESPN BET Promo Code
    • DraftKings Bonus Code
    • Fliff Promo Code
    • Rebet Bonus Code
    • TwinSpires Offer Code
    • FanDuel Sportsbook Promo Code
  • DFS Sites
    • PrizePicks Referral Code
    • Betr Promo Code
    • Boom Fantasy Promo Code
    • Dabble Fantasy Promo Code
    • OwnersBox Referral Code
    • Sleeper Promo Code
    • SuperDraft Promo Code
    • Underdog Fantasy Promo Code
    • Thrillzz Sportsbook Promo Code
  • Tools
    • Sportsbook Bonuses Explained
    • What Is a Teaser Bet?
    • What Is a Parlay Bet?
    • What is a Same Game Parlay?
    • What Is a Moneyline Bet?
    • What is Expected Value?
    • Win/Loss Statement
    • Sports Betting Revenue Tracker
    • Sports Betting Podcasts
    • Partnership Tracker
    • Sports Scores And Odds Apps
    • Sports Betting Twitter
  • News
No Result
View All Result
  • US Sports Betting
    • Arizona Sports Betting
    • Colorado Sports Betting
    • Florida Sports Betting
    • Illinois Sports Betting
    • Indiana Sports Betting
    • Kentucky Sports Betting
    • Louisiana Sports Betting
    • Maryland Sports Betting
    • Massachusetts Sports Betting
    • Michigan Sports Betting
    • Missouri Sports Betting
    • New Jersey Sports Betting
    • New York Sports Betting
    • North Carolina Sports Betting
    • Ohio Sports Betting
    • Pennsylvania Sports Betting
    • Tennessee Sports Betting
    • Vermont Sports Betting
    • Virginia Sports Betting
  • Betting Apps
    • Best Sports Betting Sites
    • bet365 Bonus Code
    • Caesars Promo Code
    • BetMGM Bonus Code
    • Fanatics Sportsbook Promo Code
    • Borgata Promo Code
    • BetRivers Promo Code
    • ESPN BET Promo Code
    • DraftKings Bonus Code
    • Fliff Promo Code
    • Rebet Bonus Code
    • TwinSpires Offer Code
    • FanDuel Sportsbook Promo Code
  • DFS Sites
    • PrizePicks Referral Code
    • Betr Promo Code
    • Boom Fantasy Promo Code
    • Dabble Fantasy Promo Code
    • OwnersBox Referral Code
    • Sleeper Promo Code
    • SuperDraft Promo Code
    • Underdog Fantasy Promo Code
    • Thrillzz Sportsbook Promo Code
  • Tools
    • Sportsbook Bonuses Explained
    • What Is a Teaser Bet?
    • What Is a Parlay Bet?
    • What is a Same Game Parlay?
    • What Is a Moneyline Bet?
    • What is Expected Value?
    • Win/Loss Statement
    • Sports Betting Revenue Tracker
    • Sports Betting Podcasts
    • Partnership Tracker
    • Sports Scores And Odds Apps
    • Sports Betting Twitter
  • News
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result

‘Felony Friendly’: Inside The Business Of Signature Gathering For Florida Initiatives 1c2x6l

Time is of the essence to obtain thousands of signatures for gambling expansion, and witnesses are not required hw71

Jill R. DorsonJill R. Dorson
December 14, 2021
in Politics

Shutterstock b324j

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

As the fate of legal sports betting in Florida hangs in the balance in (virtual) courtrooms from Washington, D.C., to Tallahassee, Fla., the real battle is taking place in theaters far outside the halls of justice. Signature gatherers, the people who ask us all to sign petitions in favor of or against everything from the use of medical marijuana to whether or not the Pledge of Allegiance may be uttered in schools, are out in force at Florida’s county fairs, football games, college campuses, and local grocery stores.

In what many in Florida have characterized as the statewide mobile wagering on the ballot.

In addition, the Seminole Tribe, which doesn’t have a proposal it’s prepping for the ballot, is gathering signatures in symbolic of its 2021 gaming compact. That effort serves in part to muddy the water for the official proposals. The new compact, approved by the state legislature in May and the U.S. Department of the Interior in August, has since been deemed illegal by a federal court. While the legality of the compact is in question, Floridians did get a taste of ostensibly legal sports betting: The tribe’s Hard Rock Digital sportsbook platform operated online for 34 days before the tribe complied with a court order and temporarily suspended operations.

Lawsuits, harassment, and more vx3r

Signature gathering, it turns out, is a seedy business. The Sands Corp. earlier this month sued entities connected to the Seminoles in Leon County (Fla.) court over what’s called “petition blocking,” and also made allegations of harassment. The Sands Corp. argued that the tribe’s contractors are paying petition workers to not work, and in some cases, to leave the state altogether. The Sands Corp. also accused these contractors of trying to impede its ability to collect signatures by being disruptive. There have been reports of both from both a Sands Corp. withdrew its complaint.

How Long Until Sports Betting Is Back In Florida? https://t.co/kABK9my9DP

— 96.9 The Game (@969thegame) December 8, 2021

Beyond the tactics described in the pleadings, consider this: It is legal in Florida and many other states to have a criminal record and still work in the signature-gathering business. In fact, it is legal to have been convicted of election fraud and still work on petitions. Those familiar with signature-gathering efforts say it is common for ex-cons to work in the business. According to Florida law, anyone convicted of a felony that is not murder or sexual assault has the right to vote, and signature gatherers, in turn, must be ed voters. There are only a handful of U.S. states where it is illegal for a convicted felon to work as a petition gatherer.

In 2019, the Florida legislature ed and the governor signed House Bill 5, which banned paying petitioners based on the number of signatures collected (pay-per-signature), among other provisions related to statewide initiative and referendum. As of 2021, Wyoming had bans on paying circulators on a per-signature basis, Alan Wilmot, senior legal counsel at Heitner Legal, told Sports Handle.

The state had previously considered altering its petition laws, but a 2008 bill that would have banned convicted felons from working as paid petition circulators died in the House Committee on Judiciary.

A prospective circulator may not be paid for gathering signatures in Oregon if the circulator has been convicted of a criminal offense involving fraud, forgery, or identification theft in any state within a period of five years. Under the law, the circulator is also prohibited from ing in the state. The stipulation also applies to circulators who have faced civil penalties for certain violations of election law.

Plenty of mudslinging going on g1k12

One figure getting thrust into the limelight, and the mud, in Florida is a veteran of signature-gathering campaigns who has been Virginia in what Shawn Wilmoth  called a “setup.” Wilmoth got probation and has since worked on campaigns in multiple states.

He currently consults with Mack Douglas LLC, a petition company working in Florida on the Las Vegas Sands proposal, and has his own petition company, First Choice Contracting LLC, Petition Management Services. Mack Douglas LLC has three offices in Florida, according to its website, but is not ed with the Department of State, Division of Elections, a spokesperson said.

“None of my clients are willing to it they are my clients,” Wilmoth told Sports Handle. “I pull the strings in the background. My opposition, what they do is they find out I have a contract, they go to the Washington Times, or somewhere else. I was working in Ohio on HB 6 and they went there at that time.

“I still manage larger-scale projects than other people, but I never thought I would have the problems I am having. But the clients know I do good work.”

 

One state lawmaker, who is not in the Florida legislature and wished to remain anonymous, told Sports Handle that it is “bad public policy” to allow people convicted of election fraud to work on signature-gathering initiatives, and that there should be laws preventing them from working on those type of campaigns.

But Jeff Brandes, a Florida state senator who did not the tribal-state compact, disagrees, and s the idea that reformed felons should be able to work in the signature-gathering business.

“The people that gather signatures, many of them have some type of criminal history, I would imagine,” Brandes told Sports Handle. “The question is are they doing it in Florida? I know they are gathering signatures, but have they committed a criminal offense in Florida?”

Brandes told Sports Handle that he believes that those who have been convicted of a non-violent crime and have served their time should be allowed to go back out into the world and make an honest living.

‘He’s been paying attention to the rules’ 6lg1i

Since his conviction, Wilmoth has worked on many campaigns. In Ohio in 2019, he worked a campaign related to HB 6 and a nuclear bailout petition. At the time, Cleveland.com ran a story with the headline “Ohio House Bill 6 repeal campaign, struggling to find petitioners, hires supervisor with fraud conviction,” but as in Florida, it is not illegal to have a conviction and still work in the petition business in Ohio.

“He’s not collecting signatures. He coordinates where different people go, and doesn’t really the public,” Ohioans Against Corporate Bailouts spokesman Gene Pierce told Cleveland.com at the time. “He’s been obeying Ohio law … and we’re fighting a daily battle to keep people in the field.

“We’ve got to use the people we can,” Pierce added. “And he’s been good. And he’s been paying attention to the rules.”

In 2017, Wilmoth was connected to signature-gathering efforts in Michigan. Just like in Ohio after it, and Florida now, competition for signature gatherers at that time was vicious.

“We have literally 4,000 people collecting signatures around Michigan — we haven’t run background checks on all 4,000 people, but we do very strictly analyze petitions as they are returned to us before submission to the Secretary of State,” Matthew Dobler told the Detroit Free Press at that time via email.

In Florida, a political consultant close to the Seminole Tribe echoed the idea that more competition — and a lack of time — can change the face of signature gathering.

“It is becoming increasingly clear that as time is running out the two initiative campaigns are becoming more and more desperate,” the consultant told Sports Handle. “Whether that Hail Mary strategy yields them an avenue to meet the necessary signature threshold remains to be seen, but the clock is ticking.”

Wilmoth: I was ‘unfairly convicted’ 695m11

In Virginia, Wilmoth was convicted for hiring two signature gatherers with criminal records, which, at the time, disqualified them from collecting signatures. He said there was a sealed indictment that he was unaware of, and he complied with officials who arrested him in Michigan, his home base.

“Someone in my office hired people and didn’t do a background check,” Wilmoth said of the Virginia case. “So then it was pinned on me.”

He says he was unfairly convicted and has paid his debt to society, and his name comes up when those on the other side of an issue want to create a diversion.

“The only reason they are stirring the pot is they fear me,” he said. “I am taking work from them.

“Because I have a conviction … I take the approach of being very clean.”

Sports Handle spoke with two other individuals in the petition-gathering business who say they’ve had with Wilmoth regarding signature gathering in Florida this fall. One said that Wilmoth told them he wouldn’t fire anyone for turning in forged signatures, and another claimed that Wilmoth asked him to circulate a petition that had another signature gatherer’s identification number on it. Neither could offer physical proof, and both placed Wilmoth in Florida in October or November, though Wilmoth said he hasn’t been in the state nor did he directly hire anyone to collect signatures.

Wilmoth strongly refuted both claims and reiterated that he has not been in Florida since taking a vacation there in June. In addition, he said he works with judges, lawyers, and others in law enforcement on a regular basis and that those people wouldn’t work with him if he were trying to do something illegal.

“First off, we have very strict quality standards and we don’t accept forged signatures,” he told Sports Handle. “A lot of people that we have fired for forgery are working for the other side. We keep digital scans for every signature we’ve ever had.

“Not only have I not been in Florida, I would never encourage anyone to circulate a petition with someone else’s number. If you’re collecting signatures with somebody else’s paper, we can’t [anything].”

How signature gathering works 6l2n54

By Florida law, signature gatherers are paid hourly vs. by the signature. Multiple companies have d in the state for signature gatherers, and hourly rates vary wildly. One company, Initiative and Referendum Campaign Management Services, is offering $17/hour to start with a $2/hour raise per week up to $35.

Wilmoth posted on Facebook seeking signature gatherers to “expand gaming in Florida.” The post says there is the opportunity to “make quite a bit of money” and that Mack Douglas LLC pays daily. The post also says the jobs are “felony friendly.”

According to a source, the hourly wage can ultimately be tied to the number of signatures gathered. For example, companies will offer to boost rates for more effective signature gatherers, so the more signatures collected in an hour, the higher the wage. That is, de facto, paying per signature.

In addition, there is no requirement that a petition be signed in the presence of a signature gatherer. In fact, multiple campaigns in Florida have bar codes voters can scan to and mail in signed petitions, and petitions are being mailed to voters’ homes.

Florida law specifically permits the g of petitions outside the presence of a circulator:

Secretary of State Election Division, . Rule 1S-2.009(9): “Petition forms may be reproduced in newspapers, magazines, and other forms of printed mass media, provided such forms are reproduced in the same format as approved by the Division. The petition forms may be included within a larger ment, provided the forms are clearly defined by a solid or broken line border.”

Current petition landscape 4p4a4s

Whatever the rules, both the Sands Corp. and the commercial operators are continuing to move forward with gathering signatures. According to the Florida Department of Elections website, there are more than 30 proposals addressing an array of topics aiming for the November 2022 ballot, making for a crowded marketplace. Several gaming companies have spent tens of millions of dollars in Florida petition-gathering efforts, underscoring the intense push to make it onto the ballot. Altogether, multiple outside groups have collectively spent about $60 million in PAC funding to hire about 1,000 workers to contest the Seminoles’ efforts, tribe spokesman Gary Bitner told Politico.

Signed the Florida Sports Betting Petition because I'm against government mandated monopolies.

@GovRonDeSantis and so should you be. pic.twitter.com/rBxEI0PUHd

— 🏉🍿AJ⚡🦃 (@TampaBayAJ) December 7, 2021

Those collecting signatures for November 2022 initiatives have until Feb. 1, 2022, to submit signatures to the state for verification. Proponents must obtain 891,589 verified signatures to get on the ballot. In general, political committees seek to gather 10% more signatures than needed because some will be deemed invalid.

As of Tuesday morning, according to the Florida Department of Elections website, Florida Voters in Charge, the Sands Corp.’s political committee, had 175 verified signatures, but it’s likely it has collected  more. The state site posts only those that have been verified. Florida Education Champions, the political committee running the statewide mobile betting campaign, had 173,834 signatures verified, but according to a spokesperson in late November had collected more than 600,000 total signatures.

— Matt Rybaltowski and Brett Smiley contributed to this report

ShareTweetShare
Jill R. Dorson

Jill R. Dorson 5m3w5e

Jill has covered everything from steeplechase to the NFL and then some during a more than 30-year career in sports journalism. The highlight of her career was covering Oakland Raiders during the Charles Woodson/Jon Gruden era, including the infamous “Snow Bowl” and the Raiders’ 2003 trip to Super Bowl XXXVII. Her specialty these days is covering sports betting legislation across the country. You can reach Jill at [email protected]

This site contains commercial content. We may be compensated for the links provided on this page. The content on this page is for informational purposes only.

Related Posts 4a5r72

Promotions

Illinois Sportsbook Promos: Unlock $3,000+ in Total Bonus Value for Dodgers vs. Cubs, Any Game Now 485e5g

March 17, 2025
Promotions

Tennessee Sportsbook Promos: Use $3,000+ in Offers from Top Sports Betting Apps Today, Including bet365 TN 1x706n

March 16, 2025
Load More

SportsHandle 5w3960

  • Analysis
  • Casino
  • Features
  • Horse Racing
  • Industry
  • Legal
  • Legislation
  • Lottery
  • Opinion
  • Podcasts
  • Poker
  • Politics
  • Promotions
  • Regulation
  • Sports
  • Uncategorized

Better Collective 58t4o

This website is owned and operated by Better Collective USA. Trademarks and copyrights referenced on this website are and shall remain the exclusive property of their respective owners and/or licensors. Please be sure to visit the operator’s website(s) to review their & conditions. We advise you to read these carefully as they contain important information. Copyright © 2025 | Better Collective USA
21 Play Responsibly
National Council on Problem Gambling
Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-Gambler.

Search Sports Handle 4g1872

No Result
View All Result

Legal 31o1q

  • Cookie Policy
  • /
  • Responsible Gambling

No Result
View All Result
  • US Sports Betting
    • Arizona Sports Betting
    • Colorado Sports Betting
    • Florida Sports Betting
    • Illinois Sports Betting
    • Indiana Sports Betting
    • Kentucky Sports Betting
    • Louisiana Sports Betting
    • Maryland Sports Betting
    • Massachusetts Sports Betting
    • Michigan Sports Betting
    • Missouri Sports Betting
    • New Jersey Sports Betting
    • New York Sports Betting
    • North Carolina Sports Betting
    • Ohio Sports Betting
    • Pennsylvania Sports Betting
    • Tennessee Sports Betting
    • Vermont Sports Betting
    • Virginia Sports Betting
  • Betting Apps
    • Best Sports Betting Sites
    • bet365 Bonus Code
    • Caesars Promo Code
    • BetMGM Bonus Code
    • Fanatics Sportsbook Promo Code
    • Borgata Promo Code
    • BetRivers Promo Code
    • ESPN BET Promo Code
    • DraftKings Bonus Code
    • Fliff Promo Code
    • Rebet Bonus Code
    • TwinSpires Offer Code
    • FanDuel Sportsbook Promo Code
  • DFS Sites
    • PrizePicks Referral Code
    • Betr Promo Code
    • Boom Fantasy Promo Code
    • Dabble Fantasy Promo Code
    • OwnersBox Referral Code
    • Sleeper Promo Code
    • SuperDraft Promo Code
    • Underdog Fantasy Promo Code
    • Thrillzz Sportsbook Promo Code
  • Tools
    • Sportsbook Bonuses Explained
    • What Is a Teaser Bet?
    • What Is a Parlay Bet?
    • What is a Same Game Parlay?
    • What Is a Moneyline Bet?
    • What is Expected Value?
    • Win/Loss Statement
    • Sports Betting Revenue Tracker
    • Sports Betting Podcasts
    • Partnership Tracker
    • Sports Scores And Odds Apps
    • Sports Betting Twitter
  • News

loading

Please wait while you are redirected to the right page...

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.Read more