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Court agrees to review Crystal Mason's acquittal after appeal from Tarrant County DA

A photo of Crystal Mason, a Black woman with short, straight black hair, wearing a brown dress and a butterfly necklace. She speaks into a microphone at a press conference, surrounded by her attorneys and supporters.
Miranda Suarez
/
四虎影院
Crystal Mason speaks to reporters outside the Tarrant County criminal courthouse in downtown Fort Worth on March 29, 2024. The day before, a Tarrant County-based appeals court threw out her conviction for illegal voting.

The state's highest criminal court has agreed to review the acquittal of Crystal Mason, who was accused of illegal voting in Tarrant County in 2016.

When Mason went to vote, she was on supervised release for federal tax evasion. People convicted of felonies can't vote while on supervised release, . Mason has maintained she didn't know she was ineligible, and she cast a that day, which was never counted.

Mason was convicted of illegal voting and sentenced to five years in prison. She fought her conviction for years, and in March, the Second Court of Appeals in Tarrant County acquitted her. The justices ruled there's no evidence Mason knew she was ineligible to vote. That knowledge is a requirement to make a vote illegal, according to the court.

The Tarrant County District Attorney's Office asked the Court of Criminal Appeals to reverse the acquittal, and on Wednesday, the court agreed to take up the case.

鈥淲hile I am ready for this case to be over and for my acquittal to stand, I will continue to maintain my faith that justice will be done,鈥 Mason said .

Tarrant County DA Phil Sorrells explained why he appealed Mason's acquittal in a briefing to county commissioners in May.

鈥淚 want would-be illegal voters to know that we鈥檙e watching,鈥 he said.

because she signed an affidavit at the polling place that explained the rules.

Got a tip? Email Miranda Suarez at msuarez@kera.org. You can follow Miranda on Twitter @MirandaRSuarez.

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Miranda Suarez is an award-winning reporter who started at 四虎影院 in 2020. Before joining 鈥淣TX Now,鈥 she covered Tarrant County government, with a focus on deaths in the local jail. Her work drives discussion at local government meetings and has led to real-world change 鈥 like the closure of a West Texas private prison that violated the state鈥檚 safety standards. A Massachusetts native, Miranda got her start in journalism at WTBU, Boston University鈥檚 student radio station. She later worked at WBUR as a business desk fellow, and while reporting for Boston 25 News, she received a New England Emmy nomination for her investigation into mental鈥慼ealth counseling services at Massachusetts colleges and universities.