Plaintiff Brian Valenti is a convicted felon and registered sex offender. Even though his felony conviction is predicated on a sexual act with a child victim, Valenti believes that the state of Indiana is violating his right to vote by refusing to let him enter a polling site located at a school. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the state defendants. We affirm.
I
In 1993, Brian Valenti was convicted in California state court of a "Lewd or Lascivious Act with [a] Child Under 14 Years"-a felony in violation of
The issue here is that on election days, Valenti's neighborhood polling place is on school property: the Blackford County High School gymnasium, which is about three miles from Valenti's home. Indiana allows felons like Valenti to vote once they are nо longer imprisoned.
But that is not enough for Valenti: he argues that Indiana is violating his constitutional right to vote under the First and Fourteenth Amendments by banning him from the polling site at Blackford County High School. So he brought this as-applied challenge for declaratory and injunctive relief against the Indiana Secretary of State, the individual members of the Indiana Election Commission, the Superintendent of the Indiana State Police, and the Blackford County Prosecutor, all in their official capacities.
In short, Valenti believes that the three alternative methods of voting that Indiana provides are vastly inferior to voting at the local high school. First, he considers vоting to be a celebration of his American rights, and he wants to engage in that celebration with his closest neighbors at his neighborhood polling place. Next, most of the local candidates go to the high school-nоt the civic center 12 miles away-and Valenti wants the chance to engage with them before voting. Third, he believes that the absentee ballot process is riddled with flaws that may lead to his vote not counting. And finally, he assеrts that if he must vote early by absentee ballot or at the county courthouse, he will miss out on the "late-breaking news" that is so pervasive in today's 24-hour news cycle.
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment below. The distriсt court entered judgment in favor of the state defendants, holding that under the flexible balancing test mandated in Burdick v. Takushi ,
II
We review de novo a district court's decision to grant or deny summary judgment to a party. C.G. Schmidt, Inc. v. Permasteelisa N. Am. ,
III
The district court was correct to enter judgment in favor of the defendants in this case, but it did so for the wrong reasons. Contrary to the assertions of both рarties, this case does not implicate Valenti's constitutional right to vote under the First and Fourteenth Amendments. This is because Valenti does not even have a constitutional right to vote: it is well established that Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment gives states the "affirmative sanction" to exclude felons from the franchise. Richardson v. Ramirez ,
Accordingly, Valenti only has a statutory right to vote here, not a constitutional right. And since the Indianа statute does not infringe on any fundamental right or suspect class, it only requires rational basis review-not something higher, like the constitutional balancing test seen in Burdick , supra . Segovia v. United States ,
The Indiana statute survives rational basis review if there is a "rational relationship between the law and some legitimate governmental purpose." Segovia ,
Valenti cannot meet this high burden. First of all, Indiana has offered a legitimate purposе for the statute: to keep serious sex offenders away from schools, where they could prey on children. Sex offenders are a "serious threat" with a "frighteningly high" risk of recidivism, so Indiana's stated purpose is quite legitimate-especially considering that "the victims of sexual assault are most often juveniles." McKune v. Lile ,
Indiana's position is an iron-clad fortress in light of the rational basis test. Valenti tries to lay siege to the fortress, but his cannons are full of feathers. His first barrage is targeted at Indiana's stated purpose and grounded in the Supreme Court's recent holding in Packingham v. North Carolina , --- U.S. ----,
Valenti also complains about the many alternative methods of voting that Indiana provides to him, even though the state is under no obligation to give him any alternatives at all given his status as a felon. Richardson ,
Valenti's arguments are not even remotely persuasive given the ample alternatives that Indiana provides to him, especially considering the state is not required to offer any alternatives at all. Valenti's argument about wanting to learn the politics of his neighbors and the local candidates at the polling place is especially odd, given the fact that
Valenti also relies on three cаses outside of this circuit in support of his position, but these cases are inapposite because they dealt with challenges to the fundamental right to vote-not to any statutory right, as here. One case held that voting by absentee ballot was not an acceptable substitute for voting in-person for many African Americans impacted by Texas's voter identification laws, because "[f]or some African-Americans, [voting together at the polls] is a strong tradition-a celebration-to overcoming obstacles to the right to vote." Veasey v. Perry,
IV
There is no doubt here that Indiana has demonstrated a rational relationship between
AFFIRMED
