Robert Crowley is a U.S. Army veteran, and volunteer with the Paralyzed Veterans of America and Mid-South chapter representative.
He’s described in a lawsuit as a devoted father, grandfather and great-grandfather. But 27 years ago in 1997, he was convicted of attempted murder. Though he’s a registered voter in Alabama, his ability to vote on Nov. 5 is in doubt because of a new Alabama law that could disqualify him and many others from voting.
It’s also a new law that is confusing and unconstitutional, according to a lawsuit filed Wednesday in Montgomery County Circuit Court that challenges the law – which was HB100 in the Alabama Legislature this spring – before absentee voting begins in September.
“Every American should be able to exercise their freedom to vote, regardless of whether they have a past felony conviction,” said Blair Bowie, director of the Campaign Legal Center’s Restore Your Vote program.
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CLC, along with Montgomery attorney J. Mitch McGuire, filed the lawsuit that seeks to block HB100 from being implemented.
“HB100 makes an already confusing voting rights restoration process in Alabama even harder to navigate,” Bowie said.
Expanding Moral turpitude
Rep. Adline Clark, D-Mobile
The intent of HB100, sponsored by Democratic Rep. Adline Clark of Mobile, was to protect election workers by adding crimes against election workers and other election officials to a list of disqualifying felonies that can strip someone’s ability to vote.
But before the bill’s passage, lawmakers amended it to add six more felonies as crimes of moral turpitude – a designation that means those convicted are disqualified from voting.
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Four additional categories of felonies for “inchoate” crimes, such as attempted crimes and conspiracies, were also added to the list.
According to the lawsuit, HB100 “effectively adds over 120 new disenfranchising state convictions to the list of felonies involving moral turpitude. Before HB100, that list included only approximately 40 disenfranchising state felonies.”
“More Alabamians with prior felony convictions have been able to vote since 2017,” Bowie said, referring to the year that state lawmakers adopted the Felony Voter Disqualification Act that defined the more than 40 crimes – including murder, rape, assault, sexual abuse – as crimes of moral turpitude.
The lawsuit’s two plaintiffs – Crowley and JaiGregory Clarke, a community organizer in Jefferson County – have attempted murder convictions and would be disqualified from voting under the new law.
Questionable timing
The biggest question raised in the lawsuit is whether HB100, signed by Gov. Kay Ivey on May 16, violates the Alabama Constitution because of its timing.
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Voters in 2022 overwhelmingly adopted a constitutional amendment that says laws affecting elections cannot change within six months of an election. But HB100 includes an implementation date of Oct. 1, which is less than 35 days before the Nov. 5 election.
The lawsuit argues there is confusion and no direction from state officials about the law’s enforcement. Alabama Secretary of State Wes Allen hasn’t provided direction on the new law, the lawsuit argues, other than providing a statement to AL.com’s Mike Cason in late May, that says the new law doesn’t take effect until Nov. 6.
“Preventing confusion around such crucial, unanswered questions in the months preceding a general election is precisely why approximately 80 percent of Alabama voters passed Amendment 4, enshrining in the Alabama Constitution a prohibition on election bills taking effect within six months of a general election,” the lawsuit states.
Allen’s office declined comment, referring statements to the Alabama Attorney General’s Office. The Attorney General’s Office did not respond to a request to comment.
Othni Lathram, director of the Legislative Services Agency, said while he cannot comment on how the Secretary of State’s Office is implementing the new law, his agency’s analysis while lawmakers were considering the bill earlier this year included an acknowledgement of the new constitutional amendment. The analysis simply says the legislation, while effective Oct. 1, would not impact who votes in November because of the 2022 constitutional amendment.
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The timing of the new law – if it takes effect on Oct. 1 — would also prevent Alabamians like Clarke and Crowley from getting their voting rights restored through the Certificate of Eligibility to Vote – or CERV – process through the Alabama Bureau of Pardons and Parole (ABPP), the lawsuit states.
The CERV process allows felons who lose their voting rights and who have completed their sentence, paid all fines, court costs and restitution – and who do not have a pending felony charge – to seek the restoration of their ability to vote.
But the ABPP has 44 days to respond to CERV applications, meaning they are not required to consider a CERV to the newly disqualified voters under the law that takes effect on Oct. 1 until Nov. 14 – nine days after the Nov. 5 election.
Legislative procedure
The lawsuit challenges a piece of legislation that was, during the waning days of the legislative session in early May, was viewed as a rare piece of bipartisan election-related legislation.
Its passage was through an unusual process. The bill was resurrected during the last week of the session after it was seemingly defeated by a 4-4-3 vote during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on April 24, which is a rarity during a legislative session. The concerns from Republicans on the Judiciary Committee during the April meeting focused on levying harsh punishments on angry voters engaged in verbal spats with poll workers. The original intent of HB100 was to respond to a rise in threats to poll workers and election officials in other parts of the country – not necessarily in Alabama –since the 2020 presidential election.
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The legislation, though, sailed to passage with Allen pushing for it after it was amended on the Alabama House floor to include the additional crimes to the list those disqualifying felons from voting. Rep. Jim Hill, R-Moody, proposed the amendment to add to the list of moral turpitude crimes. He said he supported the idea after he was asked to sponsor the amendment by Allen.
Clarke, the sponsor of HB100, told AL.com Thursday she will let the courts decide the merits of the case.
The League of Women Voters, in late May, expressed concerns about adding additional crimes to those disqualifying voters from elections in Alabama, arguing that the state was encouraging the legacy of Jim Crow. Allen, though, said he felt HB100 – as amended – is a strong crime deterrent.
“I’m not disqualifying anyone from voting as it relates to HB100,” he said to AL.com in May. “It’s the criminals who disqualify themselves when they break the law and wreak havoc on our communities.”
Alabama has a long history of disenfranchising voters for crimes of moral turpitude, going back to the Alabama Constitution of 1901, which was aimed at keeping Blacks and poor whites from voting.
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For years, there was no definition moral turpitude, giving county boards of registrars and political appointees discretion over which people convicted of crimes could be disqualified from voting. Voters convicted of misdemeanors and felonies could get disqualified in past years.
In 1985, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down Alabama’s disenfranchisement of voters for misdemeanors. Alabama voters approved a new constitutional amendment in 1996 disqualifying votes who committed felonies involving moral turpitude, but there was no definition behind that term.
More than 21 years later in 2017, lawmakers approved the Felony Voter Disqualification Act to define moral turpitude.
The Philadelphia 76ers selected Alabama guard Labaron Philon Jr. with the 22nd overall pick of the 2026 NBA draft Tuesday night.
Philon is the first pick of the Mike Gansey era after he replaced Daryl Morey as the team’s president of basketball operations.
Who is Labaron Philon Jr.?
Philon, 20, led the Crimson Tide in scoring last season, averaging 22.0 points on nearly 40% shooting on 3-pointers. He was the focal point of one of the nation’s most potent offenses, as Alabama led the country in points per game in the 2025-26 season. The Crimson Tide (No. 16) finished the season with a 25-10 record and went 13-5 against conference opponents.
Philon, who helped lead Alabama to the Sweet 16 in the NCAA tournament, earned Third-Team All-American and First-Team All-SEC honors in his sophomore season.
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In 33 games last season for Alabama, Philon scored 725 total points, which is ranked third-most by a player in a single season in program history.
NBA commissioner Adam Silver shakes hands with Labaron Philon Jr. after he is drafted twenty-second overall by the Philadelphia 76ers during Round One of the 2026 NBA Draft at Barclays Center on June 23, 2026 in New York City.
Arturo Holmes / Getty Images
Philon was the 34th-ranked basketball recruit in the country entering his freshman season at Alabama, according to 247sports. The four-star guard initially committed to playing at Auburn, but decommitted. He then signed a letter of intent to play at Kansas, but didn’t play there, either. He then committed to the Crimson Tide in April 2024.
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Philon impressed as a freshman at Alabama and averaged 10.6 points in 37 games. He declared for the 2025 NBA draft but then withdrew and returned for his sophomore season, where he saw his scoring average jump more than 10 points.
Philon is a Mobile, Alabama, native and played at Baker High School in Mobile County, where he scored 2,334 points in three seasons. He was named the Class 7A Player of the Year twice.
As a junior, he averaged 35 points, 6.2 rebounds and 3.9 assists and was named Alabama Mr. Basketball, which is given to the best high school boys’ basketball player in the state. Philon transferred to Link Academy, a boarding school in Missouri, for his senior year of high school.
Philon now joins a backcourt headlined by Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe heading into the 2026-27 season. Quentin Grimes could return to Philadelphia next season and add even more depth, but he’s an unrestricted free agent.
The pick the Sixers used to pick Philon was acquired in the deal that sent Jared McCain to the Oklahoma City Thunder at the trade deadline.
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Labaron Philon Jr. scouting report
CBS Sports had Philon ranked as the 14th-best prospect in the 2026 NBA draft.
Here are his strengths and weaknesses, according to CBS Sports:
Strengths
On-ball creator who made an extreme leap as a sophomore, ranking in the 99th percentile in isolations (was 24th percentile as a freshman) and 94th as a pick-and-roll handler (was 32nd percentile as a freshman). Combines smooth attack with sudden change of speed and direction, dexterity, and finishing craft in the lane.
Shot-maker who can make tough shots off both the catch (36% on contested catch-and-shoot 3-pointers), dribble (38% from deep), and has extreme gravity when he’s spacing the floor (46% on unguarded catch-and-shoot 3-pointers).
Shown pliability to thrive in different roles over the years and is a similarly versatile creator, because he’s a scoring threat at multiple levels and also an accurate, and somewhat creative, passer with both hands off the dribble.
Weaknesses
Inconsistent defensive approach. Showed more engagement and potential as a freshman, but couldn’t maintain that as a sophomore when taking on a bigger offensive role.
Lacks overwhelming physicality or highest level explosiveness, and didn’t add any notable muscle mass between his freshman and sophomore seasons (175 pounds at 2025 combine and 176 at 2026 combine).
Unclear how well his creation scales to the NBA level when he will have less usage and volume coupled by more physicality in opposing defenders.
Alabama football hosted a hometown kid for an official visit last weekend when it got Jeremiah Beverley on campus for an official visit.
Beverley attends Hillcrest High School in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, and ESPN currently has him rated as a four-star recruit. He is considering Alabama, Cincinnati, Wake Forest and others.
The Crimson Tide offered Beverley earlier this month and got him on campus for an official visit last weekend. The Alabama target told Touchdown Alabama he used the visit to learn what the Tide has planned for him if he commits.
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“I’m truly happy that I went on that official visit,” Beverley said. “Blessed for that. All I was talking about was the next step, what I got to do? So, just knowing what they have planned for me, knowing what they have set for me.”
At 6-foot-2 and 235 pounds, Beverley makes plays for Hillcrest-Tuscaloosa as a defensive end. Alabama has plans to use him similarly at the next level.
“They’re going to have me at wolf mostly,” Beverley said. “I know coach (Kane) Wommack and coach (Christian) Robinson, I think they see me at other positions, but I know it is guaranteed they’re going to see me at Wolf and me working my way up on special teams, and they expect that out of me.”
Beverley is expected to announce a commitment decision on Friday.
Watch Jeremiah Beverley’s Highlights Below:
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Justin Smith is the Managing Editor and Lead Writer for Touchdown Alabama Magazine with over 10 years of writing experience & expertise. Smith has consistently delivered high quality, extensively researched information on the University of Alabama’s Crimson Tide football team that fans can trust. Smith is official credentialed media with the University of Alabama under Touchdown Alabama Magazine. He is also the Director of Recruiting for Touchdown Enterprises, specializing in scouting and analyzing high school recruits around the nation, specifically focusing on recruits within the state of Alabama.
Alabama football is hiring Noah Fisher to be its assistant tight ends coach, according to CBS Sports’ Matt Zenitz.
Fisher spent two seasons as a graduate assistant working with the offensive line and tight ends at Louisville before joining the Tide’s staff. He played three years on the offensive line at South Alabama and spent one season with Tulane. The Jaguars started Fisher along its offensive line when he was a player for multiple games.
The Crimson Tide appear to want to use their tight ends in multiple ways in the future including as extra blockers along the line of scrimmage. Fisher looks as if he can assist the Tide with this mission.
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Justin Smith is the Managing Editor and Lead Writer for Touchdown Alabama Magazine with over 10 years of writing experience & expertise. Smith has consistently delivered high quality, extensively researched information on the University of Alabama’s Crimson Tide football team that fans can trust. Smith is official credentialed media with the University of Alabama under Touchdown Alabama Magazine. He is also the Director of Recruiting for Touchdown Enterprises, specializing in scouting and analyzing high school recruits around the nation, specifically focusing on recruits within the state of Alabama.