Attorney General

Critical Thinking is Required

 

Critical Thinking is Required – Interview 9

 

Released May 29, 2014

artworks_mediumIn CTIR Interview 9: Bill Wohlsifer (Libertarian Candidate for Florida Attorney General), I interview Bill Wohlsifer who is running for Florida Attorney General as a Libertarian Candidate. We discuss a variety of issues, mostly focusing on Florida, that include the drug war, industrial hemp, gay rights, among others.

Thank you for listening to CTIR. If you enjoyed the show please share and like this episode. You may also check the website:

http://www.criticalthinkingisrequired.net/

 

Federal Overreach on Consumer Labels

Nutrition facts

As a Libertarian I sometimes find myself at odds with other members of my political party over certain laws. Take for instance GMO Labeling law. I favor laws that inform us of what we are putting into our bodies. As consumers, we want to make informed free market choices. I am able to read beyond the Madison Ave puffery on food packaging, but I cannot reverse-engineer the commodity inside. I do not want to choose salmon because of the attractiveness of the pinkish food dye it is soaked in, nor because of its larger size from genetic engineering. I would much rather know which waters the fish came from, what it consumed in its lifetime, and if it was genetically engineered before I consume it. Libertarians recognize that not all laws are bad. But we apply strict scrutiny to even the most local ordinance. As candidate for Florida Attorney General my position on GMO Labeling laws is not to regulate an industry, but to provide consumer information and protection. I believe consumer protection is a proper role of government and a high priority for the people’s Attorney General.

 

Currently, there is a Federal GMO Labeling bill, HR 4432, recently introduced by Rep. Mike Pompeo (R-Kan.). HR 4432, superficially named the “Safe and Accurate Food Labeling Act” and commonly referred to as “The DARK Act” by anti-GMO activists, intends to prevent any individual state from passing its own GMO Labeling law such as Vermont, Connecticut and Maine have recently done.  Proposed HR 4432, if passed, would create an unconstitutional encroachment on the laws of Florida. As candidate for Florida Attorney General I pledge to use the full power of the 9th and 10th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution to shield Florida from such federal overreach. Indeed, section 16.52, Florida Statutes, clearly mandates the Florida Attorney General  “to oppose any existing or proposed federal legislative encroachments upon constitutional state powers . . . [and] to pursue that course best calculated to preserve and safeguard the constitutional state powers of the government of this state.” We, as a sovereign state and as responsible individuals, have every right to control what goes on within the borders of our state for the protection of the health, safety and welfare of all Floridians.

 

Bill Wohlsifer (LPF) Candidate for Attorney General

www.BillW2014.com

Attorney General Candidate Bill Wohlsifer Takes Issue with Pam Bondi’s Limited View on Hurricane Shutter Dangers

Attorney General Candidate Bill Wohlsifer Takes Issue with Pam Bondi’s

Limited View on Hurricane Shutter Dangers

Candidate Wohlsifer says the role of the Attorney General is to be a Consumer Advocate

 

Tallahassee, Florida– Last May 31, Attorney General Pam Bondi’s office published a news release stating that homeowners should only purchase hurricane shutters that were Florida Building Code (FBC) approved.  FBC approved shutters are required to be installed with penetrating anchors that are driven at least 2 inches into the structure. “In the past I have personally followed these guidelines,” said Candidate Wohlsifer.

“However it never occurred to me that the plywood I bolted on could have trapped my family inside.”

 

Since 1998, there have been over 12 deaths in Florida and $51 Million in property destruction linked to bolted-on hurricane shutters and plywood.  With the 2014 Hurricane Season approaching June 1, a new Petition to the Federal Government’s Consumer Products Safety Commission (CPSC) spotlights the dangers facing Florida homeowners and firefighters regarding Florida Building Commission-approved bolted on hurricane shutters.  Says Petitioner John D. Smith, Inventor of Storm Stoppers, a plywood alternative that can be safely removed from the inside of the home, “If Attorney General Bondi really cared about protecting the lives and safety of Floridians, she wouldn’t put out press releases that encourage homeowners to only buy Florida Building Code approved hurricane shutters, without also warning them of the dangers.” (See Temporary Hurricane Shutters and Firefighting Operations, Chief Hollins, Leigh, T. Fire Engineering, PennWell (June 2005) available at http://www.fireengineering.com/articles/print/volume-158/issue-6/features/temporary-hurricane-shutters-and-firefighting-operations.html.

 

All of the deaths of homeowners trapped behind hurricane shutters occurred outside the threat of a hurricane.  One death occurred on January 7, 2008 when Holocaust Survivor Esther Mabib of West Palm Beach was trapped behind her Accordion Shutters during a fire.  Other news headlines in the Petition include: Hurricane Shutters hindered Hollywood fire victim from Hollywood, Florida on June 1, 2007 and Shutters blamed in fatal blaze that killed priest from September 15, 2004 in Fort Lauderdale.  The priest was Father Jorge  Sardinas, a St. Thomas University art professor, who was a beloved priest at Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church in Miami Lakes. “I attended mass at Our Lady of the Lakes and I attended St. Thomas University School of Law,” says Candidate Wohlsifer.  He continues, “I lived in Palm Beach County during the cluster of Hurricanes that struck in 2004-05. I have first-hand experience with Hurricane preparedness and clean up.  Homeowners need to be warned of these bolted on hurricane shutter dangers and I support Storm Stoppers’ federal CPSC Petition.”

 

Florida can do better. As your next Attorney General, Bill Wohlsifer brings much more experience to Tallahassee than just prosecuting criminal cases. “I have experience in many areas of law, experience in diverse social settings, and experience in business. I am a self-made businessman that graduated law school at age 42, with honors. When elected Florida Attorney General, I will NOT allow special interest groups to mislead me from my job of protecting the public.  I bring open-minded real world knowledge and leadership to the debate on Florida’s legal affairs for the health and safety of all Floridians,” said Wohlsifer.

 

CONTACT INFO:

 

Bill Wohlsifer (LPF) Candidate for Florida Attorney General

Steve Edmonds, Campaign Manager, 407-701-9045 — [email protected]

With a name like Common Core…

I don’t have kids but when and if I do, I will be searching for truly exceptional education.  There will be nothing “common” regarding my children’s education and I’m sure every parent out there has the same hopes and desires.  Common core can never satisfy my demands for exceptional education.  By its very nature it is “traditional” education – making every student learn the same materials and curriculum at the same time or ‘fail’ rather than learn and succeed at their own pace.  With that in mind I will prepare to homeschool my children first and foremost and will desire the liberty to educate my children without government oversight, e.g. standardized testing.  If for some reason I absolutely cannot educate my children at home, I will search for “alternative” education which in many aspects is far superior to traditional education. Montessori schools are a perfect example.  These schools provide excellent education for students precisely by allowing them to learn at their own pace and foster relationships.  Force and coercion are never the best practices to foster relationships.  This is my personal opinion about education these days even though I attended schools that provided a traditional educational approach.  As a student who was ahead of the curve, I was provided opportunities to excel through advanced curriculum however, even that at times was boring and simplistic.  Every student requires an individual approach to maximize their potential and the state will never be able to provide that by implementing common core.

With that in mind and taking into account the massive amount of money spent why can’t the state focus on providing more alternative, individualistic approaches to education, treating children as individuals and not labeling and dictating their status as “students”?  Common core is a monopoly that has been created to enrich testing companies, teacher certification companies, state education budgets and in my opinion is the most exploitative creation yet by state and federal governments.  It is truly and abomination and Florida should join the small minority of states that did not adopt it.  Education is best left to parents, communities, and the smallest unit of government available, the school board.  Every child’s education should have only one thing in common; an individually tailored and enriched plan to maximize their potential and provide them with a truly exceptional childhood that allows them to develop into educated adults.

 

Matthew Battista

THE WEB OF CRONY CAPITALISM IS MUCH BIGGER THAN ‘CHARLOTTE’S WEB’

While Florida’s legislators present themselves as though they are acting with compassion to help children who suffer intractable epilepsy, many of the power player’s real objective is to capture market share for their crony friends of the huge marijuana business that is rapidly approaching Florida.  A close reading of SB 1030, ironically tilted the “Compassionate Medical Cannabis Act of 2014” a/k/a the “Charlotte’s Web Bill” reveals it sets the foundation to hand over Florida’s burgeoning marijuana industry to a select few friends of the establishment class.  Charlotte’s Web creates an anti-competitive platform under the guise of compassionate legislation and the Governor has stated his intent to sign it into law.

The proposed law requires that the cultivation, processing, and dispensing of the low level-CBD end-product shall solely be conducted by a single entity referred to as a “dispensing organization.” Under the proposed law there can be no more than five dispensing organizations, statewide. I predict there will be only one. This anti-competitive business model is referred to as “vertical integration.” Ironically, vertical integration is exactly what the Republican majority argued against when insisting that the craft brewery industry must use a three-tier level of distribution contending that would preserve competitive markets. This is what is known as hypocrisy.

It gets worse. Not only must a single entity be the sole grower, processor, manufacturer and distributor of the Charlotte’s Web strain of cannabis from the time it is planted in the soil until placed under the patient’s tongue as an oil, but in order to qualify as a dispensing organization the business must have been “a registered nursery in this state for at least 30 continuous years.” (See lines 185-194 from the proposed legislation inserted below.) I suggest this anti-competitive platform was accomplished purposefully to position a few crony capitalists (also known as democratic capitalists) to be handed the lion’s share of Florida’s marijuana business that will plant itself in our state following the passage of Amendment 2 to the Florida Constitution in November 2014. I further suggest, as I have been stating in my campaign appearances around the state, this was the Republican establishment’s endgame plan all along, despite political propaganda to the contrary. A thirty-year requirement to qualify for market access is unprecedented in any industry I am aware of and certainly has no rational basis to serve as a prerequisite to grow “weed.” Shame on those in the House who introduced and supported this 11th hour amendment.  A new industry that could create prosperity for so many Floridian entrepreneurs is being funneled to a select few.

My heart goes out to the families and patients who will be denied compassionate use because of this highly restrictive Charlotte’s Web bill, which only allows for use as an oil droplet for patients who demonstrate symptoms of seizures or severe and persistent muscle spasms. Aside from the small population this oil will help, a million Floridians will be denied the healing benefits of other derivatives of the cannabis plant which could have been made available by passage of the Cathy Jordan Medical Cannabis Act (SB 962). When I wrote the original Cathy Jordan Medical Cannabis Act in 2012, I purposefully included safeguards against anti-competition like we now see in 2014. The Republican leadership refused to advance the Cathy Jordan Act again this year. Yet they embraced this commercial market grab presently known as CS/CS/SB 1030, Enrolled.

This is the type of politicking and cronyism that inspired me to run for Florida Attorney General. I want to be in a position to protect the interests of ALL Floridians when the legislature has to meet its mandate to create law following the passage of Amendment 2 in November. I do not trust any of the ‘establishment candidates’ to protect the will of the voters where such a huge and profitable market is involved. On behalf of the parents who came to Tallahassee to plead for access to that which is available in 21 other states and D.C., I’m calling “foul” on our FL legislators.

In the 11th hour the following was added to the bill by 7th-generation Floridian, Rep. Matt Caldwell, R-Lehigh Acres:

185 . . . An applicant for approval as a

186 dispensing organization must be able to demonstrate:

187 1. The technical and technological ability to cultivate and

188 produce low-THC cannabis. The applicant must possess a valid

189 certificate of registration issued by the Department of

190 Agriculture and Consumer Services pursuant to s. 581.131 that is

191 issued for the cultivation of more than 400,000 plants, be

192 operated by a nurseryman as defined in s. 581.011, and have been

193 operated as a registered nursery in this state for at least 30

194 continuous years.

Wohlsifer, an attorney in Tallahassee, is now running for the office held by Attorney General Pam Bondi.  Wohlsifer has announced that he will pay the qualifying fee and is certain to be on the November ballot.

 

Matt Wright is a writer and political activist living in south Florida. He has a BS in communications and is currently working for the Bill Wohlsifer for Attorney General campaign. To hear more from Matt you can follow him on Twitter at @mrwright79 or Like him on Facebook.

FLORIDA LIBERTARIAN PARTY CANDIDATE FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL BILL WOHLSIFER SAYS THANKS, BUT NO THANKS FOR MARIJUANA VOTE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                 May 2, 2014                                                  

 

Florida Libertarian Party candidate for Attorney General Bill Wohlsifer publically thanks Speaker Weatherford for placing the House version of what is commonly referred to as the “Charlotte’s Web” bill (HB 843) on the calendar, in the 9th inning yesterday.  “If approved, Charlotte’s Web can bring relief to 125,000 children in Florida who suffer seizures from intractable epilepsy,” said Wohlsifer.  “We have a unique opportunity to help children as the state Senate has wisely realized.”  Wohlsifer released a public statement calling for this action on April 30.

“I am calling on Speaker Weatherford to resist the pressure from Governor Rick Scott who does not want to see this bill move,” said Wohlsifer.  “These children need help now.”

Wohlsifer, who also supports Amendment 2, a constitutional amendment that will legalize the use of medical marijuana in Florida, said he believed that the “Charlotte’s Web” bill had enough bipartisan support to pass the House if the Speaker would post it for a vote.  Yesterday, Wohlsifer was proven correct and the legislation is headed back to Senate with a “message” – a statement of the action taken on the bill in the House on the 59th day of the 60 day legislative session.

Charlotte’s Web refers to a non-euphoric strain of the cannabis plant. The Senate version, CS/CS/SB 1030, received overwhelming approval on April 28, 2014 (36-3).  Following certification in the Rules Committee Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fort Walton Beach, filed a House amendment to CS/CS/SB 1030, but Gaetz withdrew the amendment the next day, and another amendment by Matt Caldwell, R – Lehigh Acres, if ultimately approved, will add a “highly restrictive, anti-competitive” requirement to the bill according to Wohlsifer.

The Caldwell amendment requires that in order to qualify as a dispensing organization for the non-euphoric strain of cannabis, the applicant must demonstrate that it already possess a valid certificate of registration issued by the Department of Ag for the cultivation of more than 400,000 plants and that it has been continually operating as a registered nursery in Florida for at least the past 30 years.

“There is no rational basis for such an unprecedented requirement of three decades in the cultivation business to grow a simple grass. This is a blatant attempt to stifle free market competition in what is soon be the fastest growing industry in Florida,” Wohlsifer claims. “Crony capitalism is at work in the Sunshine State. The handful of nurseries that will be the only entities allowed to participate in growing this low-level THC strain of cannabis will be purposefully positioned with the first-mover advantage to corner the marijuana cultivation, processing and distribution markets when  Amendment 2 passes in November, which will mandate the growth of large assortment of cannabis sativa plants. Clearly, this bill, which was championed under the guise of helping the children, is a really a power-play at the market share for Florida’s future marijuana and industrial hemp businesses,” said Wohlsifer. There is no other logical explanation; surely, we do not need to demonstrate the ability to harvest two million plants to create an oil to drop under the tongues of 125,000 children.”

“Gaetz, along with Katie Edwards, D-Plantation, were the first to file a low-level THC bill in this year’s legislative session, HB 843, and with good intentions, Wohlsifer continued. The original bill was one-page long.” The metamorphosis of this legislation from compassionate use to big business is exactly the reason you need to elect a watchdog Attorney General in November. The same legislature that tabled four other real marijuana bills and falsely labeled this quasi-pharmaceutical bill a “marijuana bill” is composed of the same legislature that the voters will trust to implement the will of the voters when it comes time to create law to implement the rollout of Amendment 2.  As Attorney General, I will represent the will of the people when implementing Amendment 2, given that opportunity,” Wohlsifer concludes.

Inmate Release of Clemency

IROC (Inmate Release of Clemency) Bill’s Plan to Restore Liberty through Clemency 

The clemency function is an act of mercy that absolves an individual from all or any part of the punishment that the law imposes. This is a power to grant full or conditional pardons, or commute punishment. There are rules for these lengthy procedures, with the primary power being vested in the Governor, but for the requirement of approval of two cabinet members. The Rules of Executive Clemency can be viewed online at: https://fpc.state.fl.us/PDFs/clemency_rules.pdf

If elected Attorney General, I will initiate a process to restore liberty through clemency. I refer to the process as “IROC”– Inmate Release of Clemency. It is an act of mercy to right the wrong that prior administrations have bestowed upon many peaceful Floridians now serving time in state prisons for perceived victimless offenses against society. In many instances it is the mere possession of marijuana that resulted in their incarceration. In many instances the percentage of black males incarcerated is highly disproportionate to the population of the communities from which they have been removed.

Clemency is governed by Article IV, Section 8, of the Florida Constitution.  Section 8(a), which provides as follows:

Except in cases of treason and in cases where impeachment results in conviction, the governor may, by executive order filed with the custodian of state records, suspend collection of fines and forfeitures, grant reprieves not exceeding sixty days and, with the approval of two members of the cabinet, grant full or conditional pardons, restore civil rights, commute punishment, and remit fines and forfeitures for offenses.

The Attorney General cannot deviate from the Constitution, but can affect the manner in which constitutional law is implemented through the Rules of Executive Clemency, pursuant to Rule 2 of the Rules of Executive Clemency, which provides in pertinent part:

These rules were created by mutual consent of the Clemency Board to assist persons in applying for clemency. However, nothing contained herein can or is intended to limit the authority or discretion given to the Clemency Board in the exercise of its constitutional prerogative.

With the influence of the Attorney General’s seat on the Clemency Board, if elected, I pledge to propose additional language to Rule 5 of the Rules of Executive Clemency, Eligibility, to-wit: a new paragraph to be known as Rule 5(F). The purpose of Rule 5(F) is to modify application of Rule 4, Clemency. Proposed Rule 5(F) will provide as follows:

5. Eligibility

. . .

(F) In instances where the Office of Clemency Investigations finds, to the satisfaction of the Clemency Board, that the applicant for clemency was convicted of possession marijuana, without the intent to sell, and is serving time for no other conviction, and the adjudication of said conviction did not include an act of violence nor any identifiable, known or suspected victim, and the charging document filed of record does not include possession of a firearm at the time of arrest, the governor’s approval and the approval of two members of the cabinet to grant such applicant a full or conditional pardon, restoration of civil rights, and to commute punishment shall be deemed to be given. The de facto approval referenced in this section does not require the Clemency Board to accept the findings of the Office of Clemency Investigations. Nothing in this section shall be deemed to constitute the governor or any other cabinet member’s approval to grant full or conditional refund or return of any fines paid or personal property confiscated and subjected to forfeiture in conjunction with the pardoned offense.

If you are going to vote yes on Amendment 2 – You need to vote Wohlsifer for AG, and this is why:

WHEN YOU VOTE YES ON AMENDMENT 2,

 

VOTE WOHLSIFER FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL

 

 

I am the only candidate for Attorney General in Florida that can be trusted to implement the will of the people when it comes time to create policy and law for the rollout of medical marijuana in Florida after Amendment 2 passes. Be careful! Amendment 2 leaves it to the bureaucrats and politicians to frame the law to implement the anticipated Constitutional mandate. The will of the people could easily be destroyed by allowing as little as one entity the right to marijuana cultivation, processing and sale to a single statewide entity; a political insider crony. It could even result in availability in nothing but a pill form brought to you by Big Pharma.

Amendment 2 itself does not allow for homegrown marijuana or even for smoking to medicate. In fact, the word “smoke” is not included in the proposed Amendment, at all, but for a single reference that, “Nothing in this section shall require any accommodation of any on-site medical use of marijuana in any place of education or employment, or of smoking medical marijuana in any public place.”

When I authored the Cathy Jordan Medical Cannabis Act I did so with the intention of real patient care, including homegrown, legal possession of up to 16 plants, waiver of confiscation and forfeiture laws, implementation through licensing fees, no out of state imports, no specified excise taxes, no requirement for a caregiver for ages 18 and older and no caregiver requirement for emancipated minors or married Floridians under age 18.

Here’s the thing, after the Amendment is passed, you, the voter, are out of the planning stage. The lawmakers, agency directors, bureaucrats, rule-promulgators, and law enforcement will take it from there. The state officers will turn to the Florida Attorney General for official legal opinions on questions of implementation of law, creation of new fiscal markets, consumer protections, retailer protections, physician defenses, driver impairment disparities, how to navigate around federal law, and more. The legal opinions of Florida’s next Attorney General will significantly impact the rollout of medical marijuana in Florida. Caution: Our incumbent Attorney General’s understanding of the marijuana culture is about equal to that of Bill O’Reilly’s.

While I, Bill Wohlsifer was drafting and lobbying for medical marijuana law in Florida, Democratic candidate for Florida Attorney General, George Sheldon, was serving (2011-2013) as Assistant Secretary to Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius. George resigned after the unprecedented failed rollout of the Affordable Care Act and his former boss, Sec. Sebeilus, resigned on April 11, 2014. You, the people, worked too hard on getting medical marijuana on the ballot. Indeed, if the Republican led legislature did not bury the Cathy Jordan Medical Cannabis Act in committee in 2013, we would not even have had the need for a ballot initiative. We have come too far to trust any other candidate with the rollout of Amendment 2. WHEN YOU VOTE YES ON AMENDMENT 2, VOTE WOHLSIFER FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL.

Do not let George Sheldon rollout medical marijuana law in Florida. Do not let Pam Bondi chill it and kill it. Elect me, Bill Wohlsifer, to be your next Attorney General. I pledge to implement compassionate medicinal access to marijuana, open market competition for this new and vibrant industry, removal of industrial hemp from Florida’s controlled substance list. And, under my proposed Inmate Release of Clemency (IROC) plan, I pledge to restore liberty through clemency and to release and reunite with their families, inmates serving time for non-violent, victimless marijuana possession. WHEN YOU VOTE YES ON AMENDMENT 2, VOTE WOHLSIFER FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL.

 

By, Bill Wohlsifer, Florida’s first Libertarian candidate for Attorney General

Pam Bondi Disregards U.S. Marijuana Patent Showing Medicinal Benefits

How can any logical person read the claims made in U.S. Patent 6630507 and not see the hypocrisy of the federal government’s prohibition against medicinal use, when the U.S. itself attests to its efficiency to treat many known diseases?

The U.S. owns the patent to medical marijuana. They (we) obtained the patent in 2003, when the U.S. DHSS government found “cannabinoids useful in the treatment and prophylaxis of wide variety of oxidation associated diseases such as; ischemia, age-related, inflammatory and autoimmune. The cannabinoids are found to have particular applications as Neuro-Protectants, for example in limiting neurological damage following ischemic insults, such as stroke and traumatic injury. It has also had an impact in the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, Dementia, and Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) and AIDS. Non-psychoactive cannabinoids, such as cannabidoil (CBD), are particularly advantageous to use because they avoid toxicity that is encountered with psychoactive cannabinoids at high doses useful in the method of the present invention.” Paraphrased from the text of the Abstract of the US Patent, Please see for yourself at: USTPO

Marijuana is listed as a Schedule I (the most restrictive) drug under section 893.03(1), Florida Statutes (2013). A drug is classified for Schedule I of Florida’s controlled substance list if scientific evidence shows that the drug: 1) has a high potential for abuse; 2) has no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States; and 3) its use under medical supervision does not meet accepted safety standards.

Section 893.0355(2), Florida Statutes, delegates authority to the Florida Attorney General “to adopt rules rescheduling specified substances to a less controlled schedule, or deleting specified substances from a schedule . . . .” On December 12, 2012,

Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi, responding to petitions received from the Cannabis Action Network (CAN), flatly refused to reschedule marijuana or to even consider the proposal. If I am elected to the Office of Florida Attorney General, I will use the power vested in that office to remove marijuana for medicinal purposes from Schedule I. I tried to do this when I drafted the Cathy Jordan Medical Cannabis Act, which the Republicans buried in committee. Elect Bill Wohlsifer for Attorney General, and I will get it done, without the need to amend the constitution or lobby the legislature. Now ask yourselves, how could Pam Bondi read U.S. Patent 6630507 and not find sufficient support in favor of rescheduling?

By Bill Wohlsifer

Sources:

United States Patent and Trademark Office (October 7,2003). uspto.gov.

Florida Legislature (December 24, 2013). leg.state.fl.us.

2012 Florida Statutes. Flsenate.gov.

Jodi James (December 12, 2012). Florida’s Attorney General Responds to FLCAN.

Florida House of Representatives (2013). HB 1139.

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Paid political advertisement by Committee to Elect Bill Wohlsifer, 1100 East Park Ave Ste B, Tallahassee FL 32301. Approved in advance by Bill Wohlsifer.

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