The passage of Amendment 4 restored the right to vote to all individuals who have “complet[ed] all terms of [their] sentence.” This may sound simple. The difficulty, though, is that our courts often operate as revenue centers, tacking fines and fees onto many convictions, regardless of ability to pay. As a result, a defendant’s completion of sentence can drag on indefinitely, tangled up in a collection effort that extends well beyond any period of supervision. Whether these payments are actually a necessary part of the “sentence,” at least for purposes of voting, has led to a raw, post-election partisan fight over whose voting rights should be restored.