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Thursday, January 17, 2008

01/17/08 Read the District Court's decision

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
__________________________________________X
:
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA and :
CESAR RUIZ, :
:
Plaintiffs, : 06 Civ. 15173 (SCR)
:
-against- : DECISION AND ORDER
:
VILLAGE OF PORT CHESTER, :
:
Defendant. :
__________________________________________X
STEPHEN C. ROBINSON, U.S. District Judge:
I. Background
The United States of America (the “Government”) filed a Complaint on December 15,
2006 against the Village of Port Chester (“Port Chester” or the “Village” or the “Defendant”),
alleging a violation of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 1973.
The Government maintains that the at-large system used to elect the six members of the Port
Chester Board of Trustees denies the Hispanic population of the Village an equal opportunity to
participate in the political process and to elect representatives of their choice.
As part of its Complaint, the Government sought a preliminary injunction pursuant to 42
U.S.C. § 1973j(d) to prevent the Village from holding its next election for the Board of Trustees,
which was then scheduled for March 20, 2007. Following a nine-day hearing that concluded on
February 26, 2007, this Court issued a preliminary injunction on March 2, 2007, finding: (i) that
there would be irreparable harm if the 2007 Trustee election were allowed to proceed under a
structural framework that violated the Voting Rights Act; (ii) that the balance of the potential
harms weighed in favor of granting an injunction; and (iii) that the Government had
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 1 of 562
demonstrated that it was likely to succeed on the merits of its claim at trial. Accordingly, the
Village was enjoined from holding its March 20, 2007 Trustee election pending a trial on the
merits in this matter.
1

On March 1, 2007, Cesar Ruiz (“Ruiz”; Ruiz and the Government are collectively
referred to herein as the “Plaintiffs”) filed an Order to Show Cause why he should not be
permitted to intervene in this action pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 24. Following an oral argument,
this Court granted Ruiz’s motion to intervene as a party plaintiff on April 6, 2007.
After settlement negotiations proved unsuccessful, the parties reconvened for a six-day
bench trial that concluded on June 5, 2007.
2
In lieu of oral closing arguments, the parties were
granted until July 9, 2007 to submit post-trial briefs in support of their respective positions.
Further, an organization called FairVote – which describes itself as having a mission “to
advocate for fair representation through voting systems changes”
3
– was given permission to
submit an amicus curiae brief. For the reasons discussed below, we conclude that Plaintiffs have
established that Port Chester’s system for electing its Board of Trustees violates Section 2 of the
Voting Rights Act, and that Plaintiffs are therefore entitled to the relief they seek.

1
The March 2, 2007 injunction did, however, allow the Village to decide whether it would go forward with
its Mayoral election – also scheduled for March 20, 2007 – given that the instant lawsuit does not challenge the
Village’s system for electing its Mayor. The Village held its Mayoral election as scheduled, and as a result, Gerald
Logan, who testified at both the preliminary injunction and trial phases of this proceeding, was replaced as Mayor
by Dennis Pilla (“Pilla”), who also testified during the trial phase.
2
In the interest of judicial efficiency, this Court accepted all of the testimony and exhibits from the
preliminary injunction hearing as if they had been offered and received in the same way at the trial. See Trial Tr. at
2. Because the pagination of the May/June trial transcripts did not resume from where the February hearing
transcripts ended, however, this Decision employs different citation formats for the different phases of the
proceedings. All references to the transcripts of the May/June 2007 trial will be cited as “Trial Tr. at XX” (pages 1
through 1015), and all references to the transcripts of the February 2007 hearing will be cited as “Hearing Tr. at
XX” (pages 1 through 1683).
3
See Br. of Amicus Curiae (docket number 77) at 1.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 2 of 563
II. Legal framework
A. Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act
Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 1973, reads:
(a) No voting qualification or pre-requisite to voting or standard, practice, or procedure
shall be imposed or applied by any State or political subdivision in a manner which
results in a denial or abridgement of the right of any citizen of the United States to
vote on account of race or color.
(b) A violation of subsection (a) of this section is established if, based on the totality of
the circumstances, it is shown that the political processes leading to nomination or
election in the State or political subdivision are not equally open to participation by
members of a class of citizens protected by subsection (a) of this section in that its
members have less opportunity than other members of the electorate to participate in
the political process and to elect representatives of their choice. The extent to which
members of a protected class have been elected to office in the State or political
subdivision is one circumstance which may be considered; provided, that nothing in
this section establishes a right to have members of a protected class elected in
numbers equal to their proportion in the population.
There is no dispute here that Port Chester’s at-large system for electing its Board of
Trustees is an electoral practice or procedure that is subject to challenge under this statute.
B. Gingles preconditions and Senate factors
The Supreme Court construed this statute in its amended version for the first time in an
action challenging a multi-member at-large districting scheme. See Thornburg v. Gingles, 478
U.S. 30 (1986). In Gingles, 478 U.S. at 34, the Supreme Court set out three “preconditions” that
must be met for a challenge under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act to be successful:
(1) the minority group must be sufficiently large and geographically compact to
constitute a majority in a single-member district;
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 3 of 564
(2) the minority group must be politically cohesive and vote as a bloc; and
(3) the white majority must vote sufficiently as a bloc to enable it, in the absence of
special circumstances, to defeat the minority’s preferred candidate.
No specific showing of discriminatory intent is required to prove a Section 2 violation. See id. at
70-73 (Brennan, J. plurality op.); Coleman v. Bd. of Educ. of the City of Mt. Vernon, 990 F.
Supp. 221, 227 (S.D.N.Y. 1997) (internal citation omitted); cf. Goosby v. Bd. of the Town of
Hempstead, 180 F.3d 476, 498-504 (2d Cir. 1999) (Leval, J. concurring) (hereinafter “Goosby
III”).
An analysis of the three Gingles factors and whether each has been proven by a
preponderance of the evidence is the first step in a two-part analysis of a vote dilution claim on
behalf of minority voters. The Supreme Court has found, however, that the satisfactory
establishment of the three Gingles preconditions alone is not sufficient for a Section 2 vote
dilution claim to succeed. See Johnson v. DeGrandy, 512 U.S. 997, 1011 (1994). Accordingly,
this Court must “consider whether, under the totality of the circumstances, the challenged
practice impairs the ability of the minority voters to participate equally in the political process.”
Goosby v. Bd. of the Town of Hempstead, 956 F. Supp. 326, 329 (E.D.N.Y. 1997) (hereinafter
“Goosby I”) (citing NAACP v. City of Niagara Falls, 65 F.3d 1002, 1007 (2d Cir. 1995)).
Various Circuit courts have recognized that “it will only be the very unusual case in which the
plaintiffs can establish the existence of the three Gingles factors but still have failed to establish a
violation of Section 2 under the totality of the circumstances.” Niagara Falls, 65 F.3d at 1019,
n.21; see also Thompson v. Glades County Bd. of County Comm’rs, 493 F.3d 1253, 1261 (11th
Cir. 2007); Jenkins v. Red Clay Consol. Sch. Dist. Bd. of Educ., 4 F.3d 1103, 1116 n.6 (3d Cir.
1993).
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 4 of 565
Judicial assessment of the totality of the circumstances requires a “searching practical
evaluation of the past and present reality.” Gingles, 478 U.S. at 45. The key to this inquiry is an
examination of the seven principal factors set forth in the Senate Judiciary Committee Report
accompanying the 1982 amendments to Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, the so called “Senate
factors.” See S. Rep. No. 97-417, 97th Cong. 2nd Sess. 28 (1982) (the “Senate Report”). The
additional factors listed in the Senate Report are:
1. the extent of any history of official discrimination in the state or political subdivision
that touched the right of members of the minority group to register, vote, or otherwise
to participate in the democratic process;
2. the extent to which voting in the elections of the state or political subdivision is
racially polarized;
3. the extent to which the state or political subdivision has used unusually large election
districts, majority vote requirements, anti-single shot provisions, or other voting
practices or procedures that may enhance the opportunity for discrimination against
the minority group;
4. if there is a candidate slating process, whether the members of the minority group
have been denied access to that process;
5. the extent to which members of the minority group in the state or political subdivision
bear the effects of discrimination in such areas as education, employment and health,
which hinder the ability to participate effectively in the political process;
6. whether political campaigns have been characterized by overt or subtle racial appeals;
[and]
7. the extent to which members of the minority group have been elected to public office
in the jurisdiction.
In addition, the Senate Report adds two other considerations that may have probative
value in vote dilution cases, specifically:
(1) whether there is a significant lack of responsiveness on the part of the elected officials
to the particularized needs of the members of the minority group; and

(2) whether the policy underlying the state or political subdivision’s use of such voting
qualification, prerequisite to voting, or standard, practice or procedure is tenuous.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 5 of 566
The list of factors is “neither comprehensive nor exclusive.” Gingles, 478 U.S. at 45.
Plaintiffs need not prove a majority of these factors, nor even any particular number of them in
order to sustain their claims. Instead, “these factors are simply guideposts in a broad-based
inquiry in which district judges are expected to roll up their sleeves and examine all aspects of
the past and present political environment in which the challenged electoral practice is used.”
Goosby I, 956 F. Supp. at 331.
III. Findings of fact
A. Overview of the Village of Port Chester
Port Chester is an incorporated village located within the Town of Rye, and is situated in
southeastern Westchester County, New York, adjacent to the Connecticut border. According to
the 2000 United States Census, Port Chester’s population was 27,867, an increase of 12.7 percent
from the 1990 Census. From 1990 to 2000, the Hispanic population of the Village grew by 73
percent from 7,446 to 12,884; the Hispanic community now constitutes a plurality of Port
Chester’s residents. As of the 2000 Census, Port Chester’s total population was 46.2 percent
Hispanic, 42.8 percent non-Hispanic white, and 6.6 percent non-Hispanic black. Of Port
Chester’s voting age population (“VAP”) of 21,585 in 2000, however, 45.7 percent were nonHispanic white, 43.4 percent were Hispanic and 6.1 percent were non-Hispanic black.
Meanwhile, as of 2000, the Village had a total citizen voting age population (“CVAP”) of
13,990, of whom 65.5 percent (9,160) were non-Hispanic white, 21.9 percent (3,070) were
Hispanic and 8.9 percent (1,245) were non-Hispanic black. Plaintiff’s expert Dr. Andrew
Beveridge (“Dr. Beveridge”) estimated that as of July 2006, Port Chester’s CVAP totaled
14,259, of which Hispanics constituted 27.5 percent (3,928).
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 6 of 567
Port Chester is governed by a Mayor and a six-member Board of Trustees, and all of
these Village officials are elected pursuant to an at-large voting scheme. The Trustees serve
staggered three-year terms, with two Trustee positions open for election each calendar year; the
Mayor, who presides over the Board of Trustees, serves a two-year term, and thus must stand for
election every other year. Each resident of the Village who is registered to vote may cast up to
two votes for Trustee candidates. A voter cannot select the same candidate twice – such
“cumulative” voting is not permitted – but a voter may opt to cast just one of his or her two votes
and withhold the other, a practice known as “single shot” or “bullet” voting. Village elections
for Mayor and Trustees are held “off cycle” – that is, they are not conducted in November
alongside other county, state, and national elections, but instead are held in the spring, usually on
the third Tuesday in March.
The Village is divided into 16 election districts
4
for the purposes of voting administration
– these districts determine at which polling place Port Chester’s voters cast their ballots for both
Village elections in March and “on-cycle” county, state, and national elections in November.
5
In
addition, it has been the practice of the Republican and Democratic parties in Port Chester to
choose “district leaders” for each election precinct. To be clear, however, these precincts in no
way correspond to any type of elected representation – voters in each of the Village’s election
precincts choose from the same slate of candidates in local elections. The Town of Rye, which
in addition to the Village of Port Chester also encompasses the incorporated village of Rye

4
Other courts in this have made findings of fact with respect to elections districts in Westchester County
than can be applied to this case. As Judge Brieant found, the “election district is the smallest and the basic political
unit in the State for purposes of registration and voting.” New Rochelle Voter Def. Fund v. City of New Rochelle,
308 F. Supp. 2d 152, 160 (S.D.N.Y. 2003). Further, “the legislative body of the city or town in which it is situated
has the power to create, divide, consolidate or alter the boundaries of an election district, consistent with law,
Section 4-100 N.Y. Election Law.” Id. at 161.

5
To eliminate any potential confusion, this Court will refer to the 16 numbered election districts as
“precincts” for the purposes of this Decision; future references to “districts” will refer to Plaintiffs’ proposed
political subdivisions for electing representatives to the Board of Trustees.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 7 of 568
Brook as well as the Rye Neck section of Mamaroneck, consecutively numbered all of the
election precincts within the Town; those that lie within Port Chester are precincts 5 through 19
and precinct 25.
B. First Gingles precondition: the minority group must be sufficiently large and
geographically compact to constitute a majority in a single-member district
1. Criteria for drawing proposed districts
Dr. Beveridge, an expert in the fields of demographics and redistricting, offered two
alternative plans – Proposed Plan A (“Plan A”) and Proposed Plan A as Modified (“Modified
Plan A”) – each of which divided the Village into six illustrative single-member districts that
would allow Port Chester to elect the six members of its Board of Trustees using a district-based,
rather than an at-large, system. See Gov. Exs. 32 (Plan A) and 33 (Modified Plan A). To draw
the proposed districts in each of the plans, Dr. Beveridge first sought to ensure equality in the
total population of each district, and next endeavored to make each district “reasonably
compact.” See Hearing Tr. at 599. Dr. Beveridge testified that he opted to draw the districts on
the basis of total population because in his view “total population is the accepted standard
method”; he did not know of any districting process in the United States that has used a method
other than total population for drawing district lines.
6
See Hearing Tr. at 600. Population

6
Defendants argue that the Plan A and Modified Plan A – each of which contains districts drawn on the
basis of total population – create an unconstitutionally extreme deviation in the CVAP of the districts. In sum,
Defendants contend that the votes of citizens in, for example, District 1 are “devalued” by the proposed districting
plans because the number of citizens in District 1is greater than the number of citizens in District 4, yet the Districts
have the same share of political power in the Village (each district would be able to elect one member of the Board
of Trustees). While this argument raises important legal questions deserving of full analysis, we believe it is
inappropriate to address those questions at this stage of the litigation – Defendant’s “devaluation” concerns only
become an issue at the remedy stage.
This Decision and Order concludes that there is a Section 2 violation in Port Chester, and provides the
Village with an opportunity to provide a remedy for that violation. Given Defendant’s aforementioned objections to
Plan A and Modified Plan A, it is unlikely that the Village will choose one of those plans as its proposed remedy;
however, if the Village devises a remedial plan that satisfies its own criteria and is also acceptable to the Court, it
will not be necessary to reach the “devaluation” issue. If the Court finds the Village’s plan to be unacceptable and
opts to impose Plan A or Modified Plan A as the remedy for the Section 2 violation, then the Court would be
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 8 of 569
equality and compactness are “two of the most relevant [re]districting principles” in smaller
geographic areas – such as Port Chester – where districting experts need not be concerned about
splitting towns and villages when drawing potential district boundaries. Id. Only after these
principal criteria were met did Dr. Beveridge seek, to the extent possible, to keep together a
portion of the Hispanic community of Port Chester within a single proposed district in a way that
did not “pack” or “crack” the Hispanic population.
7
Both of the proposed plans show very limited deviation in the total population among the
six proposed districts based on data from the 2000 Census. Given a total Village population of
27,867, an equal division of the population for each district would yield approximately 4,645
individuals in each district. In Plan A, the district with the smallest population is District 5,
which contains 4,528 people – 117 less than the ideal – for a deviation of 2.51 percent. See Gov.
Ex. 25 at Ex. F. The largest district by population in Plan A is District 3, which contains 4,793
people – 149 more than the ideal – for a total deviation of 3.20 percent. Id. Thus the total
population deviation in Plan A – measured by the spread between the greatest downward
deviation and greatest upward deviation within the districting plan – is 5.71 percent, a figure that
is comfortably within the bounds of acceptable 10 percent population deviation for districting
purposes. Under Modified Plan A, the greatest downward deviation is again in District 5, though
the difference in this model is only 1.50 percent; similarly, District 3 exhibited the greatest

compelled to confront Defendant’s devaluation concerns. Rendering an opinion on that issue at this stage, however,
would arguably amount to an inappropriate advisory opinion. Accordingly, we reserve judgment on that question.
7
As Dr. Beveridge described, “packing” a minority population would involve forcing as many members of
the minority community as possible into a single district to limit their political clout. For example, if a minority
group were large enough to constitute a majority in two or more districts, but the districts were drawn in such a way
as to confine the entire minority population to a single district, that district would demonstrate the “packing”
phenomenon. Conversely, “cracking” a minority community involves spreading the minority community to limit
that group’s ability to elect a candidate of its choice. Thus if a minority group were large enough to constitute a
majority in one hypothetical district configuration, but district lines were drawn so as to distribute the minority
community among three districts where the minority group remained a minority in each of the three districts, such a
plan would be an example of “cracking” the minority community. See Hearing Tr. at 634-36.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 9 of 5610
upward deviation in Modified Plan A, but with only a 1.84 percent departure from the ideal
figure. See Gov. Ex. 26 at T. 2. Modified Plan A therefore has a total deviation of 3.34 percent,
again well within acceptable population deviation parameters. Defendant’s expert Dr. Peter
Morrison (“Dr. Morrison”), an expert in the fields of demography and drawing and evaluating
single-member districts, agreed that the total population balance of both Plan A and Modified
Plan A falls within acceptable limits. See Def. Ex. LL at 34.
As to Dr. Beveridge’s second criterion, both Plan A and Modified Plan A are reasonably
compact. The only challenge that can be construed as relating to the compactness of the
proposed districts is the Village’s contention that the proposed districts for Trustee representation
should have taken into account existing election precincts in the Village. Based on the current
election precinct boundaries and the proposed district boundaries in Plan A and Modified Plan A,
the district plans would create a system where the population of certain election precincts would
be divided among one or more Trustee districts. For example, certain residents of election
precinct 14 would be eligible to vote in Trustee District 1, while others would be eligible to vote
in District 3, District 4, or District 5. In fact, 10 of the 16 current election precincts would
experience these types of cleavages. See Def. Ex. X.
Such a scenario raises administrative and logistical concerns for the Village, as Port
Chester would have to ensure that voters are presented with the proper electoral choices when
they arrive at their polling places. Assuming that the precinct boundaries remained the same and
that the proposed districts were implemented, the Village might, for example, be forced to use
different practices and procedures for March elections (which, under the current electoral
framework, would implicate the Trustee district boundaries) and November elections (which
would not). Dr. Morrison admitted, however, that this issue is a “purely economic
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 10 of 5611
consideration” – his concern is that “it would be an expense imposed on the taxpayers of the
Village to have to have a different set of geographies used for elections” – though he also
acknowledged that he did not analyze any potential expenses or savings that might result. Trial
Tr. at 478, 556. Dr. Beveridge did not place great emphasis on election precinct boundaries
given that they are simply an administrative mechanism for localities, and given that such
precinct lines, in his experience, are commonly redrawn during districting or re-districting
processes. See Hearing Tr. at 613. There was no evidence presented at any point in this
proceeding to explain why Port Chester’s election precincts were drawn the way they were, or
why it would be important to preserve those particular boundaries.
On balance, the decision not to give any particular weight to election precinct lines here
was sensible – these purely administrative designations do not signify anything of overwhelming
import in Port Chester, and do not represent the types of political boundaries that are particularly
deserving of deference when crafting proposed district borders. In no way would it have been
advisable to place greater emphasis on the maintenance of existing precincts than on the other
criteria employed by Dr. Beveridge in crafting Plan A and Modified Plan A.
Finally, though he admits that he used race as part of his districting process, Hearing Tr.
at 634, Dr. Beveridge did not, as Defendant suggests, use race as his only criterion, or even as his
predominant criterion, in drawing either of the proposed plans. The proposed districts did not
result in any impermissible packing or cracking of the Hispanic population of the Village.
Indeed, the distribution of Hispanics across the proposed district lines under both Plan A and
Modified Plan A results in four districts where Hispanics account for a greater percentage of the
total population, VAP, and CVAP in those districts as compared with the Hispanic share of
population, VAP, and CVAP in Port Chester as a whole. By way of illustration, the Hispanic
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 11 of 5612
community constituted 46.23 percent of the population of the Village based on 2000 data, as well
as 43.34 percent of the VAP and 21.87 percent of the CVAP. Under Plan A, the Hispanic
population shares of the following four proposed districts exceed these thresholds on all three
metrics: District 5 (48.43 percent Hispanic population; 44.31 percent Hispanic VAP 26.00
percent Hispanic CVAP); District 6 (54.37 percent Hispanic population; 51.80 percent Hispanic
VAP; 28.13 percent Hispanic CVAP); District 3 (54.45 percent Hispanic population; 51.67
percent Hispanic VAP; 29.95 percent Hispanic CVAP); and District 4 (75.40 percent Hispanic
population; 73.83 percent Hispanic VAP; 50.51 percent Hispanic CVAP). Under Modified Plan
A, the Hispanic populations of District 6, District 3, and District 4 constitute a greater percentage
of the total population, VAP, and CVAP in those districts as compared with the Hispanic
population of Port Chester as a whole, while the Hispanic population of District 5 accounts for a
greater percentage of CVAP, but slightly smaller percentages of total population and VAP as
compared to the Village generally.
In addition to the favorable comparisons between intra-district ethnic compositions and
the Village population as a whole, the inter-district distribution of the Village’s Hispanic
population in both Plan A and Modified Plan A is well-balanced. For example, in Modified Plan
A, District 3, District 4, District 5, and District 6 contain 82.05 percent of the total Hispanic
CVAP of the Village, with each of those Districts accounting for no less than 19.33 percent and
no more than 22.79 percent of the Village-wide share based on 2000 Census data. Similarly,
those four districts include 83.94 percent of the Hispanic VAP of Port Chester and 83.47 percent
of the total Hispanic population of the Village; while District 4 contains the greatest share of
Village-wide Hispanic VAP (28.54 percent) and total Hispanic population (28.10 percent), the
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 12 of 5613
remaining three Hispanic-heavy proposed districts contain between 16 and 21 percent of the
Village-wide share of Hispanic VAP and total population.
Through cross-examination of Dr. Beveridge, Defendant attempted to demonstrate that
the non-Hispanic white population of the Village was impermissibly packed under the proposed
districting regime. Neither Dr. Beveridge’s methodology nor the resulting data support this
contention, and we therefore reject the notion that either Plan A or Modified Plan A packed the
non-Hispanic white population of the Village. The mere fact that there are greater
concentrations of non-Hispanic whites in certain areas and greater concentrations of Hispanics in
other areas does not indicate any sort of nefarious effort; instead, this merely is a reflection of the
reality of residential segregation in Port Chester.
8
Under Modified Plan A, 72.60 percent of the
non-Hispanic white population of the Village is concentrated in District 1, District 2, and District
5, but the greatest proportion in any one district is the 30.18 percent of non-Hispanic whites
living in District 1. Similarly, those three districts also contain 72.18 percent of the nonHispanic white VAP and 74.67 percent of the non-Hispanic white CVAP of the Village, but none
of the districts contains more than a 30 percent share of the non-Hispanic white VAP or CVAP
of the Village. These figures simply do not support a finding that the proposed districting plans
create impermissible concentrations of the non-Hispanic white population in Port Chester.
In sum, it is clear that the proposed districts in Plan A and Modified Plan A were drawn
in accordance with traditional districting principles of population balancing and compactness,
and there is no evidence in the record to indicate that race – of Hispanics or non-Hispanics – was
the predominant factor in crafting the proposed district boundaries.

8
Dr. Morrison calculated that there was a “moderately high” level of segregation in the Village. Hearing
Tr. at 1492. In addition, Plaintiff’s expert Robert Courtney Smith (“Professor Smith”), an expert in the areas of
history of discrimination against Hispanics and the socioeconomic disparities of Hispanics in New York, described
Port Chester as “a very segregated town.” Id. at 372 (expert qualifications); 408 (quotation).
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 13 of 5614
2. Use of 2000 Census data and 2006 estimates
As noted above, Dr. Beveridge relied on data from the 2000 Census in drawing the
proposed districts in Plan A and Modified Plan A, and data from the 2000 Census formed the
basis of the majority of his expert conclusions. The 2000 figures represent the most recent set of
comprehensive Census information for Port Chester – no new complete Census information will
be available until sometime in 2011. Various exhibits – such as Gov. Ex. 34 – show the 2000
Census data broken down by the block level, indicating the number of individuals counted for all
of the blocks of the Village that appear on that particular map. Defendant attempted to call into
question the accuracy and reliability of the Census figures, but the Village’s efforts did not
produce any clear, concrete, and comprehensive demonstration that the 2000 Census data for
Port Chester is in any way significantly unreliable.
Defendant presented testimony from Patrick Cleary (“Cleary”), who worked as the
Village’s principal planner from 1986 through 1990, and has served as a planning consultant to
Port Chester for the majority of time since then. Referring to Gov. Ex. 34, Cleary testified that
certain blocks on that map which, according to the 2000 Census, contain some number of
residents are in fact purely industrial areas that have no residential units whatsoever. He further
testified that other blocks likely did not contain as many residents as indicated by the 2000
Census data as a result of various development initiatives in the Village. See generally Trial Tr.
at 797-813. During cross-examination, however, Cleary admitted that he uses Census data as a
benchmark in his own work as a planner, and it also became evident that Cleary had no idea
about the population characteristics of Census blocks in Port Chester other than the few he
described during his direct testimony. See id. at 815, 818-19. Cleary’s selective examination of
certain Census blocks in Port Chester consisted of little more than his personal observations of
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 14 of 5615
land uses and development patterns – there was no analysis of population trends, and certainly no
sampling of the accuracy of Census data throughout the Village. On the whole, Defendant’s
contention that the 2000 Census should not be accepted as reliable is unavailing.
As part of his analysis, Dr. Beveridge estimated the demographic changes that he
believes have occurred in Port Chester since 2000 based on an extrapolation from the 2000
Census figures and the rate of change in voter registration in the Village. This Court takes Dr.
Beveridge’s 2006 estimates for what they are – estimates provided by a demographics expert
that, while not endowed with the same presumption of reliability as the decennial census, may
nevertheless be used by this Court to understand relevant population trends in the Village.
Nevertheless, we find no need to rely directly on the 2006 estimates in making any determinative
findings of fact or conclusions of law with respect to the ultimate issues in this case.
9

Accordingly, to the extent that we have reviewed and considered the 2006 data, it has only been
for background informational purposes. As set forth throughout this Decision and Order, the
data on which the Court relies for its assessment of the Gingles preconditions and the Senate
factors is the data from the 2000 Census.
3. Measuring the effective majority in a single-member district
Within both Plan A and Modified Plan A, the proposed district that is meant to satisfy the
first Gingles precondition for the Hispanic community is District 4. The best method to judge
whether a particular minority group constitutes an effective majority in a single-member district

9
Accordingly, we do not believe it necessary to discuss at length Dr. Morrison’s effort to discredit Dr.
Beveridge’s estimates (see Def. Ex. LL. at 25-30), though considerable time was spent on this issue at both the
hearing and trial of this matter. We do note, however, that we were not convinced by Dr. Morrison’s analysis in this
part of his report because, among other reasons, his charts relied heavily on the accuracy of registration data but did
not reflect any of the admitted problems with registration data as an accurate measure of voters in a given area. See
section III.B.3 infra.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 15 of 5616
is to examine the VAP and CVAP data for that district.
10
The Hispanic community comprises
73.83 percent of the VAP in proposed District 4 under the Plan A boundaries, and constitutes
50.51 percent of CVAP according to 2000 Census data. In Modified Plan A, the Hispanic VAP
in District 4 is 77.27 percent of the population there, and the Hispanic CVAP makes up 56.27
percent of the district. Even Dr. Morrison conceded that even taking into account possible data
errors, Hispanics would constitute a majority of CVAP in District 4 in Modified Plan A. See
Hearing Tr. at 1390, 1429, 1430, 1456.
Port Chester challenged the use of VAP and CVAP for measuring whether Hispanics
constituted an effective majority in proposed District 4 under any of Plaintiffs’ plans by attacking
the reliability of the VAP and CVAP figures and by offering alternative approaches to the
effective majority question. Dr. Morrison posited that CVAP data for Port Chester may not be
fully accurate because there is some evidence that there is over-reporting of citizenship status by
Hispanics in the Census in general – that is, Hispanic non-citizens will indicate on Census forms
that they are in fact citizens. See Def. Ex. LL at 31. Dr. Morrison did admit, however, that he
had no evidence showing any such over-reporting of citizenship status in Port Chester
specifically. See Hearing Tr. at 1500. Though he performed calculations to “correct” the Census
numbers by estimating the effect of citizenship over-reporting in Port Chester in the 2000
Census, he based those calculations on models generated in 1997 based on communities other
than Port Chester – before the 2000 Census was even conducted – and simply applied those
approaches to Port Chester without considering any specific characteristics of the Village. See
Def. Ex. LL at 32. In addition, Dr. Morrison conceded that he did not take into account counter-

10
Though districts are drawn on the basis of total population, the effectiveness of the minority group is not
measured with reference to the total population data. Dr. Morrison indicated in his final expert report that showing
that Hispanics represent a majority of CVAP in a single member district “is a typical method for arguing that there is
an ability to elect.” Def. Ex. LL at 21.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 16 of 5617
balancing information that the Census generally has been shown to generally undercount
Hispanics. See Hearing Tr. at 1506. We see no reason to accept the selective adjustment of
Census data offered by the Village, especially given that the methodology involved in tabulating
the revised data is simply a generalized formula that does not take into account actual
information regarding Port Chester.
11

Dr. Morrison also recommended that we examine voter registration and voter turnout
data to determine whether Hispanics constitute an effective majority in District 4, but it is clear
to this Court that both of these methods have serious shortcomings that render them
inappropriate for this analysis. Though Dr. Morrison described voter registration rolls as a “true
measure” of “actual people” in a given district, see Hearing Tr. at 1410, registration rolls
overstate the number of eligible voters in a given location because they are only scrutinized and
updated from time to time. For example, lists of registered voters will include names of voters
who have died or have moved out of the jurisdiction in question. See Hearing Tr. at 1461-62.
Because the rolls are “purged” of these names only periodically, the lists at any one point in time
will inevitably over-represent the actual number of eligible voters. Records kept by the United
States Election Assistance Commission (“EAC”) illustrate this problem; according to EAC voter
registration data for New York State from the 2004 general election, a highly implausible 99.3
percent of the CVAP in Westchester County
12
was registered to vote at the time of that election.

11
Moreover, though Dr. Morrison’s adjustments would theoretically bring the Hispanic CVAP below the
50 percent threshold in proposed District 4 in Plaintiffs’ Plan A, the Hispanic community would still constitute a
majority of the CVAP in proposed District 4 based on 2000 Census information under Modified Plan A even if we
were to adopt Dr. Morrison’s figures for the purported over-reporting of citizenship by Hispanics. See Hearing Tr.
at 1502-04.
12
This Court recognizes that there is an inherent problem with the data collected in Gov. Ex. 92, because
the chart compares the voter registration rolls in November 2004 with the CVAP data as of the 2000 Census. A
population increase in these jurisdictions between 2000 and 2004 could account for part of, but certainly not all of,
the inflated percentage of Census 2000 CVAP registered to vote in 2004. It is our view, however, that population
changes alone cannot account for the significant degree to which the percentage of CVAP on the registration rolls
exceeds expected levels; those discrepancies are more likely than not attributable to the types of problems –
including deceased voters and voters who moved – highlighted by the Plaintiffs.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 17 of 5618
See Gov. Ex. 92. In smaller counties, the 2004 data revealed complete mathematical
impossibilities – according to those figures, 100.3 percent of the CVAP in Orleans County, New
York was registered to vote, and 104.0 percent of the CVAP in Sullivan County, New York was
on the registration rolls. Id.
If this Court opted to use registration data to determine whether Hispanics constitute an
effective majority in proposed District 4, we would look to data such as that compiled by Dr.
Morrison at Table 4 of his final expert report, see Def. Ex. LL at 23, which indicates that only
42.5 percent of the registered voters in District 4 of Plan A have surnames that appear on the
Census Bureau List of Spanish Surnames.
13
What we cannot know, however, is how the voter
registration inaccuracies discussed above affect this figure. If the denominator – that is, the total
number of registrants in the district – is highly inflated by deceased and relocated voters, the
Hispanic percentage of actual current registrants might be much higher than 42.5 percent. Of
course, if the numerator – the number of Hispanic registrants – proved to be inflated by the same
proportion, the 42.5 percent estimate could be close to accurate, but if the level of inflation of the
numerator were significantly lower, the proportion of Hispanic registrants again could be higher
than Dr. Morrison’s estimate indicates. The problem we face in considering this information is
that we simply cannot know how accurate the registration data is for measuring the number of
actual people in District 4 or anywhere else in Port Chester. Dr. Morrison did not, in his expert
report, attempt to adjust registration figures to take into account any of the commonly known
problems with this data; indeed, perhaps such an effort would have been entirely speculative.
Overall, this Court does not believe that the registration data – at least as currently presented –

13
Experts for both parties used the Census Bureau List of Spanish Surnames to calculate the number of
Hispanic voters in a particular area in various charts they prepared (we will refer to this approach hereafter as
“Spanish Surname Analysis”). Neither party disputes that Spanish Surname Analysis is an accepted methodology,
though it is clear that certain individuals who identify as Hispanic will be missed by this approach and certain
individuals who do not identify as Hispanic will be included in these counts.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 18 of 5619
provides a sound basis for measuring whether Hispanics constitute an effective majority of the
proposed District 4 in the Village.
This Court also rejects the notion, offered in Dr. Morrison’s expert report, that a proper
measure of an effective majority must include a consideration of voter turnout, particularly
where, as here, the minority group already constitutes a majority of CVAP in the district at issue.
Using Spanish Surname Analysis of voter sign-in sheets in Port Chester, Dr. Morrison calculated
only between 9.4 and 11.8 percent of all people who cast votes in Village elections between 2001
and 2006 were Hispanic; the greatest percentage of Hispanic voters in any one year – 11.8
percent of turnout – came in the March 2006 elections. See Def. Ex. LL at 23 (Table 5). Based
on the borders of proposed District 4 in Plan A
14
, Dr. Morrison found that in those same
elections, only between 21.0 and 28.2 percent of actual voters in the illustrative District were
Hispanic, with the greatest percentage of Hispanic voters again occurring in March 2006.
According to Dr. Morrison, these figures reveal that even if Hispanics constitute a majority of
VAP and CVAP in District 4, they will not amount to an effective majority in that District
because they do not turn out in sufficient numbers to elect candidates of their choice without
assistance from other demographic groups.
What this turnout analysis fails to consider is that there may very well be a correlation
between the subject matter of this lawsuit – the various circumstances and conditions that
contribute to the inability of the Hispanic community to elect candidates of its choice – and the
lower turnout by Hispanic citizens in Port Chester. Defendant’s expert Dr. Ronald Keith Gaddie
(“Dr. Gaddie”), an expert in the fields of elections and voter participation, acknowledged that a
district-based system with a majority-minority district would likely increase the number of

14
Dr. Morrison does not provide any analysis of voter registration or turnout for proposed District 4 in
Modified Plan A, the plan that clearly contains a greater proportion of Hispanic population, VAP, and CVAP within
the boundaries of District 4.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 19 of 5620
Hispanic candidates who would run for office (and the number who would win), and that such
candidates would likely stimulate increased voter participation – both in terms of registration and
turnout – among the Hispanic population. Hearing Tr. at 1289 (qualifications); 1344-48.
It is interesting to note that in the 2007 Mayoral election – held in the shadow of this
lawsuit, and less than two weeks after the issuance of the preliminary injunction halting the
Trustee elections – Hispanic turnout both Village-wide and within the confines of proposed
District 4 was the highest it had ever been for a Village election from the years 1995-2007 (15.3
percent Village-wide, and 44.5 percent within proposed District 4). See Def. Ex. LL at Table 5.
Though these figures are subject to multiple interpretations, when they are combined with the
testimony and other evidence presented in this case, it seems highly likely to this Court that a
dramatic change in the electoral structure to create districts would likely result, for myriad
reasons, in a marked change in voter turnout. Accordingly, it would be counterintuitive to
determine that depressed turnout among Hispanics – a condition that may very well be a direct
byproduct of the existing electoral regime – should be a reason to preclude the creation of a new
electoral structure in Port Chester.
On balance, the most reliable measure of whether Hispanics constitute an effective
majority in proposed District 4 in Plan A and Modified Plan A is the CVAP data for Port
Chester. As discussed above, Hispanics constitute a slight CVAP majority in District 4 under
Plan A, and an even more substantial majority under Modified Plan A; Plaintiffs, therefore, have
made a sufficient showing to satisfy this component of the first Gingles factor.
C. Second Gingles precondition: the minority group must be politically cohesive
and vote as a bloc
Plaintiff’s expert, Dr. Lisa Handley (“Dr. Handley”), is an expert in the fields of racially
polarized voting, analyzing voting behavior, statistical analysis of voting, and the effect of
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 20 of 5621
electoral practices of minority participation and representation. Hearing Tr. at 461. Dr. Handley
used three methods of statistical analysis – bivariate ecological regression analysis, ecological
inference, and homogeneous precinct analysis – to review election data and to determine how
voters cast their ballots in those contests. Hearing Tr. at 480, 500. In her initial report in this
case, Dr. Handley used voter registration data to estimate voter behavior – this was the only data
that was available to her at the time she prepared the initial expert report. See Gov. Ex. 12. In
her subsequent reports, however, Dr. Handley used sign-in data, which reflects actual voter
turnout, and therefore provides a more reliable basis for estimating voter preferences. See Gov.
Ex. 13. Defendant’s expert, Dr. Ronald Weber (“Dr. Weber”), is an expert in the fields of
political science, state and local politics, quantitative analysis of voting behavior, and
demography. Hearing Tr. at 894. In analyzing election data, Dr. Weber also used bivariate
ecological regression analysis and ecological inference methodologies, and used voter sign-in
data as the basis for his conclusions. Def. Ex. B; Hearing Tr. at 507.
Both experts analyzed “endogenous” and “exogenous” elections as part of their work for
this matter. Endogenous elections are those involving the specific office at issue in the lawsuit
(i.e. Port Chester Trustee elections). Hearing Tr. at 470. This Court also treats Mayoral
elections in Port Chester as endogenous elections in this case – the Mayoral elections are
conducted in precisely the same manner as the Trustee elections with precisely the same set of
voters, and in the structure of the Village government, the Mayor presides over meetings of the
Board of Trustees and votes along with the Trustees on legislative initiatives. Exogenous
elections are contests for positions other than Trustee or Mayor in the Village – for example,
county-wide races for judgeships or the office of the district attorney, and state-wide races for
attorney general are exogenous elections in the context of this matter. Hearing Tr. at 471.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 21 of 5622
To determine whether minority voters vote cohesively, Dr. Handley considers the degree
to which those voters support the same candidates, and will look to the gap between the
percentage of votes for the minority-preferred candidate and the non-preferred candidate rather
than using a particular bright-line threshold for determining cohesion.
For the years 2001-2007, Dr. Handley in her three reports analyzed 16 endogenous
elections – 12 of these were the Trustee contests in each of these six years (two positions were up
for election each year), and the remaining four were the Mayoral races in 2001, 2003, 2005, and
2007.
15
Dr. Handley testified that “in all of the 16 contests that [she] looked at, Hispanics were
cohesive.” Trial Tr. at 13. According to Dr. Handley, this was especially true in 2001, when the
Trustee election included Ruiz, a Hispanic candidate. Both Dr. Handley and Dr. Weber
concluded that virtually 100 percent of Hispanics who voted in that election cast one of their
votes for Ruiz, the Hispanic candidate. See Hearing Tr. at 483-84; Def. Ex. B at 29, 37. The
data presented in Dr. Handley’s reports indicate that Hispanics also voted cohesively in
endogenous elections where there was no Hispanic candidate. See Gov. Ex. 13.
Dr. Weber testified that the Hispanic community is not cohesive, in his view, because
with the exception of the 2001 Trustee election, the turnout of the Hispanic group is lower than
the minimum threshold required to constitute cohesion.
16
Hearing Tr. at 982. Dr. Weber defines
the “minimum threshold” for cohesion as 10 percent of the CVAP. Hearing Tr. at 926. This rule

15
This Decision concentrates on endogenous elections between 2001 and 2006 because both Dr. Handley
and Dr. Weber testified that these contests produced the most reliable data for their analyses. See Hearing Tr. at
499, 506-07 (Dr. Handley explaining how the data for the 1999 and 2000 Trustee elections were unreliable); 1015
(Dr. Weber admitting his concern about the reliability of the data in this case, particularly with respect to the
“earlier” data between 1995 and 2000).
16
Unlike Dr. Handley, Dr. Weber will only consider a group to be cohesive if 60 percent of that group
votes for the same candidate. Given the degree of cohesion of the Hispanic community in Port Chester, however,
this requirement was regularly met; accordingly, this Court will not make any findings of fact regarding this 60
percent threshold in this section. But see section III.D.2 infra.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 22 of 5623
is his brainchild, and is a bright-line rule to be applied in all cases. However, when questioned,
Dr. Weber conceded that the 10 percent figure was arbitrary. The Court inquired: “But why ten?
Why is ten the magic number and not 12 and not 8? … Is there any science; is there any
statistical data that supports a 10 percent number? Versus a 9 percent, versus an 11 percent
number?” Dr. Weber’s candid response was “No. No there isn’t. No.” Hearing Tr. at 980. Dr.
Weber further admitted that he knew of no court that has explicitly adopted his 10 percent rule,
Hearing Tr. at 981, and did not cite this Court to a single other expert in the field who has
adopted any bright-line turnout threshold in this context.
In his testimony, Dr. Weber conceded that if this Court were to reject his 10 percent
turnout requirement, then the Hispanic voters in Port Chester were cohesive in 13 of 15 Trustee
and Mayoral elections between 2001 and 2006.
17
Hearing Tr. at 977-79 Additionally, Dr.
Weber acknowledged that if his arbitrary fixed CVAP participation percentage were not adopted
by this Court, then in 10 of those 15 elections Hispanic voters were “strongly cohesive.”
Hearing Tr. at 977. Dr. Gaddie, who performed racial bloc voting analysis as part of his
supplemental expert report, also admitted at his May 18, 2007 deposition that Hispanic voters in
Port Chester are cohesive, though he did note that he believed the evidence of cohesion was
stronger between 2001 and 2004. See Gov. Ex. 91 (Gaddie Dep. at 159-60).
D. Third Gingles precondition: the white majority must vote sufficiently as a
bloc to enable it, in the absence of special circumstances, to defeat the
minority’s preferred candidate
1. Most probative election contests
The parties’ experts offered substantially different views of which elections this Court
should consider most important in analyzing the third Gingles precondition, though both sides

17
Dr. Weber did not perform any analysis of the 2007 Mayoral election. Hispanic voters were not cohesive
in the remaining two elections, according to Dr. Weber, because they did not reach his 60 percent threshold.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 23 of 5624
agreed that the 2001 Trustee race in which Ruiz was a candidate was the most significant of the
elections they studied. See Hearing Tr. at 469, 473-74; 984. The 2001 Trustee contest was the
only endogenous election that involved a Hispanic candidate who was the candidate of choice of
the Hispanic community; indeed, it was the only endogenous election from the 2001-2006 time
period that involved a Hispanic candidate at all.
Dr. Handley posited that after the 2001 Trustee race, the next most significant elections
were three exogenous elections that included Hispanic candidates who were the candidates of
choice of the Village’s Hispanic community. These included: (i) the 2001 and 2005 races for
Westchester County District Attorney, in which Anthony Castro (“Castro”), a candidate of
Portuguese ancestry, was defeated both times; and (ii) the 2000 race for Westchester County
Family Court Judge, a contest in which Nilda Morales Horowitz (“Judge Morales Horowitz”),
became the first person of Hispanic ancestry ever to win election to a countywide office in
Westchester. Finally, Dr. Handley added that endogenous races that did not involve Hispanic
candidates – so-called “white versus white” endogenous contests – were also of some probative
value. Hearing Tr. at 476-77.
In addition to the 2001 Trustee election, Dr. Weber believed that the most important
contests for consideration were the 2000 Westchester County Family Court Judge election, the
2005 District Attorney election, and the 2002 race for New York State Attorney General.
Hearing Tr. at 901-03. This final example – the only one not listed by Dr. Handley – included a
Hispanic candidate, though that candidate was clearly not the candidate of choice of the Hispanic
community in Port Chester.
Dr. Handley would have included among her most important elections the exogenous
contests for the Port Chester-Rye Brook Board of Education (the “School Board”). Several of
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 24 of 5625
these races involved minority candidates, and the electorate for School Board seats includes all
of Port Chester and only a small contingent of Rye Brook voters who live outside of the Village.
Hearing Tr. at 474-75. Because these elections take place in a single voting precinct, however, it
is not possible to perform the same types of statistical analysis for the School Board elections as
were performed for all other endogenous and exogenous elections studied in this case. Hearing
Tr. at 475. Given these limitations, Dr. Handley could not consider the School Board elections
as part of her analysis. Nevertheless, the Government did attempt to use the School Board
elections as evidence of non-Hispanic bloc voting by presenting information regarding the
outcomes of various School Board elections.
Testimony from various witnesses revealed difficulties with the exogenous elections
described by these experts; specifically, in the three elections that involved Castro and Judge
Morales Horowitz, there was considerable disagreement about whether voters perceived these
candidates to be Hispanic. See, e.g., Hearing Tr. 182-84 (Vega testimony regarding Judge
Morales Horowitz campaign); 778-79, 785 (Judge Morales Horowitz testimony regarding her
campaign); Gov. Ex. 35. It is clear that these examples only retain the level of relevance
attributed to them by Dr. Handley and Dr. Weber if these candidates were thought to be
Hispanic. Otherwise, the elections would be no more important than other “white versus white”
exogenous races.
After careful consideration, this Court concentrated its examination on the endogenous
elections – for Mayor and for various Trustee positions – that were held exclusively within the
Village of Port Chester. It is clear that the 2001 Trustee race took on special significance
because of Ruiz’s candidacy, but the “white versus white” Trustee and Mayoral races also
provided important insights into the behavior of Port Chester voters.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 25 of 5626
While certain exogenous elections involving Hispanic candidates ordinarily would be of
significant value – providing insight into how Hispanic voters in Port Chester behaved when
presented with the option of a Hispanic candidate – the exogenous elections studied by the
respective experts here do not allow for this type of understanding. There is insufficient
evidence in the record for this Court to conclude confidently that Westchester voters viewed
Castro and Judge Morales Horowitz as Hispanic candidates. Moreover, the inclusion of a
Hispanic candidate in the 2002 Attorney General race does not make that contest probative for
this Court, precisely because the Hispanic-preferred candidate was not the Hispanic candidate.
In sum, the evidence from all of the endogenous contests studied here was both more
convincing and less fraught with factual disputes about, for example, whether candidates were or
were not perceived to be Hispanic and how that may or may not have factored into the electoral
outcomes. Further, it is clear to this Court that in general, countywide and statewide elections
interject a host of different influences and variables into the electoral analysis, not the least of
which is that those elections are held “on cycle” in November. In addition, this Court opted not
to consider the Government’s evidence about the School Board elections in support of the third
Gingles precondition; because those elections could not be analyzed statistically, and because
fact witnesses offered conflicting, and unverifiable, opinions about which candidates had the
support of which communities in those elections, the Court does not find that evidence to be
probative on this question. For all of these reasons, we concentrate on the endogenous elections
in the Village.
2. Methodologies
Dr. Weber believes that in order for there to be non-Hispanic bloc voting, 60 percent or
more of non-Hispanics have to coalesce or vote for a particular candidate. Hearing Tr. at 926-
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 26 of 5627
28. He concedes, however, that his choice of percentage is an arbitrarily assigned number that is
“simply a number at which [he] feel[s] comfortable.” Hearing Tr. at 1001. Dr. Weber put forth
no scientific or statistical basis from which this Court could conclude that there is reason to
believe that 60 percent is the correct number as opposed to 55 percent or 65 percent or some
other number, even if it accepted the concept of a minimum threshold requirement for nonminority bloc voting. On this point, Dr. Weber is out, alone, on a rather thin branch. Not only
could he point us to no court in the United States that has accepted his cohesion requirement for
non-minority bloc voting, but he also admits that he knows of no other expert in the field who
has adopted or agreed with his non-minority cohesion requirement. Hearing Tr. at 1005.
Therefore, it goes without saying that no court or expert in the field has ever endorsed a 60
percent cohesion requirement for non-minority bloc voting. This Court declines to be the first.
Dr. Handley put forth a different analysis of the requirements of Gingles in this regard.
She described a functional test that examines whether “the whites [are] voting for the other
candidates to such a degree that the Hispanic preferred candidate is losing.” Hearing Tr. 467. It
is not necessarily important that the non-Hispanic voters coalesce behind a particular candidate
or that a particular percentage of non-Hispanic voters vote for any one candidate – what matters
most is that those voters do not cast votes for the Hispanic candidate of choice, and those votes
usually result in the defeat of the minority-preferred candidates. Even Dr. Weber agrees with
this statement as long as there is reliable data to review. Hearing Tr. at 1004. This Court
believes that a more flexible, functional test, like that proposed by Dr. Handley, is appropriate
when considering whether there has been non-minority bloc voting.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 27 of 5628
3. Electoral outcomes
Dr. Handley testified that non-Hispanic voters voted as a bloc to defeat Hispanic
candidates of choice in 12 of the 16 endogenous elections she reviewed – a total of 75 percent of
the time. Trial Tr. at 13. In all 10 Trustee contests between 2001 and 2005, the Hispanic
candidates of choice were different from the non-Hispanic candidates of choice; the candidates
of choice of the non-Hispanic voters won 9 of those 10 elections. Gov. Ex. 13 at 1-2. The only
year in which a Hispanic candidate of choice was elected was 2001, the year in which Ruiz was a
candidate; notably, Ruiz was the Hispanic community’s top candidate of choice in that election
according to Dr. Handley’s data, but he still was defeated. That election also provided an
illustration of Dr. Handley’s functional approach to this issue; non-Hispanic votes were not
concentrated on any one candidate, but rather were well distributed among the three white
candidates who finished ahead of Ruiz in the balloting. See Gov. Ex. 13 at 1. The same pattern
held true for the Mayoral elections in Port Chester in 2001, 2003, and 2005. In each of these
endogenous contests, the Hispanic candidate of choice differed from the non-Hispanic candidate
of choice; in each, the Hispanic candidate of choice was defeated.
In 2006, the only year in the past six in which Hispanic candidates of choice were elected
in both Trustee races, it is no coincidence that those candidates were also the candidates of
choice of non-Hispanic voters. Similarly, in the 2007 Mayoral election, the Hispanic candidate
of choice emerged victorious because non-Hispanic voters did not vote cohesively, and instead
split their votes between the two candidates. See Gov. Ex. 46. Of course, the 2007 Mayoral
election must be viewed somewhat differently; the election took place just weeks after this Court
enjoined the Trustee election that was supposed to take place simultaneously, and the voting
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 28 of 5629
rights issues raised by this lawsuit played a prominent role in the campaign itself. See Gov. Exs.
70, 71, 77.
E. Senate Report factors – totality of the circumstances
1. History of official discrimination
Professor Smith testified concerning the history of discrimination against Hispanics in
New York State, Westchester County, and Port Chester. Some of that testimony was related to
historical events that occurred 30 or 40 years ago – including evidence of New York State’s
literacy test for voting (abolished in 1966), see Hearing Tr. at 373-74, and a New York City
lawsuit from the early 1970s concerning Spanish language assistance at polling places. See
Hearing Tr. at 374. Of greater probative value to this Court were some of the more recent
examples from Westchester County – including the 1985 Yonkers housing and education
discrimination case, see Hearing Tr. at 377, a 2006 State Senate race in Yonkers, see Gov. Ex. 22
at ¶ 22, and the 2005 Consent Decree between the Untied States and Westchester County
pertaining to language assistance at polling sites in the County, see Hearing Tr. at 378-87. Based
on these data points and others, Professor Smith offered the general conclusion that there has
been discrimination against Latinos in Westchester County. See Hearing Tr. at 376.
Professor Smith analyzed the Consent Decree entered in United States v. Westchester
County, 05 Civ. 0650 (CM), as a guidepost for the what type of language assistance would be
required at polling sites in Port Chester. See Hearing Tr. at 386-87. Based on the county-wide
standard established in the Consent Decree – requiring at least one bilingual poll worker
18
at
each polling site located in an election precinct containing between 100 and 249 Spanish
surnamed voters – Professor Smith concluded that Port Chester failed to provide sufficient

18
The terms “poll worker” and “election inspector” are used interchangeably here, as they were during the
Hearing and Trial.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 29 of 5630
Spanish language assistance at polling sites in the Village for the Trustee elections held between
2001 and 2006. See Hearing Tr. at 387-90.
The Port Chester Village Clerk’s Office is responsible for conducting Village elections;
those responsibilities include posting public notices, creating the official ballots, and assigning
four election inspectors (two Democrats, two Republicans) to each of the 16 election precincts in
the Village. See Trial Tr. at 79. Joan Marino (“Marino”), Port Chester’s Deputy Village Clerk,
testified that since she began working there in 1997, it has not been the specific practice of the
Village Clerk’s office to appoint Spanish-speaking poll workers for election precincts that
contain a large number of Spanish speaking voters. See Trial Tr. at 80. Joanne Villanova, who
is not a Spanish speaker, testified that she served as an election inspector for Village elections
approximately 15 times over a period of approximately 25 years, and only once worked
alongside a Spanish-speaking inspector. See Trial Tr. at 924-27.
From 2001-2004, the Town of Rye provided the Village with lists of qualified election
inspectors for each major party; these lists, however, did not indicate which inspectors, if any,
spoke Spanish, and the Village Clerk’s Office made no independent effort to determine which
inspectors spoke Spanish. See Trial Tr. at 80-86; Gov. Exs. 49-52. In 2005 and 2006, the lists of
qualified election inspectors provided to the Village did denote which poll workers were Spanish
speakers – a total of four eligible poll workers were indicated to be Spanish speakers in 2005,
and six were listed as Spanish speakers in 2006. See Trial Tr. at 87, 91 and Gov. Ex. 53 (2005
election); Trial Tr. at 92-95 and Gov. Ex. 54 (2006 election). During the 2005 election, only two
of the four eligible Spanish-speaking inspectors actually worked at polling places; and only three
of the six eligible inspectors worked at polling places during the 2006 election. Trial Tr. at 92,
96. For the 2007 Mayoral election, the Village Clerk’s Office obtained a list of bilingual
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 30 of 5631
inspectors from the Westchester County Board of Elections for the first time, see Gov. Ex. 56,
and assigned 14 Spanish-speaking poll workers to various election precincts, a total higher than
in any of Marino’s previous years working for the Village. See Trial Tr. at 98-100.
Plaintiffs offered testimony from one Spanish-speaking poll worker – Luz Marina
Chavista – who described several situations from her experiences as a poll worker in Port
Chester where she observed Hispanic voters being treated differently from white voters. See,
e.g., Trial Tr. at 844, 852. In addition, Richard Falanka, the former Village Clerk and Village
Manager of Port Chester, testified that there are no Spanish-speaking employees at the Village
Hall who would be able to take a complaint from a Spanish-speaking voter at the beginning of
the polling day (from 7:00 a.m. until 9:00 a.m.) or at the end of the polling day (from 4:30 p.m.
until 9:00 p.m.), though English-speaking employees are available to receive complaints during
those times. See Hearing Tr. at 1272-73.
Plaintiffs offered other examples of official discrimination against Hispanics that
occurred in Port Chester itself. During his Hearing testimony, Nelson Rodriguez (“Rodriguez”)
described the events surrounding his 1991 campaign for a seat on the School Board. According
to Rodriguez, more than 40 Hispanic voters were turned away from the polls during that election
because of poll workers’ inability to locate their names on voter lists. See Hearing Tr. at 295-
301; Gov. Ex. 9 (affidavits of voters from 1991 School Board election). Rodriguez lost that
election by 37 votes, Gov. Ex. 10 at 1, and subsequently challenged the election results by filing
an appeal with the New York State Education Department. See Appeal of Nelson Rodriguez,
Dec. No. 12,704 (May 26, 1992) (available at http://www.counsel.nysed.gov/Decisions/
volume31/d12704.htm). The School Commissioner sustained the appeal and ordered a new
election, finding that Rodriguez “amply demonstrated that there were irregularities in the
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 31 of 5632
conduct of respondent board’s election,” and that the “board’s failure to locate approximately 39
names is unacceptable.” Id. In 1992, the School Board scheduled a special “re-vote” election;
Rodriguez ran again, and was defeated by 374 votes. See Gov. Ex. 10 at 2.
Finally, the Government offered in evidence audio-visual recordings of two public
hearings held in Port Chester in 2006 regarding the Government’s proposed districting plans.
Gov. Exs. 101 and 102. The hearings mostly consisted of statements by various citizens of the
Village either in support of or in opposition to the districting proposals, and therefore could not
be viewed as evidence of official discrimination in the Village. However, a comment at the first
public hearing by Aldo Vitagliano (“Vitagliano”), an attorney who would later be appointed by
the Village to serve as special counsel to the newly-formed Voting Rights Commission created to
study and evaluate the Government’s districting proposals, was noteworthy – Vitagliano
suggested that Port Chester’s representatives in Congress should introduce an amendment to
exempt the Village from the requirements of the Voting Rights Act.
2. Extent of racially polarized voting
Dr. Handley testified that “voting is polarized…if Hispanics would have elected a
difference candidate or set of candidates than whites, [and] it rises to the level of legal
significance if, under these circumstances, the Hispanic preferred candidate usually loses.”
Hearing Tr. at 467. According to Dr. Handley’s analysis, 13 of the 16 endogenous elections
were polarized.
19
Trial Tr. at 13.

19
In the data presented by Dr. Handley in support of her conclusions of polarization, African-American and
other minority voters are grouped in with the “non-Hispanic” voting bloc. Thus, to the extent, if any, that AfricanAmerican voters actually tend to vote in a manner more comparable to the Hispanic citizens of Port Chester than the
non-Hispanic white citizens of Port Chester, the polarization data actually understates the separation between the
Hispanic and non-Hispanic white communities in the Village.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 32 of 5633
In many cases, the degree of polarization was significant; in the single-vote elections for
Mayor, Hispanic preferred candidates received between 69.6 percent and 96.2 percent of the
Hispanic vote in these two-candidate elections, according to Dr. Handley bivariate ecological
regression estimates.
20
Gov. Ex. 13 at 2; Gov. Ex. 46 at 1. It therefore follows that the
candidates of choice of non-Hispanic voters received little support from Hispanic voters in these
elections. In the “vote for two” Trustee elections – where 50 percent support would be the
maximum achievable threshold absent “single shot” voting – 10 of 12 Hispanic-preferred
candidates received more than 40 percent of Hispanic voter support according to Dr. Handley
bivariate ecological regression estimates.
21
Gov. Ex. 13 at 1-2. Again it follows that the nonHispanic candidates of choice received little support from Hispanic voters, with percentages
often in single digits according to these estimates.
For the same reasons discussed above in connection with the third Gingles factor, this
Court does not consider evidence presented about the School Board elections as part of this
determination.
3. Electoral practices that enhance opportunities for discrimination
There is no dispute that Port Chester holds its Trustee elections in March, and it is also
evident that the six Trustees are elected to staggered three-year terms. See Gov. Ex. 4. Experts
on both sides agree that generally, voter turnout is lower in March elections than in November
elections, and that this general principle is true of the off-cycle elections in Port Chester for both
the Hispanic and the non-Hispanic populations of the Village. Dr. Handley’s data demonstrate

20
Dr. Handley arrived at substantially similar results using ecological inference methodology for the 2001,
2003, and 2007 elections, but her ecological inference estimates for the 2005 Mayoral race ascribed only 52.6
percent of the Hispanic vote to the Hispanic-preferred candidate, as opposed to 96.2 percent support under the
bivariate ecological regression method.
21
Nine candidates reached this threshold based on Dr. Handley’s ecological inference methodology.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 33 of 5634
that Hispanic turnout was markedly greater for November elections in 2004, 2005, and 2006 than
it was for March elections those same years. See Gov. Ex. 13 at 6-7; see also Hearing Tr. at
1377 (Dr. Morrison noted that “the participation levels of Hispanics turning out to vote varies
widely from a March Trustee election to a November general election”). Meanwhile, Dr. Gaddie
agreed that holding local elections off cycle generally results in depressed voter participation,
and observed that “every Mach election has lower turnout that the November elections.”
Hearing Tr. at 1343-44.
4. Access to the candidate slating process
Candidates for political office in Port Chester are selected through a caucus system
organized and administered by the political parties in the Village. At each caucus, a majority of
caucus attendees must vote in favor of a particular candidate for that candidate to formally
receive the party’s nomination for Trustee. Prior to the official party caucus, however, the major
political parties invite prospective candidates to interview before the parties’ respective
nominating committees, which then select their two preferred individuals and forward those
names to the parties’ caucuses for ratification. Hearing Tr. at 823-25 (describing the Republican
Party process); Trial Tr. at 337 (describing the Democratic Party process).
In theory, a candidate who did not win approval from the nominating committee could
“storm” the caucus by bringing enough supporters to challenge the nominating committee
selections – the formal rule is that the individuals who receive the most support at the caucus
become the nominees. For both parties, however, the nod from the nominating committee is the
critical step to getting onto the March ballot – no witness could identify a single instance where
the nominating committee’s selections were defeated by a “storming” of the caucus. See, e.g.,
Trial Tr. at 163-64 (Pilla was not aware of any challenges at a caucus); 337 (former Village
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Democratic Party chairman testified that “the people nominated were always approved by the
caucus”); Hearing Tr. at 828 (Village Republican Party chairman not aware of any candidate
selected by nominating committee who did not become the nominee); 1166 (Rye Town
Republican Chairman could not recall a contested caucus). Indeed, no witness could even
identify a single bona fide attempt to storm the caucus.
In fact, Dr. Janusz Richards, the Chairman of Port Chester’s Republican Committee,
initially testified that he believed that candidates were required to interview with the nominating
committee in order to receive the Republican nomination. Hearing Tr. at 841-42. Though he
ultimately clarified this testimony to make clear that there was no party rule or regulation that
required an appearance before the nominating committee, Hearing Tr. at 842, the fact that this
political “insider” was not completely clear about the possibility of winning the nomination
through the caucus alone makes this Court question whether the “storming” option is known to
exist among the general population, much less the Hispanic community. It is worth noting that,
as explained further in section III.E.7 below, even when the parties purported to have made
outreach efforts to find Hispanic candidates, the evidence is clear that only two Hispanics made
it through the nominating committee process and onto the ballot for Port Chester Trustee
between 1992 and 2006.
Again, this system greatly favors those with existing political ties or other institutional
support. Members of the Hispanic community have few positions of leadership within the major
political parties in Port Chester, even at the entry-level district leader position that can often be a
steppingstone to public office. See Hearing Tr. at 172. With the exception of a brief “renegade”
effort led by Ruiz to seat Hispanic-preferred district leaders in the Democratic Party in 2004,
very few Hispanics have served at even this entry level leadership position in either party. See
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 35 of 5636
Hearing Tr. at 56-57; 67-69 (Democratic Party); 832, 1169 (Republican Party).
5. Discrimination in other areas that hinders the ability of Hispanics
to participate effectively in the political process
Professor Smith and Dr. Morrison acknowledged that Hispanics in Port Chester have
lower levels of educational attainment on average and lower incomes on average than nonHispanics. See Def. Ex. LL at 13 (Morrison Report); Gov. Ex. 22 at ¶ 24 (Smith Declaration).
In addition, Hispanics in Port Chester were more likely than non-Hispanics to live in
overcrowded housing, to rent their homes, and to have lived in their homes for less than five
years. See Def. Ex. LL at 13; Gov. Ex. 22 at ¶ 25. According to Professor Smith, educational
disparities in Port Chester are “stark” – approximately 55 percent of Hispanic men and 48
percent of Hispanic women aged 25 or older had attained less than a high school education,
while only 14 percent of white men and 16 percent of white women were limited to this level of
education. Gov. Ex. 22 at ¶ 25. A total of 17 percent of Port Chester Hispanics lived below the
poverty line in 1999, while the same was true of only 0.6 percent of the white population of the
Village. Id. at ¶ 24. These economic disparities persist despite the fact that Hispanics have
“comparable or higher rates of participation in the labor force compared to other groups.” Id. at
¶ 25. Figures from the 2000 Census reveal that 75 percent of Hispanic men participate in the
labor force, as compared with 71 percent of white men; meanwhile, 53 percent of Hispanic
women participate in the labor force, as compared with 56 percent of white women. Id. In sum,
it is clear that Hispanics and whites in Port Chester “have significant differences in
socioeconomic status.” Hearing Tr. at 399.
Professor Smith testified that “lower socioeconomic status leads to lower levels of
political participation.” Hearing Tr. at 399 (Smith). Though he agreed that the fact that the
Hispanic community is on average younger and more recently arrived in the United States than
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 36 of 5637
the non-Hispanic citizens of Port Chester could contribute to lower Hispanic voter turnout
22
,
Hearing Tr. at 445-48, there was no testimony to suggest that the presence of these factors
negates the effects of socioeconomic status. Meanwhile, Dr. Gaddie agreed that socioeconomic
status is the foundational influence on political participation. Hearing Tr. at 1342. Further, Dr.
Gaddie noted that empirical studies have repeatedly shown that individuals who score lower on
socioeconomic status criteria are less prone to participate in politics. Hearing Tr. at 1342.
Dr. Gaddie also testified, however, that socioeconomic status factors such as age, wealth,
education and literacy alone are not enough to predict rates of political participation. Hearing Tr.
at 1292-94. He offered the proposition that in addition to the socioeconomic status factors that
contribute to one’s “civics skills set,” it is important to take into account mobilization efforts.
Hearing Tr. at 1294. Political mobilization, he suggested, is not determined by socioeconomic
status, but rather by the degree of in-person campaigning and other get-out-the-vote efforts in
communities of lower socioeconomic status. See Hearing Tr. at 1302-06. Even Dr. Handley
acknowledges in her rebuttal report that factors other than socioeconomic status must contribute
to our understanding of participation rates in Port Chester, given that participation fluctuates
greatly between March and November elections, even within the same calendar year. See Gov.
Ex. 13 at 7.
6. Racial appeals in political campaigns
None of the evidence offered by the Government at the Hearing phase of these
proceedings provided a clear indication that political campaigns in Port Chester have been
marred by racial appeals. The Plaintiff attempted to demonstrate through the testimony of Dr.

22
To explain lower rates of Hispanic political participation in Port Chester, Dr. Morrison attempted to place
great emphasis on the fact that the Hispanic community in the Village contains many recent arrivals and is generally
a more transient population. See Trial Tr. at 427. Dr. Morrison, however, has not conducted any particular studies
to determine how transient the Hispanic community actually is in Port Chester, let alone how this would impact the
rate of political participation of the Hispanic population. See Trial Tr. at 409-11.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 37 of 5638
Maria Munoz Kantha (“Dr. Kantha”) that the 2005 contest for Westchester County District
Attorney between Janet DiFiore and Anthony Castro was characterized by subtle racial appeals
in the form of a campaign flyer. See Gov. Ex. 11 (original campaign flyer); Hearing Tr. at 1218-
24. Dr. Kantha’s testimony made clear that there were some in the Hispanic community who
viewed Gov. Ex. 11 as a racial appeal – as illustrated by Gov. Ex. 103, a number of individuals
called a press conference to voice their displeasure with the flyer. See Hearing Tr. at 1124-28.
This Court viewed Gov. Ex. 11 as nothing more than a piece of partisan political propaganda in
the midst of a hard-fought campaign. We also heard testimony at the Hearing from Mr. John
Reavis and Mrs. Doris J. Bailey-Reavis about racial epithets that were spoken or written at two
points during Mr. Reavis’s 1996 campaigning for a seat on the School Board. See Hearing Tr. at
333-34 (Mr. Reavis); 353-54 (Mrs. Bailey-Reavis).
At the trial, however, we received extensive testimony about a flyer – admitted in
evidence as Gov. Ex. 63 – that was used as part of the 2007 Mayoral election in the Village.
Without question, this flyer must be considered a racial appeal. Bart Didden (“Didden”), who
was slated to be a Republican candidate for Trustee in the March 2007 election before the
election was enjoined, developed a first draft of this flyer approximately two or three weeks
before the March 20 election
23
; thus, the flyer was first created after the conclusion of the
hearing phase of this proceeding, and perhaps even after this Court issued the preliminary
injunction on March 2, 2007. See Trial Tr. at 247-49.
Didden called the flyer a “hard-hitting, issues oriented” piece that was designed to

23
According to Didden, two other individuals collaborated on the final version of the flyer: John Crane
(“Crane”), a current member of the Board of Trustees, and Dominic Bencivenga (“Bencivenga”), who was then a
member of the School Board. Both Crane and Bencivenga testified that they were only minimally involved in the
creation of the flyer. Bencivenga stated that he did not have anything to do with the drafting of the flyer, though he
did make certain comments and recommendations about the content of the flyer when he viewed it in draft form.
Trial Tr. at 360, 364-66. Crane, at the very least, saw the flyers before they were mailed. Trial Tr. at 364-67.
Neither Crane nor Bencivenga did anything to stop Didden from sending out the flyer, even though they both
recognized that the document was “troubling” and/or “racist, sexist and disgusting.”
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 38 of 5639
convince voters not to vote for Pilla, who was at the time the Democratic candidate for Mayor of
Port Chester. See Trial Tr. at 278. The flyer also includes personal attacks on two Hispanic
leaders in the Village – Ruiz, and Blanca Lopez, who was Pilla’s campaign manager. Ruiz is
described in the flyer as “hot dog vendor-turned-professional-consultant Ceaser (sic) Ruiz,”
while Lopez’s name appears many times in many different contexts. For example, the flyer
states that “what Blanca cares about is only Hispanic,” and accuses Lopez of being “not only a
double agent” but “a super secret triple agent,” apparently because Lopez submitted a declaration
in support of the Government’s motion for a preliminary injunction, and therefore “testified”
“against Port Chester.”
Pilla is attacked because of his apparent support of issues of importance to Hispanics in
the Village. The flyer declares that Lopez is pushing for more affordable housing, more
subsidized housing, and more Section 8 housing, and warns that “she is going to get if (sic)
because Lopez and Pilla are in bed together on the Village affordable housing sub committee, the
wolf is in the house thanks to Pilla!” Further, the flyer proclaims that “Blanca say’s (sic) jump,
fetch, beg or bark and Pilla does it. The Hispanics are running the show already.”
The flyer also criticizes Pilla for his position with respect to this lawsuit, suggesting that
Pilla changed his views on the lawsuit at the behest of Lopez; specifically, the flyer claims “flip
flop Pilla sells out on command of campaign manager / Hispanic leader Blanca Lopez.” Pilla
allegedly “abandon’s (sic) the Village by reneging on his commitment to fight splitting the
Village up into districts and pitting neighbor against neighbor,” and “is selling you and me out to
the Department of Justice.” Language in the flyer also mischaracterizes the lawsuit as an attempt
to portray the residents of the Village as racists, urging recipients not to “elect carpet baggers
(sic)” but rather to “elect people who care about our history, heritage and what our kids will be
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 39 of 5640
told about us in the future, are we to be known as racists or law abiding free Americans.”
According to Didden he mailed the flyer to approximately 1,000 households in the
Village, asserting that he did so because of his “civic responsibility to the community that I live
in.” Trial Tr. at 278-79. Didden, however, did not sign the flyer or otherwise indicate that he
was its primary author, and when he mailed the material he did so at a mailbox in Greenwich,
Connecticut, because he “did not want to be observed in front of the Port Chester post office with
a thousand envelopes putting them in the post box because that could lead to someone suspecting
that I had something to do with the mailing.” Trial Tr. at 280-81.
Various Village officials testified that they believed the flyer was a racist document. In
response to a question from the Court, Domenick Cicatelli (“Cicatelli”), currently a Trustee and,
in March 2007, the Republican candidate for Mayor, testified that the flyer appears to be a racial
appeal, and called the flyer “troubling.” Trial Tr. at 761. Trustee Crane testified that the flyer
was “racist, sexist, disgusting,” and “highly inflammatory.” Trial Tr. at 680. Bencivenga, in
response to a question from the Court, indicated that he believed the flyer could fairly be
characterized as racist. Trial Tr. at 384.
7. Election of Hispanics to public office in the jurisdiction
It is undisputed that no Hispanic candidate has ever been elected to public office in Port
Chester – not Mayor, not to the Board of Trustees, and not to the School Board. In all of the
Trustee elections studied by both sides in this case up to and including 2007, only two Hispanics
have ever been on the ballot – Jose Santos ran as a Republican in 1992 and Cesar Ruiz ran as a
Democrat in 2001 – and both finished last in their respective fields. See Gov. Ex. 4 at 13 (Santos
results) and 22 (Ruiz results). There is no indication from the evidence in this case that a
Hispanic candidate has ever run for Mayor in Port Chester.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 40 of 5641
Further, while the lack of statistical data from the School Board elections made it difficult
to consider the results of those elections as part of the racial polarization analysis, this Court does
consider the outcomes of those elections as additional evidence of this Senate factor. Between
1991 and 2006, three Hispanic candidates ran for the School Board a total of four times
24
, and all
were defeated. See Gov. Ex. 10.
25
Indeed, only one member of the Hispanic community has
ever been elected to any federal, state, county, or local office for any jurisdiction in which Port
Chester is located – Judge Morales Horowitz, who, as discussed above, was elected Family
Court Judge in 2000. See Hearing Tr. at 782.
The Village attempted to elicit testimony concerning various theories for why no
Hispanics have been elected, both through expert witnesses and from Village residents who
offered their views as to which Hispanic candidates actually garnered the support of the Hispanic
community and why. This Court already has addressed the testimony from the various experts,
and further concludes that the speculative testimony from the Village’s other witnesses regarding
the preferences of Hispanic voters is of no particular relevance to the issues presented in this
case. Defendant also endeavored to show that both major political parties in Port Chester made
concerted efforts to encourage Hispanic candidates to run for office. See, e.g., Hearing Tr. at
811-14 (Republican Party efforts); 1088 (Democratic Party efforts). It was clear that at least
some of the recruiting was conducted at least in part in response to the Justice Department’s
investigation here; more importantly, few Hispanic candidates ultimately were put forward by
the parties, despite these purported outreach strategies.

24
Nelson Rodriguez ran in 1991 and ran again in 1992 as part of the state-mandated re-vote for the 1991
election. Rodriguez’s 1988 School Board candidacy was also unsuccessful. Hearing Tr. at 278
25
In addition, though this lawsuit does not name African-Americans as a minority group experiencing a
violation of the Voting Rights Act in Port Chester, it is worth noting that no African-American has ever been elected
Mayor or to the Board of Trustees, and no African-American has ever been elected to the School Board, despite the
fact that African-American candidates ran for the School Board eight times between 1991 and 2006.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 41 of 5642
8. Additional factors in the Senate Report
i. Lack of responsiveness to particularized needs of Hispanics
Plaintiffs have not attempted to make an issue of Port Chester’s lack of responsiveness to
the particularized needs of members of the Hispanic community.
ii. Tenuousness of the challenged voting practice or procedure
Plaintiffs put forward no evidence to suggest that the policy rationales underlying Port
Chester’s voting system are tenuous. Port Chester has had an at-large system of elections in
place since 1868, more than a century before the Hispanic population became a plurality. The
Village has offered evidence that it holds local elections in March to insulate them from the
vagaries of the national election cycle and, in part, to bring the Village in line with other New
York State localities.
IV. Conclusions of law
A. First Gingles precondition: the minority group must be sufficiently large and
geographically compact to constitute a majority in a single-member district
To satisfy the first Gingles precondition, Plaintiffs must prove that the minority group “is
sufficiently large and geographically compact to constitute a majority in a single-member
district.” Gingles, 478 U.S. at 50. In sum, unless minority voters possess the potential to elect
representatives in the absence of an at-large voting system, they cannot claim that their voting
rights have been implicated by that system. See id. at 50, n.17. This requirement is designed to
ensure that the minority population in the subject area will have a real opportunity to elect
candidates of its choice.
As a threshold matter, although there was some anecdotal evidence presented that the
2000 Census might not have placed every voter in the exact block of their residence, this Court
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recognizes that Census data is presumptively accurate. See Valdespino v. Alamo Heights Indep.
Sch. Dist., 168 F.3d 848, 853-54 (5th Cir. 1999); Johnson v. DeSoto County Bd. of Comm’rs,
204 F.3d 1335, 1341 (11th Cir. 2000) (“the presumption is that Census figures are continually
accurate”). The Valdespino court determined that “proof of changed figures must be thoroughly
documented, have a high degree of accuracy, and be clear, cogent and convincing to override the
presumptive correctness of the prior decennial census.” Valdespino, 168 F.3d at 854.
Defendants have not come close to meeting that burden here through Cleary’s testimony, and
this Court accepts the 2000 Census data as reliably accurate, though not perfect, in this case.
First, the size and shape of the illustrative districts contained in Plaintiffs’ Plan A and
Modified Plan A comport with traditional districting principles of population equality and
compactness. See Shaw v. Reno, 509 U.S. 630, 651 (1993) (quoting United Jewish Orgs. v.
Carey, 430 U.S. 144, 168 (1977)). In addition, while respect for existing political boundaries is
also a valued traditional districting method, see Miller v. Johnson, 515 U.S. 900, 919 (1995),
election precincts are not such important political boundaries that they should negate a districting
proposal, particularly where, as here, other key districting principles are obeyed. We find no
fault with Dr. Beveridge’s decision to disregard the precinct boundaries when drawing the
proposed districts. Finally, based on the testimony of the parties’ respective experts, this Court is
firmly convinced that race was not the “predominant, overriding factor explaining” Dr.
Beveridge’s Modified Plan A. See id, 515 U.S. at 920.
While traditional districting principles typically require the use of total population in
drawing district boundaries, in determining whether the minority group at issue has a sufficient
majority in an illustrative district to satisfy the first Gingles precondition, courts look to the
VAP, and in particular to the CVAP, as the relevant population in the district. See, e.g.,
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Rodriguez v. Pataki, 308 F. Supp. 2d 346, 378 n.38 (S.D.N.Y. 2004) (three-judge panel) (citing
Valdespino, 168 F.3d at 851-53; Negron v. City of Miami Beach, 113 F.3d 1563, 1569 (11th Cir.
1997); and France v. Pataki, 71 F. Supp. 2d 317, 326 (S.D.N.Y. 1999)).
Plaintiffs have proven that Hispanics comprise 56.27 percent of the CVAP in proposed
District 4 under Modified Plan A, which clearly represents a majority of CVAP in that area. See
Goosby I, 956 F. Supp. at 348 (finding that Plaintiffs satisfied the first Gingles precondition with
a proposed district where African-Americans comprised 52.57 percent of the VAP in the
district). Though the Supreme Court has held in dicta that it is theoretically possible for a
minority group to lack “real electoral opportunity” in a district even if that group constitutes a
majority of CVAP in that district, see League of United Latin Am. Citizens v. Perry, 126 S. Ct.
2594, 2615 (2006), the weight of authority indicates that a CVAP majority will typically
constitute an effective majority for the purposes of the first Gingles precondition. Indeed, even
the Perry Court indicated that a 57.5 percent CVAP majority did possess electoral opportunity
protected by Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. Id.
Though the Village argued that the proportion of Hispanic registrants and the turnout rate
among Hispanics in proposed District 4 are such that the Hispanic population would not
constitute an effective voting majority, there are significant shortcomings in both lines of
reasoning. As to the turnout issue, we agree with the view expressed by the Ninth Circuit about
the proper consideration of voter turnout in a Section 2 analysis: “if low voter turnout could
defeat a Section 2 claim, excluded minority voters would find themselves in a vicious cycle: their
exclusion from the political process would increase apathy, which in turn would undermine their
ability to bring a legal challenge to the discriminatory practices, which would perpetuate low
voter turnout, and so on.” United States v. Blaine County, 363 F.3d 897, 911 (9th Cir. 2004). A
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similar logic applies to voter registration – if, as expected, the elimination of a Section 2
violation will increase opportunities for Hispanics in Port Chester to participate in the political
process of the Village, it seems likely that such participation will extend down to the simplest
level of participation: registering to vote.
Thus, as to the first Gingles precondition, this Court finds that Plaintiffs have
demonstrated adequately through Modified Plan A that Hispanics in Port Chester are sufficiently
large in number and geographically compact to constitute an effective majority in a singlemember district in the Village. Accordingly, Plaintiffs have satisfied the first Gingles factor.
B. Second Gingles precondition: the minority group must be politically cohesive
and vote as a bloc
The second Gingles precondition requires Plaintiffs to demonstrate that Hispanics in Port
Chester are politically cohesive. See Gingles, 478 U.S. at 51. According to the Gingles Court,
“if the minority group is not politically cohesive, it cannot be said that the selection of a
multimember electoral structure thwarts distinctive minority group interests.” Id. Plaintiffs
proved during these proceedings that Hispanic voters in Port Chester voted cohesively in all 16
election contests in the Village between 2001 and 2007. The methods employed by Dr. Handley
to reach these conclusions have been accepted by numerous courts in voting rights cases. See
Gingles, 478 U.S. at 52-53 (accepting bivariate ecological regression analysis); Rodriguez, 308
F. Supp. 2d at 388 (accepting ecological inference methodology).
Further, this Court declines to adopt Dr. Weber’s position that the Hispanic community in
Port Chester cannot be considered cohesive unless 10 percent of the Hispanic CVAP votes in a
given election. This Court does not believe that there should be any arbitrarily fixed percentage
for CVAP participation in order to find cohesion; such a bright-line threshold for minority CVAP
turnout is not helpful or appropriate here. See Blaine County, 363 F.3d at (9th Cir. 2004); Uno
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v. City of Holyoke, 72 F.3d 973, 987 (1st Cir. 1995). Dr. Weber conceded that if this Court were
to reject his turnout requirements, Hispanics in Port Chester were cohesive in 13 of 15 elections
between 2001 and 2006.
Accordingly, this Court concludes that Plaintiffs have proven that Hispanics in Port
Chester vote cohesively, and therefore that Plaintiffs have fulfilled the second Gingles
precondition.
C. Third Gingles precondition: the white majority must vote sufficiently as a
bloc to enable it, in the absence of special circumstances, to defeat the
minority’s preferred candidate
To satisfy the third Gingles precondition, Plaintiffs must demonstrate that “the white
majority votes sufficiently as a bloc to enable it – in the absence of special circumstances, such
as the minority candidate running unopposed – usually to defeat the minority’s preferred
candidate.” Gingles, 478 U.S. at 51. Proving this third point enables the minority group to show
that “submergence in a white multimember district impedes its ability to elect its chosen
representatives.” Id. Further, the requirement that the white majority be repeatedly successful
“distinguishes structural dilution from the mere loss of an occasional election.” Id.
In assessing which elections should be afforded the greatest probative value, we were
guided by two Second Circuit pronouncements on this question. First, it is clear that, in this
Circuit, at least, district courts must consider “white versus white” elections as part of a Section 2
analysis. Niagara Falls, 65 F.3d at 1015-17. In addition, “exogenous elections – those not
involving the particular office at issue – are less probative than elections involving the specific
office that is the subject of the litigation.” Goosby III, 180 F.3d at 497 (quoting Clark v.
Calhoun County, Miss., 88 F.3d 1393, 1397 (5th Cir. 1996)); see Niagara Falls, 65 F.3d at 1015
n.16. In light of these decisions, we believe that the proper focus in this case was on endogenous
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 46 of 5647
elections in the Village, even though all but one of these elections were “white versus white”
contests.
Defendant argues that any elections that occurred after spring 2001 cannot form the basis
of a Section 2 violation here, because “if a Section 2 violation exists it must be one that could
have been reasonably evident to the Village contemporaneous with the release of the decennial
census data…. The law cannot require the Village to create districts because sometime in the
future, (but before the next census) population changes might lead to an allegation that its atlarge system dilutes minority voting rights.” Def. Post-Trial Mem. of L. at 13. The Village does
not cite any case law in support of the proposition that this Court should not consider the most
recent elections in the jurisdiction as part of its Section 2 analysis. A brief look at Goosby I
reveals that other district courts in this Circuit have not adhered to Defendant’s position. The
original Complaint in Goosby I was filed in 1988, and a bench trial was held in July 1996. See
Goosby I, 956 F. Supp. at 329. By Defendant’s logic, the Goosby I court should not have
considered any Town of Hempstead elections that took place after spring 1991, yet the record is
replete with evidence from two elections held in 1993. See, e.g., id. at 334. The argument that
post-2001 elections should not be considered here is without merit.
Courts have employed methods that are very similar to Dr. Handley’s functional
approach to assess whether whites vote as a bloc to defeat Hispanic-preferred candidates. See
Gingles, 478 U.S. at 53. That is, the critical point is whether white voters are voting for other
candidates to such a degree that Hispanic-preferred candidates are consistently defeated. See,
e.g., Jenkins v. Red Clay Consol. Sch. Dist. Bd. of Educ., 4 F.3d 1103, 1123 (3d Cir. 1993) (“the
correct question is...whether, as a practical matter, the usual result of the bloc voting that exists is
the defeat of the minority-preferred candidate”). The motivations of the white voters under such
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 47 of 5648
a framework are irrelevant – indeed, Plaintiffs did not introduce evidence sufficient to prove that
the non-Hispanic community in Port Chester voted the way it did because of any sort of racial
bias. Contrary to Dr. Weber’s view, however, the degree of white voter cohesion is also
irrelevant, and we decline to adopt Dr. Weber’s 60 percent cohesion requirement in this matter.
The evidence here is clear that in 12 of the 16 elections this Court views as most
probative in this case, the candidates of choice of Hispanic voters in Port Chester were defeated
by the candidates of choice of non-Hispanic voters. Defendant is correct to point out that three
of the four elections in which Hispanic candidates were not defeated are among the most recent
contests in the Village – the two Trustee races in 2006 and the 2007 Mayoral election.
Nevertheless, it is well-settled that “in a district where elections are shown usually to be
polarized, the fact that racially polarized voting is not present in one or a few individual elections
does not necessarily negate the conclusion that the district experiences legally significant bloc
voting.” Gingles, 478 U.S. at 57. Moreover, the March 2007 election – which took place in the
after this Court issued the preliminary injunction, and in which this lawsuit became a central
campaign issue – was characterized by the type of “special circumstances” that make the results
of this election somewhat of an outlier in the overall analysis.
26
In addition, Defendant seeks to
use data from elections held between 1995 and 2000 to rebut Dr. Handley’s conclusions;
however, this Court concurs with the views of the parties’ experts that the data from those
elections is unreliable, and therefore should not form the basis of any legal conclusions here.
Defendant attempts to explain differences in voter behavior by claiming that partisan
politics, and not racial polarization, is the cause of these electoral outcomes. The Second Circuit

26
Though the Second Circuit has not specifically defined the contours of the “special circumstances”
doctrine, we think the Ninth Circuit’s reasoning on this point is instructive. That court found that “to invoke the
special circumstances doctrine regarding an election that occurred after a Section 2 lawsuit is filed, plaintiffs must
show that a particular election was surrounded by unusual circumstances. Those unusual circumstances must
demonstrate that the election was not representative of the typical way in which the electoral process functions. The
focus is voter behavior, not voter motivation.” Ruiz v. City of Santa Maria, 160 F.3d 543, 557 (9th Cir. 1998).
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 48 of 5649
has counseled, however, that arguments concerning the causes of racially polarized outcomes are
to be considered as part of the totality of the circumstances analysis, and not as part of the
Gingles determination. See Goosby III, 180 F.3d at 493 (“the best reading of the several
opinions in Gingles, however, is one that treats causation as irrelevant in the inquiry into the
three Gingles preconditions, see Gingles, 478 U.S. at 62 (Brennan, J., plurality op.) but relevant
in the totality of circumstances inquiry”).
In sum, it is clear to this Court that Hispanic voters and non-Hispanic voters in Port
Chester prefer different candidates, and that non-Hispanic voters generally vote as a bloc to
defeat Hispanic-preferred candidates. Accordingly, Plaintiffs have succeeded in proving the
third Gingles precondition, and therefore have established all three of the required Gingles
preconditions in this case. We now turn to the totality of the circumstances analysis.
D. Senate Report factors – totality of the circumstances
As outlined above, even though this Court has found that Plaintiffs have satisfied all three
Gingles preconditions, it is also necessary to consider the totality of the circumstances before
finding a Section 2 violation. See Johnson v. DeGrandy, 512 U.S. 997, 1011 (1994); Goosby III,
180 F.3d at 492. As discussed in further detail below, it is this Court’s view that Plaintiffs have
proved that all seven of the Senate factors are present in Port Chester; accordingly, the totality of
the circumstances clearly indicates that Defendant’s method of electing the members of its Board
of Trustees violates Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act.
1. History of official discrimination
This Court is persuaded that there is some history of official discrimination in Port
Chester that continues to touch the rights of Hispanics to participate in the political process.
Other courts in this district have cited the “regrettable history of discrimination in employment,
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 49 of 5650
housing and education in the Westchester County area,” New Rochelle Voter Defense Fund, 308
F. Supp. 2d at 159, as part of a Voting Rights Act analysis. While this Court finds the New York
State and Westchester County examples of discrimination to be relevant, we were far more
influenced by the examples from Port Chester itself, including the lack of Spanish-language
voter assistance in the Village and the 1991 and 1992 School Board elections. At the very least,
it is apparent that the Village Clerk’s Office has failed to take proactive steps to address the
needs of the Hispanic population in Port Chester, despite the rapid growth of the Hispanic
community. While the evidence in support of this conclusion is not overwhelming, this Court
does believe that, on balance, the first Senate factor supports a finding in favor of Plaintiff.
2. Extent of racially polarized voting
The Gingles Court cited this as one of the two most important Senate factors, see
Gingles, 478 U.S. at 48 n.15, and this Court considers it significant that this factor strongly
bolsters Plaintiffs’ position in this matter. According to Gingles, 478 U.S. at 53, “racial
polarization exists where there is a consistent relationship between [the] race of the voter and the
way in which the voter votes.” As discussed above in connection with the second and third
Gingles factors, the evidence presented in this case demonstrates that such a consistent
relationship clearly exists in Port Chester: Hispanic voters vote cohesively, and the non-Hispanic
community tends to vote as a bloc, generally resulting in the defeat of the Hispanic preferred
candidates. Defendant argued at various points that the outcomes of the Village elections could
be viewed as a factor of partisan political preferences rather than racial polarization of the
electorate. That there is some correlation between political party and the voting preferences of
Hispanics in Port Chester, however, does not contradict the conclusion that voting in the Village
is polarized along racial lines. See Goosby I, 956 F. Supp. 355. Senate factor two clearly
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 50 of 5651
suggests that judgment for Plaintiffs is appropriate here.
3. Electoral practices that enhance opportunities for discrimination
Port Chester’s practice of holding local elections “off-cycle” in March and staggering its
Trustee elections combines to enhance the opportunity for discrimination against the Hispanic
voting population. There is little question that the difference between holding an election “offcycle” in March as opposed to holding it in November alongside major state and national
elections can have a significant impact on voter behavior. See NAACP v. Hampton County
Election Comm., 470 U.S. 166, 178 (1985) (noting that in the jurisdiction at issue, “an election in
March is likely to draw significantly fewer voters than an election held simultaneously with a
general election in November”). The lower turnout rates for March elections in Port Chester is at
least partly the result of a structural flaw in the system, and is indicative of the Section 2
violation here; holding local elections at a time when only the most engaged and politically
astute citizens – those citizens who feel the most enfranchised – are likely to vote will almost
certainly result in the diminished influence of groups who feel generally excluded from the
political fabric of the community.
The Supreme Court has recognized that staggered elections may enhance the
discriminatory effect of certain voting systems. See, e.g., Lockhart v. United States, 460 U.S.
125, 143 (1983). Particularly given that many of Port Chester’s Trustee elections have been
close in terms of number of votes received, it is substantially less likely that white bloc voting
could defeat all Hispanic-preferred candidates if all six trustees were chosen at one time. There
has been no evidence to suggest that the Village adopted either of these practices with the
intention of discriminating against Hispanic citizens, but as noted above, intent is not the
touchstone of a Section 2 violation. What is important here is that off-cycle and staggered
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 51 of 5652
Trustee elections contribute to the Hispanic community’s difficulty in electing its candidates of
choice and “enhance the opportunity for discrimination” against Hispanics. Thus, this Senate
factor points toward judgment for the Plaintiffs.
4. Access to the candidate slating process
While the candidate selection process of Port Chester’s two major political parties
formally allows for candidates to have open access to the ballot through the party caucus system,
the reality of local politics in this community is that virtually binding decisions are made at
closed meetings of the parties’ respective nominating committees, which allow limited access to
outsiders or upstart candidates.
The Second Circuit has held that a system that provides only a theoretical avenue for
minority or other upstart candidates to get their names on the ballot while for all practical
purposes making it extremely difficult for such candidates to have a meaningful opportunity to
participate does in fact contribute to a violation of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. See
Goosby III, 180 F.3d at 496 (describing Town of Hempstead process where Republican
Committee members “theoretically are empowered to choose a slate of candidates for the Town
Board, [but where] the actual selection process has been much different”).
The candidate slating process employed by Port Chester’s political parties to select their
candidates for Trustee positions effectively limits access to those who are invited to interview
before the parties’ nominating committees, a situation which makes it all the more difficult for
Hispanic citizens in the Village to elect their candidates of choice. Accordingly, this Court
concludes that Senate factor four supports judgment for the Plaintiffs.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 52 of 5653
5. Discrimination in other areas that hinders the ability of
Hispanics to participate effectively in the political process
While experts from both sides agreed that factors other than the socioeconomic
disparities between Hispanics and non-Hispanics in Port Chester contribute to the differences in
political participation rates in the Village, experts also agreed that there are substantial
differences in education and income between Hispanics and non-Hispanics.
The Supreme Court has recognized that “political participation by minorities tends to be
depressed where minority group members suffer effects of prior discrimination such as inferior
education, poor employment opportunities, and low incomes.” Gingles, 478 U.S. at 69. The
Senate Report itself specifies that: “the courts have recognized that disproportionate educational,
employment, income level and living conditions arising from past discrimination tend to depress
minority political participation. Where these conditions are shown, and where the level of
[minority] participation in politics is depressed, plaintiffs need not prove any further causal
nexus between their disparate socioeconomic status and the depressed level of political
participation. S. Rep. No. 97-417 at 29 n.114. Various circuit courts, including the Second
Circuit, have followed this line of reasoning, finding that plaintiffs are not required to prove a
causal connection between socioeconomic factors and depressed political participation. See
Niagara Falls, 65 F.3d at 1021 (“according to the Senate Report, voting rights plaintiffs need not
establish [a causal] nexus where both disparate socioeconomic conditions and depressed political
participation are shown to exist”); Teague v. Attala County, 92 F.3d 283, 294 (5th Cir. 1996);
United States v. Marengo County Comm., 731 F.2d 1546, 1569 (11th Cir. 1984). Instead, the
burden falls to Defendant to show that the cause is something else. Marengo County Comm.,
731 F.2d at 1569.
Port Chester has not offered any persuasive evidence to suggest that socioeconomic
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 53 of 5654
factors do not contribute to differing rates of political participation of Hispanics in Port Chester.
For this Senate factor to support a Section 2 violation, it is not necessary to find that
socioeconomic status alone led to disparate levels of political participation; indeed, such a
finding would be nearly impossible given the number of factors that contribute to any one
individual’s decisions about political participation. That said, it is the view of this Court that the
effects of Hispanics’ socioeconomic status, when combined with the structure of elections in Port
Chester, limit the opportunities of the Hispanic community to participate in the political process
and to elect candidates of choice. Senate factor five, therefore, also supports a finding of a
Section 2 violation here.
6. Racial appeals in political campaigns
There can be no question that the most recent election for Mayor of Port Chester was
marred by a racial appeal. Though Plaintiffs did not present any compelling evidence of racial
appeals prior to 2007, the fact that such a blatant racial message – one which several witnesses
conceded was racist – emerged in the midst of the ongoing proceedings in this case is troubling
to this Court. The district court in Goosby I found that far more subtle racial appeals than this
one contributed to the Section 2 violation in the Town of Hempstead. See Goosby I, 956 F.
Supp. at 343, 353. Thus, in light of the evidence presented at trial, it is clear that this Senate
factor weighs in favor of a ruling for Plaintiffs.
7. Election of Hispanics to public office in the jurisdiction
The Gingles Court also cited this as one of the two most important Senate factors. See
Gingles, 478 U.S. at 48 n.15. The evidence here is undisputed that no member of the Hispanic
community in Port Chester has ever been elected to public office in the Village, whether as
Mayor or as a member of the Board of Trustees or the School Board. In short, there cannot be
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 54 of 5655
any more compelling case in support of Senate factor seven. See Goosby I, 956 F. Supp. at 343-
44 (finding that Senate factor seven supported a Section 2 violation where only one AfricanAmerican had ever been elected to the Town Board). Without question, this critical Senate
factor supports a finding of a Section 2 violation.
27

8. Additional factors in the Senate Report
The Senate Report makes clear that the issue of a political subdivision’s responsiveness
has little probative value, particularly where the plaintiff has not made it an issue in the case –
“defendants’ proof of some responsiveness would not negate plaintiff’s showing by other, more
objective factors enumerated here that minority voters nevertheless were shut out of equal access
to the political process.” See Marengo County Comm., 731 F.2d at 1572 (citing S. Rep. No. 97-
417 at 29 n.116). Thus, while Defendant at various points attempted to demonstrate that the
Village is in fact sensitive to the needs of the Hispanic community, that alone is not enough to
overcome this Court’s findings with regard to the other Senate factors. Further, the current Port
Chester system is not a marked departure from past practices in the Village, nor is it necessarily a
significant departure from the structure employed by other localities in New York State.
Plaintiff does not appear to contest these conclusions.

27
In the section of Defendant’s post-trial brief devoted to this point, Defendant argues: “It is very unsettling
for a community to be observed and judged by those that do not live there or barely know its history or its people, be
it Professor Smith, Professor Handley, the Department of Justice, of the Court itself. Most if not all of the Port
Chester resident witnesses were long time residents and bore good feelings towards the community. The Court must
consider this factor and examine the record in a wider context.” Def. Post-Trial Mem. of L. at 22. This argument is
somewhat shocking – Defendant appears to be suggesting that the only reason that this Court, or any of the
Plaintiffs’ representatives, believed there to be a violation of the Voting Rights Act is because we did not learn
enough about the Village or its people. This Court submits that after 15 days and thousands of pages of testimony,
not to mention hundreds of pages of legal briefs and hundreds more pages of exhibits, we certainly understood all
that we needed to understand to reach a well-reasoned decision in this case. That the Village still fails to recognize
its violation of federal law, and instead naively attributes this Court’s rulings to a purported lack of understanding of
the Village’s history, may be indicative of an even larger problem in Port Chester.
Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 55 of 56Case 7:06-cv-15173-SCR Document 85 Filed 01/17/2008 Page 56 of 56

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