Tammy Lemasters' new Florida driver's license mistakenly shows her as a sex offender. She says it was supposed to label her an organ donor.
Last Updated: Thursday, May 07, 2015, 5:21 PM
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ORLANDO (AP) --
A Central Florida woman who was issued a driver's license that mistakenly labeled her a sexual predator said Thursday that she plans to file a defamation lawsuit against a county tax collector's office.
Tammy Lemasters, 42, of Clermont said she was denied service when trying to book a room at a hotel and has endured funny looks from cashiers when cashing checks because of the blue letters in the bottom-right corner of her license that say "SEXUAL PREDATOR."
"I was afraid to drive in my car. I was afraid of getting pulled over," said Lemasters, who works as a restaurant trainer and is the mother of three teenagers. "I was afraid of the kids being in the car."
She has already filed a notice of intent to sue the Lake County Tax Collector's office. The tax collector's office serves as an agent for the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles in issuing driver's licenses. She went to the tax collector's office Thursday, accompanied by her attorney and television cameras, to get a new driver's license almost three weeks after she first noticed the mistake.
Lemasters says she was turned away from a theme park, a hotel and had trouble picking up her kids from school.
She has never been charged with any sex-related crime.
"When you have sexual predator written on your license, do you really think someone is going to give you the benefit of the doubt over a government agency? They’re not,” her atorney, John Phillips, said.
“I wanted to be an organ donor," Lemasters said. "It wasn’t supposed to be "sexual predator" on there. I think they need to have a process of having to push more than just one button to label somebody that.”
The manager of the tax collector's office where Lemasters got her license attributed the mistake to human error.
"We said we fully understand the embarrassment she faced, but these are humans doing a human job," said Mark O'Keefe. "People make mistakes. When we find them, we move swiftly to correct them."
When drivers get new licenses, they are told by workers in the tax collectors' office to double-check that everything on the ID is accurate, O'Keefe said.
Lemasters called the tax collectors' office four days after discovering the mistake and was told to come back to the office right away so the problem could be fixed, he said.
"If you misspell `Main Street' on a driver's license or put the wrong initial in the name, people are back in here in a half-hour, if not the next day, to have it corrected," O'Keefe said.
Both O'Keefe and Lemasters' attorney theorize that the mistake was made when the wrong drop-down box was checked on the computer. The motor vehicle agency software is being updated and one of the changes being proposed includes adding a "pop-up" window that would ask workers issuing the licenses whether they are sure when they are clicking "sexual predator."
Lemasters said she didn't notice the mistake until several days after getting the new license. She had to go to traffic court for a ticket and noticed the judge and bailiff studying the license quizzically. Afterward, while she was at a store, she noticed the `SEXUAL PREDATOR" label on her license and "I immediately had tears in my eyes."
Phillips said he knew of two similar instances in Florida, including a Jacksonville case in which he represented a legally blind man who had sued the Duval County Tax Collector's Office.
"It reminds me of `The Scarlet Letter,'" said Phillips, referring to the 19th century literature classic about a woman ostracized for having a child out of wedlock in Puritan Massachusetts. "This is the worst thing you can call a person."