(Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump accused Michael Bloomberg of a “criminal act” on Thursday for helping to pay off debts owed by Florida felons so that they can vote in the November election.

“It’s a felony,” Trump said in a Fox News Radio interview. “He’s actually giving money to people. He’s paying people to vote. He’s actually saying, ‘Here’s money, now you go ahead and vote for only Democrats.’ Right?”

The former New York mayor -- who is the founder and majority owner of Bloomberg LP, the parent company of Bloomberg News -- raised about $16 million with a Democratic-associated nonprofit, the Florida Rights Restoration Coalition, to pay the outstanding court fines, restitution and other costs owed by felons in the state, according to a Bloomberg spokesman. The money didn’t come from Bloomberg personally, he said.

The aid to restore felons’ voting rights is in addition to the $100 million that Bloomberg has committed to defeat Trump in Florida, which will be spent on voter turnout and outreach to Hispanic voters. Biden holds a slim, 1.3 percentage-point advantage over Trump in Florida, according to RealClearPolitics average of recent polls.

“It’s a total criminal act,” Trump said of the Bloomberg-assisted effort.

In 2018, Florida voters overwhelmingly adopted a ballot initiative restoring felons’ right to vote. But the Republican-controlled legislature subsequently passed a law requiring felons to pay off all fines and restitution they owe before registering to cast a ballot.

A federal appeals court upheld the law earlier this month.

Florida’s attorney general, Ashley Moody, on Wednesday asked the FBI and Florida Department of Law Enforcement to investigate Bloomberg’s effort to help felons vote, alleging he may be illegally inducing them to vote for Joe Biden.

“We have to have trust in our elections process. It’s essential to a strong, stable democracy,” Moody, a Republican, said in an interview on Fox News’s “Fox & Friends” on Thursday.

“And so, when you hear words like targeting certain voters, investing and adding to a particular column, that doesn’t matter what party it is,” she said. “That triggers Florida law, which under Florida law, you cannot directly or indirectly give anything of value to persuade or entice a vote.”

Bloomberg spokesman Jason Schechter didn’t respond directly to Trump, instead referring to a comment Wednesday in response to Moody’s letter.

“This transparent political ploy is just the latest example of Republicans attempting to keep Floridians disenfranchised,” he said.

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