Five Minnesotans are going to court, accused of voting when they shouldn't have.  We don't know who they voted for but according to state law, they shouldn't have voted at all.  Reports out of Polk County say the five, from the cities of Mentor, Crookston, East Grand Forks and Fosston, cast votes in the 2008 election despite being on probation after felony convictions.  That's punishable with up to five years in prison.  In most cases, the defendents said they cast ballots because they didn't know they couldn't.  To add to the confusion, just over the border in North Dakota, it's legal for those who have felony convictions to vote, as long as they aren't in jail at the time.