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The DOJ Misled a Judge About How It’s Using Voter Roll Data

WIRED·David Gilbert·about 2 months ago
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#wired#data#states#neff#voter#voting
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Last week in Rhode Island, in a hearing over the Trump administration ’s efforts to access the state’s unredacted voter lists, US district judge Mary McElroy asked a Department of Justice lawyer what the agency had been doing with the voter roll data it already amassed from other states in recent months. “We have not done anything yet,” said Eric Neff , the acting chief of the agency’s voting section, a core part of the DOJ’s civil rights division that focuses on enforcing federal laws that protect the right to vote. Neff added that the data the DOJ collected from states—which can include Social Security numbers, drivers licenses, dates of birth, and addresses—was being kept separate. “The United States is taking extra concern to make sure that we’re complying with the Privacy Act in every conceivable way,” Neff added. The Privacy Act of 1974 regulates how government agencies collect and use personally identifiable information about US residents.…

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