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Justice Department sues Connecticut and Arizona over requests for voter data
Summary
The Justice Department filed lawsuits against Connecticut and Arizona after the states declined to turn over detailed voter records requested by the federal government; state officials say the requests would violate state and federal privacy laws.
Content
The Justice Department's Civil Rights Division has filed lawsuits against Connecticut and Arizona after those states declined federal requests for detailed voter registration records. State officials said the requests would conflict with state or federal privacy protections. Arizona's top elections official publicly rejected the demand, and Connecticut's attorney general said the state tried to cooperate but was sued. The suits are part of a broader effort in which the Justice Department has sought similar data from multiple jurisdictions.
Key facts:
- The DOJ sued Connecticut and Arizona for not complying with requests for detailed voter information.
- State officials said providing the requested records would violate state or federal privacy laws and pledged to defend their positions.
- The Justice Department has pursued similar actions involving 23 states and the District of Columbia as part of the same effort.
- The lawsuits have been filed; specific next court dates or procedural steps were not specified in the report.
Summary:
The filings extend a larger Justice Department effort to obtain voter registration information from several states and have prompted legal resistance from state officials on privacy and law grounds. Undetermined at this time.
