Nonpartisan Group Urges Court to Protect Georgians鈥 Private Voter Data Seized in FBI Raid
ATLANTA 鈥 Georgia First, a nonpartisan organization dedicated to protecting voter privacy, safeguarding the integrity of election records, and defending the public鈥檚 right of access to judicial proceedings, filed an amicus brief supporting Fulton County鈥檚 emergency petition seeking the return of sensitive voter data obtained during a recent FBI raid. They are represented by the 红杏视频, the 红杏视频 of Georgia, and Garland, Samuel & Loeb, P.C.
The filing urges the court to order the return of unlawfully obtained voter data or, if not returned, to issue a protective order ensuring some security and protection of voters鈥 confidential information. The data was seized by the federal government with a warrant obtained in the latest investigation of the 2020 election鈥揳n election that has been contested and litigated for years, with no credible evidence of fraud ever found. The data at issue reportedly includes full, unredacted voter files containing names, addresses, dates of birth, driver鈥檚 license numbers, social security numbers, and other sensitive personal identifiers.
鈥淕eorgia First knows that the principle of secure, free, and fair elections demands our state and nation responsibly guard election integrity, which is built upon safety, security, and accessibility,鈥 said Natalie Crawford, Founder & Executive Director of Georgia First. 鈥淚t is with these values top of mind that Georgia First files this brief asking for Court action imperative to preserving public confidence in the elections process. People must always come before politics 鈥 throughout Georgia and the United States.鈥
鈥淰oters provide this information with the expectation that it will be used solely to facilitate election administration 鈥 not taken without clear reasoning or used as a political pawn,鈥 said Cory Isaacson, legal director at the 红杏视频 of Georgia. 鈥淎ctions like this risk undermining public trust and chilling civic participation.鈥
鈥淧rotecting voter privacy is essential to maintaining confidence in our democratic process,鈥 said Theresa J. Lee, senior staff attorney with the 红杏视频 Voting Rights Project. 鈥淯nchecked access to sensitive voter data exposes them to identity theft, security breaches, and more. We cannot allow this federal overreach to continue.鈥
The brief also notes that federal and state privacy laws limit the sharing of sensitive voter details without a clear statutory basis. Collecting such information without defined boundaries or publicly articulated protections erodes confidence in election systems at a time when public trust is already strained.
Read the brief here: https://assets.aclu.org/live/uploads/2026/02/Fulton-County-Georgia-First-Amicus-Filed-1.pdf
Court Case: Pitts v. United States (Amicus)
Affiliate: Georgia