Adrian Fontes
DOJ Sues Arizona For Refusing To Turn Over Voter Registration Records

January 8, 2026

By Staff Reporter |

The Department of Justice (DOJ) sued Arizona for refusing to turn over voter registration records.

Arizona joins 22 other states and the District of Columbia facing legal action from the DOJ for withholding access to the voter rolls. 

A press release issued on Tuesday from the DOJ also named Connecticut as the latest to be sued. 

“Accurate voter rolls are the foundation of election integrity, and any state that fails to meet this basic obligation of transparency can expect to see us in court,” said Attorney General Pam Bondi. 

The requested records would include each voter’s full name, date of birth, residential address, and either their state driver’s license number, last four digits of their Social Security number, or HAVA unique identifier.

The DOJ’s lawsuit asserts the agency maintains legal authority under the Civil Rights Act (CRA) to access any election records it desires. 

“If the custodian to whom the written demand is made refuses to comply, the CRA requires ‘a special statutory proceeding in which the courts play a limited, albeit vital, role’ in assisting the Attorney General’s investigative powers,” stated the lawsuit. 

The DOJ requested the records from Secretary of State Adrian Fontes last July, and again in August. Both times Fontes responded with refusals, claiming that state and federal privacy laws prevent him from turning over the requested records. 

Fontes rejected another follow-up request by the DOJ last month. The secretary of state claimed that voter rights to privacy trumped the federal government’s chief authority over elections. 

“Arizona voters also have important privacy rights that cannot be infringed because they choose to exercise their constitutionally protected voting rights,” said Fontes. 

Fontes said in a statement to Democracy Docket that he would rather be imprisoned than cooperate with the Trump administration. 

“They’re going to have to put me in jail if they want this information,” said Fontes. 

In a video statement on X, Fontes again declared compliance would break state and federal law.  

“Pound sand,” said Fontes. 

Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes backed Fontes’ take on privacy laws negating the authority of election oversight laws. 

“Both state and federal law prohibit the unrestricted release of Arizona’s complete voter registration database to the DOJ,” said Mayes.

Fontes also published a blog post on Tuesday commemorating the fifth year to pass since the January 6 invasion of the Capitol. The secretary of state claimed that the government remains under active threat, and compared the political climate to the Civil War era. 

“Today’s challenges — polarization, misinformation from the top down, foreign interference — are real and daunting. But they pale in comparison to the existential crisis of 1864, when the nation itself was at risk of dissolution. If democracy could survive that, it can survive now — provided we do our part,” said Fontes. “Confidence in our electoral system is not naïve; it is necessary. Election officials across the country are working tirelessly to secure voting infrastructure, expand access, and ensure transparency. These efforts deserve not only our trust but our active participation. Cynicism is easy. Engagement is harder — but it is the only way forward.”

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