PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY, MD — The Prince George’s County Board of Elections has reversed course and produced unredacted versions of voter registration records for Ian Andre Roberts, the illegal alien and Guyanese national who somehow rose to become the superintendent of Iowa’s largest school system. County elections officials had previously released only redacted copies, which omitted Roberts’ answer to the question, “Are you a U.S. citizen?”
The Board produced the previously withheld eligibility information, which demonstrates that Roberts lied about his citizenship, only after Restoring Integrity and Trust in Elections (RITE) and the American Accountability Foundation (AAF) issued a formal demand under the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA) and publicly warned of imminent federal litigation.
The production follows a sharply worded NVRA enforcement letter sent on November 20, 2025, which was subsequently publicized by Fox News and the Washington Examiner. In that letter, RITE and AAF notified county officials that their extensive redactions, including the concealment of Roberts’s answer to the U.S. citizenship question, violated binding Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals precedent and exposed the County to federal liability and attorney-fee sanctions.
Rather than defend their position in court, county officials backed down and produced the unredacted records.
The records confirm that Roberts affirmatively claimed U.S. citizenship on his voter-registration application, and that Maryland election officials took his word for it. Additionally, State Board of Elections Administrator Jared DeMarinis stated that Maryland generally initiates non-citizen removals based only on voter self-reports or jury commissioner referrals. As a result, even extensive federal immigration records—including a final order of removal issued more than a year ago—appear insufficient, standing alone, to prompt the State to begin the voter removal process under Maryland’s current practices.
“This case demonstrates exactly why Congress enacted the NVRA’s public disclosure mandate,” said Justin Riemer. “When election officials attempt to hide eligibility records, the public loses the ability to verify that the law is being followed. Once the records were produced, we saw just how weak Maryland’s safeguards really are. This is unfortunately all too common around the country and federal laws do little to help stop noncitizens from registering to vote.”
“The records show us what we all know – Maryland is not serious about keeping noncitizens off the voter rolls,” said Tom Jones of AAF. “Sadly, there are likely thousands more non-citizens on Maryland’s voter rolls.”
RITE has been a national leader in advancing citizen-only voting and ensuring states properly maintain their voter rolls. RITE successfully sued Maryland last year for enacting a regulation that prohibited the public from auditing the accuracy of the state’s voter rolls. The organization has also filed briefs supporting President Trump’s Executive Order directing the EAC to require proof of citizenship on the national registration form, sued cities that extended voting rights to noncitizens in local elections, and taken legal action in North Carolina and Arizona to stop overseas noncitizen voting. RITE has also litigated to uphold laws requiring states to verify voter eligibility at the point of registration.