WASHINGTON, DC – Restoring Integrity and Trust in Elections (“RITE”), a non-profit organization dedicated to protecting election integrity, is leading the call for the release of the full voter registration documents for the illegal alien who eventually became the superintendent of Iowa’s largest school system. Along with the American Accountability Foundation (AAF), RITE is demanding that Maryland’s Prince George’s County Board of Elections release the unredacted voter registration forms for Ian Andre Roberts, a Guyanese national who later relocated. AAF previously requested the forms but was given heavily redacted copies. RITE and AAF have threatened to sue if the county fails to comply.
The national news media have been covering the efforts:

“A legal fight is brewing over a Maryland county board of elections’ heavy redactions to the voter registration records of an illegal immigrant who served as superintendent of Iowa’s largest school system until he was arrested by federal authorities this year,” Fox News reported.

“The American Accountability Foundation and Restoring Integrity and Trust in Elections filed a National Voter Registration Act request this week, insisting that the county release Roberts’s complete voter registration file,” the Washington Examiner reported. “The groups said the county violated federal law last month when it redacted his responses to multiple eligibility questions, including the one asking if he is a U.S. citizen, before providing the documents to AAF.”
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.