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Homeland Security Citizenship Data Lawsuit Produces Two Opposite Federal Judge Orders in the Same Week

Homeland Security Citizenship Data Lawsuit Produces Two Opposite Federal Judge Orders in the Same Week

Image Source: Brooklyn Law School

Published by TrenBuzz.com | July 8, 2026 | BREAKING LEGAL NEWS


Key Points at a Glance – Homeland Security Citizenship Data Lawsuit


Homeland Security Citizenship Data Lawsuit: What Judge Sooknanan Found in 75 Pages

US District Judge Sparkle Sooknanan sided with the League of Women Voters, the Electronic Privacy Information Center, and five individual plaintiffs who argued DHS built a “searchable national citizenship data system” without proper legal authority.

The judge found DHS violated three federal laws: the Administrative Procedure Act, the Privacy Act, and the Social Security Act. She specifically highlighted internal DHS memos warning that naturalized citizens would be at particular risk of having their registrations erroneously cancelled.

“The federal government has knowingly trampled on the privacy rights of American citizens in a manner that threatens the sacred right to vote,” she wrote. “The agencies’ arguments to the contrary border on the absurd.”


Two Judges, Two Orders, Zero Clarity for 67 Million Checked Voters

The most underreported part of this story is that as of this week, two federal courts are issuing contradictory instructions to the same federal agency about the same database.

Sooknanan blocked SAVE. A Florida judge restored it. DHS cannot simultaneously comply with both orders. That legal conflict will almost certainly require an emergency circuit court ruling before the November elections, because states currently using SAVE for voter roll maintenance do not know which court order governs them.

The DOJ’s lawsuit strategy to force states to hand over voter data has now been dismissed by every single court that has reviewed it. It is 0-9 across nine separate jurisdictions. The Sixth Circuit made it 0-for-appeals too.


The Real Damage May Already Be Done

Even with SAVE blocked for voter roll checks, the data has already been gathered. Sixty-seven million voter records from Republican-led states ran through an expanded system that included Social Security numbers.

That data now exists inside government systems regardless of what courts say about SAVE going forward. The judge’s ruling stops further bulk checks, but it does not erase what was already collected.

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