NOTUS 53.8%
Judge Voids a ‘Staggering’ DOJ Bid for Georgia Election Workers’ Personal Data
By Angie Orellana Hernandez - 7/7/2026, 10:45 PM - 373 words
Faulty reasoning signals
- Confirmation Bias - 0%
- Anchoring Bias - 0%
- Availability Heuristic - 13.1% (49 hits)
- Representativeness Heuristic - 0%
- Hindsight Bias - 6.7% (25 hits)
- Overconfidence Bias - 0%
- Framing Effect - 14.7% (55 hits)
- Loss Aversion - 0%
- Status Quo Bias - 0%
- Sunk Cost Effect - 0%
- Optimism Bias - 0%
- Pessimism Bias - 0%
Article text
Judge Voids a ‘Staggering’ DOJ Bid for Georgia Election Workers’ Personal Data
A federal judge ruled Tuesday that the Justice Department cannot collect personal information about people who worked during the 2020 election in Georgia’s most populous county — dealing yet another legal blow to the agency’s efforts to investigate baseless claims of voter fraud.
In April, DOJ prosecutors directed a federal grand jury to subpoena Fulton County — a Democratic stronghold and frequent target of President Donald Trump’s ire — in tandem with a wider attempt to force four other states to produce statewide voter registration lists.
The agency sought the names, address and telephone numbers for thousands of workers across various functions on Election Day, from poll workers to bus drivers who managed mobile voting sites.
Ray, a Trump appointee, said while his ruling to quash the subpoena comes during “hyper-political times,” the Justice Department does not have the ability to issue such an “unreasonable” request — particularly because the data in question would not lead to “any viable charge.”
“Thus, everyone, whether you support the President or you do not, or whether you believe the 2020 Election was fair or believe that it was not, should be concerned about the DOJ’s ability to utilize the power of the Grand Jury to appropriate your private information without a legitimate purpose,” the ruling read.
The Justice Department often works with grand juries on criminal investigations, but “that does not give the DOJ the right to use the Grand Jury to do whatever the DOJ wants,” Ray wrote.
The subpoena had directed the county to provide records to an out-of-state DOJ lawyer or the FBI agent who moved to seize the county’s 2020 ballots earlier this year.
Trump has vowed to investigate the 2020 election since losing to former President Joe Biden, moving aggressively to do so during his return to office.
In December, the DOJ sued Fulton County for failing to produce records.
The following month, armed FBI agents raided the Fulton County Election Hub and Operation Center located on the outskirts of Atlanta, seizing over 600 boxes of records — documents the agency was allowed to retain despite flaws in their execution of the search, a federal judge ruled in May.