A company was published by Llinis Cuame Raul's lawyer for the incorrect publication on the dates of birth and home titles for hundreds of thousands of voters, and he resolved the case without recognizing criminal violations.
Lake Forest Forest, which is taking dozens of online media that established the theories of the previously reported election plot, entered the right -wing media that collected the theories of the election plot, to the previously not reported settlement agreement with Raul's office in late January.
The agreement in the Lake County County Court requires the company to destroy any restricted voter data that included birth dates and home addresses and refrain from publishing any such data if it arises from the information of the voters that came from the Electoral Council in Illinois.
No fines were imposed as a result of the agreement, which requires the company to cover its own legal expenses, and LGIS did not recognize any responsibility or illegal behavior as a result of its actions.
When the Raoul office filed a lawsuit against LGIS last May, it sought a declaration from the state court that the company had violated the government election law by obtaining and publishing and publishing the dates of birth and street numbers.
The company's deployment of this information in its online publications “a major threat to some groups of individuals, such as the victims of domestic violence, judges and law enforcement employees, whose safety will endanger by publishing their own information on the Internet”, claimed a lawsuit in the state.
The Lake County Judge ordered the removal of the voters ’data registered from the LGIS websites shortly after the lawsuit was filed, and the company complied.
Raul's office did not explain how the settlement in which she entered with LGis made her initial concerns that LGIS broke the state's election law, endangered law enforcement officials and victims of domestic violence.
Instead, it only issued a brief statement.
“We are happy that the case has been resolved,” Raul spokeswoman Raul, Raul, said.
The Prosecutor's Office did not refer to whether he had received any complaints from the voters about theft of identity or any possible threats arising from the publishing of restricted voter information.
Kansas City, Missouri's lawyer who represents LGIS, Edward Dr. A crime, for investigations from WBEZ about the settlement. The agreement was signed by the company's president, Brian Timbon.
LGIS was dissolved on January 10, 2025, according to the office of the Foreign Minister in Illinois.
The State Council for Elections, which was Raul's office in the case, rejected a spokesman for the commentary.
WBEZ and Chicago Sun-Times previously stated that LGIS has revealed Christmas and home headlines online for more than 6 million voters in Illinois last year, including dozens of federal judges whose places are legally protected.
An analysis of more than 30 LGIS sites has identified home addresses for the participants in a high -level federal drug case that includes a foreign drug cartel; Public prosecutors participating in public corruption cases; Actors and musicians in the prominent Illinois; Chicago Sports Stars. And several billions.
When this analysis was published, tens of thousands of unstable records remained from those records of 6.2 million records for voters that can be publicly accessible through the services that have clips and archive pages of the Internet, including at least one federal judge and a member of the billionaire family that owns the Chicago Cubs.
The Judicial Privacy Law in Illinois, which was yearned in 2012 and was inspired by the murders of a husband and mother of the Federal judge, Joan Levco, publishes the publication of the titles of the judges if the judge requests to remove information. Anyone who publishes such information knowing that it may pose a threat to the judge and the damage that he in reality can be accused.
Last fall, Timbon told WBEZ the burden of protection of judicial addresses with the Illinois Elections Council.
“It is worth noting that we are publishing public records throughout the country for 20 years, and that it is not unusual for countries/provinces to be deserted in their legal obligations such as this reputation,” Timbone wrote in an email at the time. “Legislative laws pass laws like this, but the secretaries of public records in the state do not love names.”
Without providing details, Tympone wrote that his company has “operations that anyone can enforce the law alert us to this so that we can remove their names. This happens frequently.”
The lawsuit was listed in the political host GoP, Dan Bruce, as a LGIS, when it was founded in 2016.
Profit led the Liberty Pacts, which the state's election council provided in 2016, according to the lawsuit.
The Public Prosecutor's Office claimed that PAC's PAC provided this information to LGIS for Publishing. The company merged this information with the voter roll information for the year 2020 it obtained from an unidentified political committee, as it claimed the lawsuit.
Dave McKini covers the policy and government in Illinois, the former head of the Springfield office of Chicago Sun Times.