How Inaccurate are Government Databases in Identifying Whether People are Illegal Aliens?: There are Real Problems.
Ohio and Iowa have sued the Biden administration because the administration is refusing to let states verify whether registered voters are noncitizens. Even without access to this data, Ohio was able to identify some noncitizens who were registered to vote. But even if the Biden administration allowed states had been allowed to check citizenship, the checks would likely miss identifying noncitizens. A recent example of these problems can be seen with an illegal alien continually getting through NICS background checks in Ohio. The NICS checks are supposed to determine if someone is a citizen or a resident alien, but they obviously failed.
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The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives began investigating and watching [Carlos] Serrano-Restrepo after he purchased at least 22 firearms, and claimed to be a U.S. citizen on the firearms forms. Agents conducted a search of his home and seized roughly 170 firearms, tens of thousands of rounds of ammunition and smoke/marine markers. . . . He also owns a business that remediates fire and flooding damage. . . .
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As a side note, Texas identified 95,000 non-citizens who were registered to vote and 58,000 actually voted.