After losing his bid for governor, Phil Lyman, backed with a conservative national group that has made repeated claims of fraud in elections, is demanding the state turn over a complete list of Utah’s registered voters — including names, addresses and birth dates of police officers and domestic violence victims.
Under Utah law , information cannot be released for those protected groups and other voters who asked to have their data kept private prior to May 2020 — when the law was changed to limit the ability of voters to keep their records confidential.
But Lyman and his attorneys from the Public Interest Legal Foundation (PILF), in a lawsuit filed Friday, argue that the National Voter Registration Act trumps state law and requires the lieutenant governor to provide Lyman with the compl