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Federal Court Approves Landmark Settlement Between Voting Rights Advocates and Private Security Company Charged with Voter Intimidation

Press Release / Last Updated:

League of Women Voters of Minnesota and Minnesota chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations reach an agreement with Atlas Aegis to settle a Voting Rights Act lawsuit via a consent decree

MINNEAPOLIS—A federal judge today approved a sweeping settlement in a lawsuit brought by voting rights advocates against a private security contractor, Atlas Aegis, for illegal voter intimidation in Minnesota. The League of Women Voters of Minnesota (LWVMN) and the Minnesota chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-MN) celebrated the settlement as a major victory for democracy.

Today, Judge Brasel approved a consent decree that resolves all remaining claims in the lawsuit. Under the consent decree, which lasts until January 1, 2025, Atlas Aegis and its chairman, Anthony Caudle, are:  

  • Prohibited from deploying armed agents within 250 feet of (or otherwise monitoring) any early voting location during early voting, a polling place on election day, places where ballots are being counted, recounted, or canvassed; or where county canvassing boards or the State Canvassing Board are meeting to canvass, inspect, or declare the results of that election; or where Minnesota’s presidential electors are meeting to vote in the presidential general election.   

  • Prohibited from otherwise taking any action to intimidate, threaten, or coerce voters, people aiding voters, or people engaged in tabulating, counting, or reporting votes.   

  • Required to notify CAIR-MN and LWVMN in writing 25 days before any federal election if they are supplying security personnel for any non-election-related protective services (e.g., providing security for an art exhibition or concert) where armed security personnel may be visible to the public within 250 feet of a polling place on election day.   

Any violations of the consent decree will be enforceable as contempt of court.  

“Today’s agreement ensures that Minnesota voters, especially voters of color, will be able to cast their ballots without fear of intimidation from armed vigilantes,” said Michelle Witte, executive director of the League of Women Voters of Minnesota. “The undeniable basis of Atlas Aegis’s planned deployment of armed agents to polling places was racism. We will always stand up to voter suppression in all forms, violent or systemic—especially when it targets voters of color.”

“Following violent attacks on our institutions and threats of further violent intimidation from armed insurrectionists, the League found it essential to stand with our partners at CAIR to strengthen the legal protections for voters of color,” said Celina Stewart, chief counsel of the League of Women Voters of the United States. “A right to cast one’s ballot freely, without coercion or intimidation, is the essence of a true democracy.” 

“America’s strength is our democracy, which is built on free and fair elections. Atlas Aegis planned a professional military-style action to intimidate minority voters in Minnesota, a clear threat to our democracy. On January 6th, our nation witnessed an insurrection fuel by the same efforts that propelled Atlas Aegis and others to undermine our democracy,” said Jaylani Hussein, executive director of CAIR-MN.  

“The 2020 election and its aftermath tested our ability to hold free and fair elections and a peaceful transfer of power,” said Ron Fein, legal director of Free Speech For People. “This consent decree will help ensure that Minnesotans can vote without fear of intimidation.” 

“I am proud to have represented the Council on American-Islamic Relations--Minnesota and the League of Women Voters of Minnesota in this case. The right to vote is one of the most precious rights of every American citizen, and it is our job as lawyers to protect that right,” said Julia Dayton Klein, partner at Lathrop GPM. “Today, we protected this right for all Minnesotans regardless of race, religion, or gender.”

In October 2020, CAIR-MN and LWVMN, represented by lawyers from Free Speech For People and two private law firms, sued Atlas Aegis and Caudle for a plan to hire and deploy armed ex-soldiers to polling sites in the state.  

The complaint cited an advertisement for armed security on election day in the Minneapolis/St. Paul metro area that appeared on job posting websites on October 6, 2020, as well as interviews with Caudle in the Washington Post confirming the authenticity of the advertisements and threatening to send ex-special forces soldiers to guard polling places in Minnesota from “antifas” and those who support “Black Lives Matter.”  

The City of St. Paul and the City of Minneapolis submitted filings in support of the lawsuit. On October 29, 2020, Judge Nancy Brasel of the U.S. District Court in Minnesota issued a preliminary injunction banning Atlas Aegis or Caudle from deploying armed agents near polling places in the November 2020 election. 

The plaintiffs in this case were represented by Free Speech For People (a nonpartisan nonprofit legal advocacy organization), Lathrop GPM LLP in Minneapolis, and Emery Celli Brinckerhoff Abady Ward & Maazel LLP in New York.   

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PRESS CONTACT: Kayla Vix | 202-809-9668 | [email protected]

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