THE APEX TIMES
Outlet Report: DOJ and DHS Launch Joint Election Integrity Website With Enforcement Map
A report says the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division and the Department of Homeland Security launched a joint webpage featuring an interactive map of federal election-related enforcement actions.
The Justice Department and the Department of Homeland Security launched a joint website focused on “election integrity,” according to a report published July 17 by Zero Hedge. The webpage, the outlet said, includes an interactive map intended to compile and present federal enforcement activity tied to election security, transparency, and integrity.
Zero Hedge reported that the effort was conducted by the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division and DHS, and that the launch occurred on Thursday, July 16 or July 17, 2026, depending on time zone. The report also said the site is designed to make it easier for the public to view where federal election-related enforcement has occurred.
The outlet’s description said the site presents an interactive map that highlights federal enforcement actions. However, the provided materials do not include an official Department of Justice or DHS announcement, the final URL for the website, or confirmation of the site’s specific feature set and data sources.
Because the central claim is an official-action announcement, Apex Times requires additional confirmation from primary or official records to describe the launch as definitively DOJ and DHS-authored. As of this draft, official confirmation or was not found in the supplied materials.
The Civil Rights Division and DHS have overlapping roles in election-related investigations and related public-facing efforts, but the report does not specify which particular cases or categories are displayed on the map, nor does it provide details on criteria for inclusion, update frequency, or how the tool is maintained.
Once official records are located, the next factual step is to verify what the website actually contains (for example, whether it covers civil rights enforcement, immigration-related election investigations, or other federal activities), and to confirm whether DOJ and DHS provide methodology, dates, and citations for the information presented.
If the interactive map is maintained as a public compliance and awareness tool, its practical effect would be to centralize information about federal election enforcement for the public and potentially for election administrators, while also clarifying what federal authorities have said they are focusing on in election-security and integrity efforts. The precise scope and legal basis for the site’s content require confirmation from official sources.
Why It Matters
- A public, interactive enforcement map could affect how the public tracks federal election-related enforcement activity and understands where actions have occurred.
- Because the report centers on DOJ and DHS, official confirmation is important for determining the accuracy, scope, and legal authority behind the information presented.
- If implemented as a continuing resource, it may require ongoing updates and clear methodology to avoid confusion about which federal actions are covered.
- Verification will determine whether the site focuses on civil rights enforcement, DHS-related election security enforcement, or a broader set of federal activities.
Sources
- Zero Hedge report published July 17, 2026
- DOJ staff-profile cache (context only, not confirmation of the website launch)
- DOJ staff-profile cache (context only, not confirmation of the website launch)
- Department of Justice News: CGrivner - Executive Assistant United States Attorney
- Department of Justice News: JPoland - Chief of Staff
- Department of Justice News: MReboso - Executive Assistant United States Attorney
Key Facts
- Zero Hedge reported on July 17, 2026, that the Justice Department and DHS launched a joint “election integrity” website.
- The report said the site includes an interactive map of federal enforcement actions tied to election security and related transparency goals.
- Zero Hedge attributed the effort to the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division and DHS.
- The materials provided do not include an official or announcement or the confirmed website URL.
- No details in the supplied packet identify what categories of enforcement are included or how the map’s data is compiled and updated.