A judge has granted an injunction ordering an Alberta separatist group to remove from its website a database of private information – including names and addresses — of close to three million provincial voters.

The Edmonton judge granted the injunction Thursday morning at the request of Elections Alberta, which is investigating how the official elector list was obtained by the separatist group.

Joey Redman, a lawyer for the elections agency, told Court of King’s Bench Justice John Little that the information on the list, and therefore in the database, is “incredibly confidential.”

“Every elector in Alberta who has cast a ballot is included on that list, including people in very sensitive positions,” Redman said.

Redman said the agency believes the list was originally given legally to the pro-independence Republican Party of Alberta. But that list allegedly ended up in the hands of a pro-separation group called the Centurion Project, which created a publicly accessible database of the private information.

Redman said the agency has yet to confirm how the list managed to change hands.

“I don’t know whether it was provided by a representative of the Republican Party. I don’t know if the list was left out on a desk and somebody picked it up,” he said.

Under provincial law, only political parties, members of the legislature, prospective candidates and constituency associations are given copies of the voter list. It can only be used to solicit donations, recruit party members and communicate with electors.

Redman said that every individual list distributed by the agency is seeded with fake names to allows investigators to track who uses it.

He said investigators acting on information from an anonymous tipster probed the database published by the Centurion Project and matched the fake names to a list given to the Republican Party in 2025.

The Centurion Project is led by longtime political organizer David Parker, who has said its goal is to recruit and identify those who support the idea of Alberta separating from Canada ahead of a potential referendum this fall.

Parker didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. On social media Thursday, he said anyone claiming there was a privacy breach “is a liar.”

The Canadian Press confirmed that the Centurion Project’s online database lists the home addresses of the province’s prominent politicians, top elections official, senators, judges and Crown prosecutors — information not publicly available through public online telephone databases.

Parker is best known for organizing a grassroots movement called Take Back Alberta. It helped organize United Conservative party members to cast ballots to take down former premier Jason Kenney in a confidence vote. It later helped galvanize support to help Danielle Smith win a party race to take Kenney’s place.

Smith went on to become premier in her own right in the 2023 election. 

She attended Parker’s wedding. But two years ago, she distanced herself from him over some of his social media posts personally criticizing federal Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre and his wife — posts that prompted Smith to tell Parker to “delete his X account and get some help.”

Early last year, Elections Alberta fined Parker and Take Back Alberta more than $100,000 for a range of violations.

Cameron Davies, leader of the Republican Party, told The Canadian Press Thursday it has not been officially contacted by Elections Alberta.

He said the party issued a notice to the Centurion Project that any information the group may have allegedly received — if it came from the party — is not to be used.

“We were proactive on that before the injunction today, and we’ll be fully complying with Elections Alberta,” Davies said.

The fact Elections Alberta went public at all is unusual. It’s prohibited under law from commenting on or even confirming investigations. But in a statement Thursday, the agency said it felt it was critical Albertans be aware of the data breach. It has notified the province’s information and privacy commissioner.

Opposition NDP leader Naheed Nenshi said his party did not leak the database and said the Republican Party should be deregistered if it did.

“It’s dangerous, it puts people’s lives at risk, and it puts our democracy at risk,” Nenshi said. 

Progressive Tory Party leader Peter Guthrie said his party doesn’t have an elector list but would never consider doing such a thing. “That would run directly counter to the standards we’re committed to,” he said.

Dave Prisco, the spokesperson for the United Conservative Party, said in a statement: “The UCP did not provide the list of electors to any unauthorized outside group or individual. Any suggestion to the contrary is false.”

Breaches of the law that dictates use of the voter list can lead to fines of up to $100,000 and imprisonment of one year.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 30, 2026.

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