Iowa Election Fraud Cases Raise Questions About Scope and Results
Election Integrity Cases Yield More Acquittals Than Convictions So Far
Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird’s ongoing effort to prosecute alleged illegal voting cases has produced mixed results, with several cases ending in acquittals despite the administration’s emphasis on election integrity.
Since taking office in 2023, Bird has made election security a major focus of her office. As of June 2026, eight individuals have been charged with election-related offenses involving allegations that people not legally authorized to vote either cast ballots or attempted to vote in Iowa elections.
Of the first six cases filed, four have reached trial or resolution. Three defendants were acquitted. Most recently, a Sioux City jury found Jose Lozano Munoz not guilty of illegally registering and voting in multiple elections during 2022 and 2023.
One defendant, Jorge Sanchez Vasquez, was convicted in Marshall County and received a deferred judgment. Another defendant, Irving Ahumada Geronimo, was convicted in 2025, but a judge later granted a new trial after determining improper testimony had been allowed during proceedings. The state is appealing that ruling. A sixth defendant, Itzel Romero Lopez, is scheduled to stand trial in Johnson County in July.
Bird’s office has also filed two additional cases in 2026, bringing the total number of election-related prosecutions to eight. One involves allegations of illegal voting in a 2023 election. The other is the first criminal case connected to Iowa’s 2024 election cycle, following a voter registration audit conducted by the Secretary of State’s office.
According to Iowa Secretary of State Paul Pate, the audit identified 40 noncitizens who allegedly voted or attempted to vote in the 2024 election and 277 noncitizens who appeared on Iowa voter registration rolls.
Election fraud remains a politically charged issue nationally and in Iowa. Supporters of Bird’s efforts argue that even a small number of illegal votes can undermine public confidence in elections, particularly in close races where outcomes may be decided by narrow margins. “We’ve seen firsthand in Iowa that elections can be determined by very few votes, so it’s crucial every vote is a legal vote,” Bird’s office said in a statement.
Critics, however, point to the relatively small number of cases identified compared to the millions of votes cast in Iowa elections and note that several prosecutions have failed to result in convictions.
The cases arrive as Bird seeks reelection in 2026 against Democratic challenger Nate Willems. The outcome of the remaining prosecutions may further shape the debate over how Iowa balances election security, voter access, and the use of state resources in pursuing election-related investigations.
Our Take
Every legal vote should count, and every illegal vote should be investigated. Those principles should not be controversial. But accountability also requires measuring results.
After several years of investigations and prosecutions, Iowa voters now have enough information to ask reasonable questions about outcomes.
How widespread is the problem? How many cases have been identified? How many convictions have been secured? How much time and public money are being devoted to these efforts?
The numbers reported so far suggest that illegal voting exists, but appears to be relatively uncommon. At the same time, election integrity remains an important public concern that deserves attention.
The challenge for policymakers is finding the proper balance between protecting elections and ensuring that enforcement efforts remain proportionate to the scope of the problem.
Voters can reasonably disagree about where that balance should be found. What they should not have to do is rely on political rhetoric alone. The public deserves transparent reporting of both the allegations and the outcomes.
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