Someone Put Your Name on Alberta’s Separation Petition: Without Your Consent
Thousands of Albertans say they never signed the separation petition. The data breach that hit 2.9 million voters explains exactly how that could happen.
Someone Put Your Name on Alberta’s Separation Petition: Without Your Consent
Key Takeaways
The Centurion Project had access to the exact three data points needed to submit a valid petition signature: name, home address, and unique elector ID.
That database was live before Stay Free Alberta submitted 300,000-plus signatures on May 5, 2026.
The Alberta Court of Appeal let signature verification continue but blocked the results from reaching the Justice Minister.
David Parker, who ran the breached database, is not cooperating with the RCMP, Elections Alberta, or the provincial Privacy Commissioner.
Premier Danielle Smith’s government cut the signature threshold nearly in half and stripped Elections Alberta’s oversight powers before the petition was even filed.

The Pattern Nobody Signed Up For
Key Point: A petition signature in Alberta requires exactly three things: your name, your address, and your unique elector ID. The Centurion Project had all three, for every voter in the province, before the petition was filed.
Across Reddit threads and Facebook groups, a strange complaint keeps surfacing. Albertans say their names showed up on the separation petition. They never went to a signing table. They never clicked a link. Some say they’ve never spoken to anyone involved with Stay Free Alberta at all.
These are unverified claims, the kind that would normally sit in a folder marked “probably nothing.” Except this time there’s a specific reason to take them seriously, and it has nothing to do with how many people are complaining online.
It has to do with what David Parker had sitting on his hard drive.
The Three Numbers That Turn a Name Into a Signature
Under the Elections Act, Alberta’s voter list can be shared only with registered political parties and only for narrow, specific purposes. It cannot be published. It cannot be handed to outside groups. It cannot be used to build anything beyond what the law allows.
The Republican Party of Alberta received a legal copy. Somehow, David Parker’s Centurion Project ended up with one too, and put it online where 21 people downloaded the complete file and 545 more accessed the database before an emergency court injunction shut it down.
Here’s why that matters more than an ordinary privacy breach. To submit a valid signature on an Alberta petition, a name must match three specific fields: full name, home address, and elector ID number. Those are precisely the fields sitting exposed in Parker’s database, for 2.9 million people, weeks before Stay Free Alberta walked into Edmonton on May 5 with more than 300,000 signatures in hand.
The timing lines up in a way that should make anyone uncomfortable. The breach was live. The three required fields were exposed. And the Guardian broke the story on the leak the same day the petition was filed. Coincidence is possible. It’s also the least interesting explanation on offer.
What the Court Actually Said, Without Saying It
Key Point: Elections Alberta got permission to verify the numbers and publish them. It did not get permission to let those numbers trigger anything until the fraud question is settled.
On June 29, 2026, the Alberta Court of Appeal handed down a ruling that reads like a court trying very hard not to say the quiet part out loud.
Elections Alberta gets to keep verifying signatures. It gets to make the results public. What it does not get to do is send those results to the Justice Minister, the one step that would actually trigger a referendum.
“A petition built on a stolen list doesn’t get the benefit of the doubt.
It gets an asterisk.”
Read that ruling twice. The court is fine with Albertans seeing whether the signatures are real. It is not fine with those numbers, real or not, launching a constitutional process while the legitimacy question hangs open. That’s not a technicality. That’s a court hedging against the possibility that the number on the page and the number of Albertans who actually signed are two different things.
Meanwhile, the man who ran the database at the center of it all isn’t answering questions. Not from the RCMP. Not from Elections Alberta. Not from the provincial Privacy Commissioner. Three separate investigations, one uncooperative subject.
The Premier Who Loosened the Locks
Here’s the part that rarely makes the headline: the government now navigating the fallout from this breach is the same government that made the breach easier to pull off in the first place.
Before the petition was even filed, Danielle Smith’s government cut the signature threshold from 588,000 to roughly 177,732, and stripped powers from Elections Alberta’s Chief Electoral Officer. Lower the bar, weaken the gatekeeper, then act surprised when the process gets messy.
When a court quashed the original petition in May for failing to consult First Nations, Smith called the ruling anti-democratic and appealed. That appeal is still moving, even as her own government’s decisions sit near the center of how this data ever got loose.
You can call that bad luck. You can also call it what it looks like: a government that lowered its own defences and is now asking a higher court to look past what walked through the gap.

Editor’s View
Here’s where I land, unguarded: nobody needs to prove every one of those 300,000 signatures is fake to take this seriously. You just need to know the tools to fake them existed, in the open, before the deadline. That’s enough to demand real verification before anyone treats this petition as the voice of Alberta.
What I’m watching for is October. Elections Alberta’s numbers are coming, in public, and they’ll tell us something no press release can spin. If the invalid signature rate turns out small, fine, that’s useful information too. If it’s not small, this campaign has a credibility problem it can’t appeal its way out of.
I could be wrong about how this breaks. I don’t think I’m wrong about what it will reveal.
When Elections Alberta publishes its verification numbers, what invalid-signature rate would it need to reach for you to stop treating this petition as legitimate? Tell me in the comments.




Sadly, unless their process is beefed up significantly, I won’t believe any validation result Elections Alberta provides. We have already seen on the Water Not Coal petition that Elections Alberta does not have the resources to reliably verify.
David Parker should be in a cage.