UPDATE: The New York Board of Elections says Kushner never registered as a woman, and was listed as a female as a result of a database error.

Jared Kushner, President Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser, was registered as a woman when he voted in November’s election, according to a report on Wednesday.

Records from the New York State Board of Elections show Kushner’s gender is listed as “female” on the registration dated Nov. 24, 2009, and that he didn’t declare a party affiliation, Wired reported.

The report doesn’t say whether there was a mixup or whether Kushner filled out the form incorrectly, but does go on to chronicle other problems the husband of Trump’s daughter Ivanka has had with other paperwork.

It says that Kushner, who’s among a number of administration officials being scrutinized for their contacts with Russian officials during the presidential election, had to update a federal disclosure form so he could get a security clearance three times.

Kushner, who’s been tasked by Trump with bringing peace to the Middle East, initially filed the form in January and listed no foreign contacts. He later claimed that his staff had accidentally emailed the document before fully filling it out. He then filed an amended form.

He tried to update the form once again in May, adding more than 100 calls and meetings with foreign contacts, but then it was revealed that he attended a meeting in June 2016 with Donald Trump Jr. at Trump Tower with a Kremlin-linked lawyer who had said she had dirt on Hillary Clinton that could help the campaign.

In June, he submitted the form once again, noting the meeting with “the person who has since been identified as a Russian attorney.”

A spokesman for American Bridge, a group that monitors Republicans, said he wonders how Kushner can accomplish anything for the White House if he can’t handle simple paperwork.

“Kushner can’t even fill out the most basic paperwork without screwing it up, so it’s a mystery why anyone thinks he’s somehow going to bring peace to the Middle East,” Brad Bainum told Wired.