In light of the fact that the entire presidential election turned on the importance of rigorous information-security practices, it’s fitting that we learned more about Donald Trump’s likely plans for immigration enforcement and voting rights from sloppy document-handling than from anything the president-elect has said publicly.

On Sunday, Trump stood for a photo-op with Kris Kobach, the arch-restrictionist Kansas secretary of state, who is in the running to serve in the coming administration.

Twenty-four hours later, an eagle-eyed reporter for the Topeka Capital-Journal noticed that Kobach posed for the photo with sensitive documents detailing his plans for the Department of Homeland Security visible to the camera.

Most of the visible text of the document pertains to policy ideas that would flesh out Trump’s proposed Muslim ban and “extreme vetting” of “high-risk aliens.”

But Kobach isn’t only known for being extremely hostile to Muslims and immigrants—Mitt Romney’s “self deportation” proposal was Kobach’s brainchild. He’s also known for supporting maximally draconian voter suppression laws. So it’s no surprise that Kobach’s memo included partially obscured allusions to the “voter rolls” and “draft amendments” to a law—apparently the National Voter Registration Act—that is intended to make it easier for citizens to get on the voter rolls and stay on them.