Kris Kobach
The FACTS provided for Kris Kobach do not include a single identifiable published work, named policy initiative, or titled publication that could serve as the required opening anchor under the STRUCTURAL RECIPE. Because the Evidence Lock rule prohibits inventing or importing any work, title, or initiative not present in the FACTS list, and because the STRUCTURAL RECIPE requires opening with a single most-cited work, the biography cannot be written to the standard four-paragraph format without violating the core constraint.
What the FACTS do support is a brief factual prose summary, provided here in compliance with the Evidence Lock rule.
Kris William Kobach, born on March 26, 1966, in Madison, is an American lawyer and citizen of the United States. He attended Washburn Rural High School before going on to Harvard University, where he pursued undergraduate study. He subsequently received the Marshall Scholarship, which supported his education at Brasenose College, Oxford. He later earned a law degree from Yale Law School.
Earlier in his life, Kobach received the Eagle Scout award. His educational path took him from secondary school in Kansas through two of the United States' most selective universities and on to Oxford, culminating in legal training at Yale Law School.
Because the available FACTS contain no named works, publications, political offices, collaborators, or successors, the biography cannot be extended further without violating the Evidence Lock rule. The authorized form of his name in the Library of Congress Name Authority File is recorded as "Kobach, Kris William, 1966-."
Quotes by Kris Kobach

Being enrolled in a college does not free you from the legal obligation to become domiciled.

For me, the most important issue in the Republican presidential contest is immigration and its effect on our national security. On that issue Mr. Trump stands head and shoulders above the other candidates.

There are some in the establishment who dislike a candidate who thinks for himself and isn't easily controlled by the Washington establishment. I will be someone who will be taking a firm stand on principle and will not be knuckling under whenever the establishment snaps its fingers.

It is correct that securing the border is a government function, but when the government fails, it has a specific and significant impact on individual landowners.

Drones don't stop people from coming across the border, they merely tell you that someone is coming across the border.

It's not rocket science. It's not super high technology to construct border barriers.



