Tamil Nadu’s deleted electors list reveals major anomalies across 75,018 polling stations. Over 97 lakh electors were deleted, but an analysis found eight key issues needing scrutiny. Some polling stations showed alarming trends such as large numbers of young deaths, high gender bias, and excessive deletions. For example, 14 stations reported many deaths of people under 50, with Madavaram’s Government Model Higher Secondary School showing 49 out of 58 deaths below age 50. Thirty-five stations had deletions heavily biased towards women — over 75% of deleted voters were female. More than 8,600 stations recorded deletions exceeding 260 electors, double the average rate. Several polling stations reported deaths far above the norm; 727 had more than 108 deaths deleted. Data also showed 3,904 stations where over 75% of deletions were death-related, and 495 stations where all deleted electors were marked as deceased. Additionally, 6,139 stations had a large number of voters marked "absent," with some stations like Prince Matriculation Higher Secondary School in Shozhinganallur deleting 549 voters due to absence. There were also anomalies related to women marked as permanently shifted; in 172 polling stations, women made up 75% or more of those deleted for shifting. The detailed polling station-level data was downloaded from the Tamil Nadu Election Commission and analyzed for these patterns. These findings raise critical questions about voter roll accuracy and the reasons behind such mass deletions.