Posted on 07/18/2002 2:36:22 PM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum
Secret rule demanding 'Your Papers Please' claimed unconstitutional San Francisco - Civil libertarian John Gilmore today challenged as unconstitutional a secret federal rule that requires domestic US travelers to identify themselves. "United States courts have recognized for more than a century that honest citizens have the right to travel throughout America without government restrictions. Some people say that everything changed on 9/11, but patriots have stood by our Constitution through centuries of conflict and uncertainty. Any government that tracks its citizens' movements and associations, or restricts their travel using secret decrees, is violating that Constitution," said Gilmore. "With this case, I hope to redirect government anti-terrorism efforts away from intrusive yet useless measures such as ID checks, confiscation of tweezers, and database surveillance of every traveler's life." At issue is a series of secret security directives issued by the Federal Aviation Administration and/or the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), in consultation with the Department of Justice and the Office of Homeland Security. The directives appear to require US airlines to demand identification before allowing customers to travel. Because the directives are secret, no citizen actually knows what they require. On July 4, Southwest Airlines staff prevented Gilmore from boarding a pre-paid flight from Oakland to Washington, D.C, where he intended to petition the government to alter the ID check. He then went to San Francisco International Airport and tried to purchase a similar ticket on United Airlines. Both airlines, though unable to identify any actual regulation requiring him to identify himself, prevented him from flying. United stated that they were following an unwritten regulation that had only been communicated to them orally, and which changes frequently. "History shows many abuses when government agents can demand 'your papers, please!'" said Bill Simpich, an Oakland civil rights lawyer, and lead attorney in Gilmore's suit. "TSA plans to deploy 'CAPPS II' later this year. This will use your ID to search in a stew of databases like credit records, previous travel history, criminal records, motor vehicle records, banks, web searches, and companies that collect personal information from consumer transactions. Your life history will be gathered and scanned, using secret criteria, whenever you book a flight or arrive at an airport. If the machine decides you're a risk, the airline will not let you fly, and federal cops will show up to interrogate you. They will probably tell you that you were 'randomly' selected for all this attention, but they will be lying." Gilmore v. Ashcroft, filed today in Federal Court for the Northern District of California, challenges every secret regulation that demands identification from innocent citizens, or restricts their domestic travel. Such regulations are unconstitutional because they are unpublished; require government agents to search and seize citizens who are not suspected of crimes; burden the rights to travel, associate, and petition the government; and discriminate against those who choose anonymity. The case also argues that because the regulations are secret, they violate the Freedom of Information Act. Mr. Gilmore is a businessman, civil libertarian, and philanthropist. He was the fifth employee of Sun Microsystems, an early author of open source software, and co- creator of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the Cypherpunks, the DES Cracker, and the Internet's "alt" newsgroups. He serves as a director on several for-profit and nonprofit boards. The legal complaint, FAQ, and other case documents can be found at: http://cryptome.org/freetotravel.htm Contacts: John Gilmore - plaintiff William Simpich - lead counsel David Greene - First Amendment Project. Contact FAP for comments on the burdening of the right to petition the government. Linda Ackerman - Privacyactivism.org. Contact for CAPPS I and II profiling issues.
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The injury is that the requirement is based on unconstitutional "secret laws".
If the government wants to issue regulations requiring photo ID, then it should do so ACCORDING TO LAW, not by promulgating "secret regulations". That is one of the major reasons this country was founded.
In case you hadn't noticed, all the people who were involved in the September 11th atrocity were very easily identifiable.
The WTC attack did not occur because Americans have too much freedom.
It occurred because:
Evidently people like you believe that America should now become a prison in lock-down mode. I hope you get your wish, you little coward.
You are right. I will try it again.
The WTC attack did not occur because Americans have too much freedom.
It occurred because:
Ok . . . while that is nice, you still have yet to establish how checking ID's makes your plane ride any safer.
I will guess from your lack of reasoned response that you actually don't have any idea how checking ID's makes a plane ride safer. Until you've got a point, please don't respond :-).
Thanks. It's probably my favorite because of the message it brings.
I'm not a smoker, but smoking is the clearest and one of the most recent examples. It all started with no smoking on flights of less than 2 hours and that was all there was supposed to be. All you have to do is look at how smokers are treated now to see how far we have slid down the slope.
Guns and gunowners have been demonized for years and now it's at the point where people go into a tizzy over arming pilots. What's next?
Stuff like this opposing ID'ing ones self before boarding a plane will gaurantee their position on politics' outer limits, outside looking in, for all eternity.
The rule is "Secret"? Hmmmmm. I've been asked to show my ID before flights for at least 5 years. I don't think it is a secret.
But, wait! I see! It makes the story much more interesting to have it sound like some sort of secret conspiracy.
Ive read enough.
But since we now have Federalized airport security, the rules change. As a Federal official, an airport security person has the same status as a cop. The courts for years have stated that anyone acting under the orders of a law enforcement officer or working in collusion with a law enforcement officer fall under the same rules as a cop, Miranda, entrapment, probable cause, etc.
Therefore, searches of private property by Federalized airport security agents without probable cause will likely be ruled unconsititional.
Whoops. I guess that Ashcroft and Mineta didn't consider that when they proposed federalizing airport security.
As long is it is illegal for a cop to demand ID of a citizen in the passenger seat of a private automobile and then search them if they refuse to produce it, it will be wrong to do the same to an airline passenger. That's assuming no probable cause, of course.
A cop can ask you to provide ID at any time, but it's not required to have ID to walk down a public road. Unless you've broken some law, he can't require you to present ID. Same goes for a Federal cop in the airport. A private company can restrict you from using their property unless you show ID. A cop can't.
The guy that filed this suit is right.
Speak to the issue. How is this rule "secret" if everyone knows that they are doing it?
They are doing it, but the "rule" they are using is secret. You can't read it. It is an unplublished law. There will be lots more unpublished laws if the imaginary safety over freedom crowd has its way.
Freedom is what made this country great. Wimps like you will give it all up in a heartbeat.
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