Traveling through TSA and the Biometric Data Program
LAWFUL DECLARATION OF PRIVACY RIGHTS AND NOTICE OF NON-CONSENT TO BIOMETRIC SURVEILLANCEBy a Free American National, Not a Federal Citizen nor Resident of Washington, D.C. To: Transportation Security Administration (TSA), U.S. Department of Homeland Security, and all agents, officers, and contractors acting under color of law From: [Your Full Name, styled as "John Doe, American National of the [Republic State]"] Date: [Insert Date] Subject: Lawful Refusal of Biometric Data Capture and Assertion of Rights under the Constitution for the united States of America I. STANDING AND STATUS I, [Your Full Name], being a free, sovereign American National born or naturalized within the constitutional jurisdiction of one of the 50 sovereign States united under the Constitution for the united States of America, do not consent to be treated as a "U.S. citizen" as defined in 8 U.S.C. § 1401 or as a subject of federal legislative jurisdiction confined to Washington, D.C., territories, or possessions. My allegiance is to the constitutional republic, not the corporate federal municipality known as "UNITED STATES" or any of its administrative sub-agencies. II. NON-CONSENT TO SEARCH AND BIOMETRICS I hereby give formal and lawful notice that I do not consent to: - The capture, scanning, photographing, mapping, or storing of my facial features or any other biometric identifier by any TSA or government-affiliated technology or personnel; - The use of facial recognition, AI surveillance, or digital ID systems as a condition of travel within the 50 states or across state lines; - Any form of implied or presumed consent by silence, acquiescence, or presence in a federalized transportation zone. Such acts constitute a search and seizure of private biological property under the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution and violate my natural, inalienable rights. III. LAWFUL BASIS FOR THIS DECLARATION This assertion is based upon: - The Fourth Amendment: securing the people in their persons, houses, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures. - The Ninth and Tenth Amendments: preserving rights not delegated to the federal government and reserving powers to the People and the States. - TSA’s Public Statement of Policy: confirming that biometric screening (including facial recognition) is voluntary and that manual ID verification must be available. - The Privacy Act of 1974 (5 U.S.C. § 552a): which prohibits federal agencies from collecting or disclosing personal data without legal authority and individual consent.