Make Sure Your ID Matches Your Ticket…

Posted by Dave Mark on Oct 24, 2009 in Business |

The Transportation and Safety Administration is starting a program requiring the name on your government issued ID and the name on your airline ticket to match exactly. That means if your middle name is on your drivers license, it has to be on your ticket.

The program is known as Secure Flight. Here’s a link to the TSA website that discusses the program.

Here’s an article that discusses the program.

If you plan on flying, read both. Best to know about this stuff before you miss a flight because you didn’t follow the rules…

– Dave

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6 Comments

AJ
Oct 24, 2009 at 2:59 pm

Also watch out for nicknames. I know a lot of folks who go by “Bill” Lastname in real life who got an airline ticket for “Bill” Lastname, but then could not get on a flight because their driver license said “William Lastname”. Ditto for all the Bob/Robert’s, Pat/Patricia’s, Steve/Stephen, Dick/Richard’s out there….


 
remy vanherweghem
Oct 24, 2009 at 3:15 pm

But wasn’t that always the case? My name is printed with an accentuated character (é) on my passport and I had trouble with KLM once because of that… and it was in 2004 or 2005!


 
Dave Mark
Oct 24, 2009 at 3:17 pm

Excellent point, AJ. Have to watch out for my tendency to buy tickets under Dave Mark. It’s David R. Mark. OK, got it… :)

– Dave


 
Dave Mark
Oct 24, 2009 at 3:27 pm

I believe it was always up to the airlines to enforce and now it will become mandatory policy…

– Dave


 
Stu Mark
Oct 24, 2009 at 10:19 pm

I’m a staunch supporter of the rights given to me by the Constitution of the United States. I believe that until legislation by Congress overturns any right guaranteed me in the Constitution or until the Supreme Court overturns any Constitutional guarantee, I get to stand behind that document, with the full knowledge that it is the last word on my personal freedoms.

With regard to travel within the United States, the Constitution provides a pretty clear right of travel. While not explicitly stated, my right to travel without identification or investigation is guaranteed in several sections of the Constitution.

First, take a look at the Privileges and Immunities Clause in Article IV, which states, “The Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the several States.” – In other words, if I don’t need identification to travel within the borders of the state of Nebraska, if I cross the border into Kansas, I do not need identification, as the Nebraska privilege applies in Kansas. This means that if I am riding a bike and I cross the border, if there is no probable cause, the Kansas police cannot stop me and demand identification because I traveled from Nebraska. Article IV’s Privileges and Immunities Clause guarantees me safe passage, with full protection from federal government interference.

So if I take a plane instead of a bike, the rule still covers me. I am a citizen and the Constitution defends me against the need for any papers identifying who I am (assuming a lack of probable cause).

And if Article IV isn’t enough, I am further protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. Section 1 states: “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.”

This clearly makes the request/demand for identification when traveling by plane (within the United States) unconstitutional. If I am acting in a manner that is, within a reasonable doubt, perceived as lawful, the 14th Amendment protects me, as it grants me immunity as a citizen of the United States.

And if anyone questions my conclusion stated here, I respectfully point them to the 1966 US Supreme Court decision in United States v. Guest. The Court, debating the rights of African-Americans traveling between states, held, in part, “As construed to protect Fourteenth Amendment rights § 241 is not unconstitutionally vague, since, by virtue of its being a conspiracy statute it operates only against an offender acting with specific intent to infringe the right in question (Screws v. United States, 325 U. S. 91) and the right to equal use of public facilities described in the indictment has been made definite by decisions of this Court”

This language makes it clear – if I am not acting in an unlawful manner or suspected of acting in an unlawful manner, I retain the right to equal use of public facilities. Airlines are public facilities. I get to fly without identification (from state to state).

Our government, despite all of the above, requests identification from those lawful citizens traveling from one state to another via an airplane. Most folks provide their i.d., but a few haven’t, and litigation has followed. One such example is John Gilmore, who refused to identify himself when attempting to fly to Washington, DC in July of 2002. He stood his ground, requesting that the TSA agents provide him proof of any law that required his identification in order to lawfully travel within the U.S. It turned into a scene (as this was not too long after 9/11 and the US government was clamping down hard, in the name of security, under the guise of protecting the citizenry. Eventually Mr. Gilmore sued the Attorney General of the United States (John Ashcroft). The case was heard in US District Court, where the case was found in favor of the plaintiff. The language that bears focus is the concluding finding: “In regards to the right to travel issue which counsel argues they should not be liable for, again, this goes right back to the secret law issue, as to whether or not they have the right to demand id or not. We do not know what that law is because it’s not been published. The government has stated, as we mentioned in our addendum that the airlines are not mandated to demand, merely request it.”

I plead with my fellow Americans to never give our government license to arbitrarily overturn or ignore the Constitution, under any circumstance. Each of us, individually and collectively, deserve full protection under the law, for the law is what protects us from the government.

“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.” —Benjamin Franklin


 
Allen
Oct 25, 2009 at 1:54 am

Stu,

WELL SAID !!!!!!!!!!!!!!


 

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