Member Submission: Passport Branding Provision Expands

A Saudi citizen enters his country’s consulate to make a notice of marriage and is instead held against his will, murdered, and dismembered. He was said to be an enemy of the state, no matter where he lived.

An American citizen enters her country’s consulate to make a similar notice. She survives. But her passport is revoked and then reissued with a special mark stating that she poses a danger to the public, no matter where she lives.

The Saudi did nothing other than speak out against the regime in his country. The American did nothing other than send a naked selfie of herself to her boyfriend many years ago when both were teenagers.

Are these comparable cases? Perhaps not. But they both involve the same principle: consular protection. This principle holds that countries do not place their own citizens at risk in another country. Instead they are obligated to protect them.

In recent years some countries have violated this principle. The Saudi case of Jamal Khashoggi is an extreme example, but other countries have used their consulates and consular activities to track, persecute, punish, and monitor their own citizens who have made themselves unpopular at home. The USA now joins this club.

How did that happen? Back in 2016 Congress passed a law called the International Megan’s Law (IML). It singled out US citizens with certain criminal convictions for a new regime regarding their international travel. Not only do they have to notify authorities in advance of their journey but the US Department of Homeland Security also notifies the countries where they plan to go. In order to accomplish this the DHS established a special bureaucracy called “Angel Watch”.

The IML also included a provision at the behest of Senator Richard Shelby to place a “unique identifier” in the passports of such Americans. Was Senator Shelby aware that the only other country to do something like this to passports was Nazi Germany? Who knows; but the provision was included in the law.

At first the State Department placed a sentence on the endorsements page at the back of the passport book. The “unique identifier” has since been moved to the front of the passport book. Whenever the bearer of a passport goes to rent a car, check in a hotel, or do any number of other daily tasks abroad that require a passport check, whoever opens the passport will see a sentence identifying this person as someone who sexually abused a child.

Until now the main effect of the IML has been to ban such people from entering most countries outside Western Europe. This interference with normal travel has brought about a great deal of harm in lost businesses, families, and property. With the new provision, that damage is likely to grow. Americans already living in other countries will also be singled out as dangerous individuals, with no policy to protect them, no matter how long they have been legal residents of these countries and no matter what those countries’ laws and culture dictate should happen to people who are declared to be a threat to public safety.

That’s because a new bill just signed into law, S. 3946, extends the passport rule to these people as well. Unlike the IML, which claimed a need to prevent sex tourism, this new law states no rationale or basis for the provision, leaving open the possibility of adding other unpopular groups of people in the future. It simply amends existing anti-terror and anti-human trafficking legislation to require a mark on the passports of more Americans no matter where they are in the world.

The bill, now law, also enhances international “information sharing” whereby the US Department of Homeland Security may provide information about American registrants to the governments of other countries, presumably going beyond what is stated in the passport. What information? Police reports? DNA? Addresses of relatives? What will happen with this information? The law leaves all this up to the discretion of the Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security.

S. 3946 passed both the Senate and the House at the very end of the Congressional session without having been debated in any committee or receiving a roll call vote in either chamber. It’s hard to believe that many members of Congress know that they just drove a spike through the heart of one of the oldest and most sacred norms of international relations (consular protection), not to mention the “rules-based international order” the Biden administration is always talking about.

Whether anyone will mount a legal challenge to this law before a great deal more damage is done isn’t known. But now that the policy has been expanded, it’s likely to continue doing so as passports function less as documents of state protection than as articles of moral denunciation for a significant number of citizens.

The historian Timothy Snyder put it well in a recent PBS documentary about the culpability of the US State Department in the Holocaust: “what holds the body and soul together is a passport”. And as a recent BBC documentary on passports (“The Price of Citizenship”) noted, “citizenship is something existential”.

Still, to many people this may not seem like that big of a deal. Aren’t registrants already treated like second class citizens in a thousand different ways? Yes. But the passport has a special significance. It is the single most important document of citizenship a human being can have. And now the US government has made it an official policy to use that document to deny equal state protection to an entire class of its citizens anywhere in the world.

38 thoughts on “Member Submission: Passport Branding Provision Expands

  • January 21, 2023 at 10:59 pm
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    No committee debate and yet passed both houses? Then signed by Biden?

    Hey Gail, can you send a letter (not an email) to President Biden and enclose a copy of this very well thought out post?

    It’s important that he & the government be confronted with this kind of fascist actions. Am I the only one that feels like I’m living in 1930s Germany? I thought Trump was bad but now we have DeSantis and now the Democrats are proving to quietly be just as bad. God help us all.

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    • January 22, 2023 at 1:22 am
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      These tactics REEK of Nazi-ism!!! The Nazis were an especially repugnant brand of fascism!

      Imagine a country forcibly “registering” certain citizens deemed, by populist sentiment, to be “undesirables”!!!

      Imagine a country stamping the passports of certain citizens deemed, by populist sentiment, to be “undesirables” With marks that guarantee their escape from state persecution virtually impossible!!!

      Imagine state sponsored hatred and second-class citizenship!!!!

      Don’t call me a radical when I compare these tactics to Nazi-ism and Jim Crow!!!

      Please remember that half-measures are anathema to our cause of Liberty!!

      ALL public registries MUST be abolished!

      UNITED we must stand!

      Stop thinking of people who speak as I do as radicals…

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      • January 22, 2023 at 6:12 pm
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        I’m with you on this. We don’t make these statements to get sympathy from the world, but to awaken our population to act and advocate among those sympathetic to us as individuals.

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      • January 22, 2023 at 8:16 pm
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        You’re not a radical and I think most of us share your thinking to at least some degree and we are all aggrieved by the oppression we endure. I will leave you with a bit of wisdom from a suffering Irishman.
        “Choose silence of all virtues, for by it you hear other men’s imperfections, and conceal your own.”— George Bernard Shaw

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        • January 22, 2023 at 10:13 pm
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          Silence is tacit complicity!
          Silence is tacit consent!

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        • January 22, 2023 at 10:21 pm
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          Furthermore:
          I was imprisoned and lost my liberty – and rightly and fairly so! I committed crimes!
          But, I EARNED my freedom by paying my debt to society.
          I will never be silent when my liberty has been infringed unjustly!!
          I will be a very squeaky squeaky wheel as long as I am being tyrannized.
          I DID MY TIME !!! I PAID MY DEBT!!!!
          I owe nobody anything whatsoever….so how DARE they cause me to appear at the jail under penalty of felony prosecution???

          NO!!! I Will NOT be silent!!!!

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          • January 23, 2023 at 3:11 pm
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            Silence is surrender!

          • January 23, 2023 at 5:59 pm
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            You obviously do not understand what Shaw meant. Railing against all this and not complying with law will not serve our cause well and is likely to land one back in prison. There is a right way and a wrong way to handle all this. It’s your choice. Simple as that.

            Oh, and not a single one of us is silent out of complicity or consent so kindly do not allege such. I may not agree with your polemics but I certainly understand the feelings they express. Raising hell about it accomplishes nothing good, but again that’s your own decision just as any consequences of your decisions are.

            Have a good day.

          • January 24, 2023 at 2:51 pm
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            MLK (and his brothers and sisters) raised hell constantly. It helped a lot!
            They were constantly vocal.

            It does absolutely no good to sit in silence and endure the loss of one’s liberty – especially when that liberty has been EARNED!

          • January 25, 2023 at 8:26 am
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            Just ask the Brevard County Commissioners about the effectiveness of registered citizens raising ‘hades’. It costs them and the county a few thousand dollars. It is not in my DNA to sit back and let a bullie take advantage of me…and do nothing. It makes such people think they have free reign.

          • January 25, 2023 at 5:31 pm
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            Besides which, Justice Seeker, what makes you think that I don’t comply with the laws?
            FYI: I comply with ALL of the laws very carefully!
            But I WON’T be silent!!! (I happen to LOVE our constitution!)

    • January 22, 2023 at 10:21 am
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      IML was signed into law by Obama. Both parties are equally corrupt. And people vote like it is a football game to be won. Team Blue or Team Red not understanding or perhaps caring just how much of our liberty we have allowed to be taken from us on many, many fronts.

      Our population has to just keep up the good fight as a whole. And we will.

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      • January 22, 2023 at 8:31 pm
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        Can’t argue with this. I think Benjamin Franklin summed it up best when he said, “A people who chose security over liberty will receive neither nor deserve either.” but I feel sure that we can all see that George Santayana was also correct when he said that, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” And society today has most definitely forgotten history.

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    • January 23, 2023 at 4:25 pm
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      Hi GL,

      I am trying to locate the guy’s attorney in Louisiana. Do you have his attorney’s name?

      Reply
  • January 22, 2023 at 5:08 am
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    I received a new passport this week and it has very offensive branding on the page adjacent to the one with my name. It also says I was guilty of a sex offense involving a child which I believe is not the position of New York where I was convicted. I am going to go through my congressman to see if he can get me off the national registry once my status in New York expires in August of 2023.

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    • January 22, 2023 at 7:55 pm
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      I am from NYC, and left the U.S. in early 2019. My Level One will expire in early 2031, and I have been assured that I will no longer have a State nor National Classification after that date, and I will ONLY return to NYC to apply for my expedited new unmarked passport once that date has passed in 2031!

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      • January 23, 2023 at 2:12 pm
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        Laws will change by then. For the good or the bad.

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        • January 23, 2023 at 10:35 pm
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          NYS does not follow the Feds requirements! They let you leave the country one day after you give notice, and WON’T LET ANYONE GIVE NOTICE UNTIL THREE CALENDAR DAYS BEFORE YOU LEAVE THE STATES!

          Reply
  • January 22, 2023 at 6:02 am
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    We are being groomed for genocide. I have watched more than a decade now and its only gotten worse. Went from military with ts to homeless and unable to escape absolute poverty. Why does anyone here deseverve anything they have if they let their own be treated no differentl;y that the jews in nazi germany before they were being rounded up enmasse, Oh no peasant dont worry about that just obey the masters.

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  • January 22, 2023 at 6:55 am
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    No God…no peace, no justice, no forgiveness.

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    • January 22, 2023 at 8:24 pm
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      For being so much professors of religious faith I find that they seem to have completely missed 2 very important scriptures.
      Matthew 7:[12] So whatever you wish that men would do to you, do so to them; for this is the law and the prophets.

      James 2:[13] For judgment is without mercy to one who has shown no mercy; yet mercy triumphs over judgment.

      All we can do is do our best to live up to all of it.

      Reply
  • January 22, 2023 at 9:14 am
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    Having a hard time finding the case identified in the Member Submission— the American expat marked for a selfie.

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    • January 22, 2023 at 9:31 am
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      The individual described in the Member Submission strikes me as a sympathetic (or ‘Rosa Parks’) plaintiff.*. If she is being harmed by the new law then I would consider contributing a new legal fund to challenge it. In the meantime, I would encourage her to start documenting the harms it is causing her.

      *h/t: Janice Bellucci for introducing me to this terminology.

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      • January 22, 2023 at 11:03 am
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        Maybe NARSOL they just received a settlement from the Butts Country sign case. They could see this as a worthy case.

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        • January 23, 2023 at 3:48 pm
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          This Member Submission seems to describe a fictional registrant suffering unspecified harms from an unidentified new statutory provision.

          So naturally this causes some of my fellow Members to predict a new Holocaust.

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          • January 23, 2023 at 3:56 pm
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            I THINK this is saying that US expats living overseas, must now get the passport inscription if they are covered by IML, same as if they were a U.S. resident on travel. How this will affect their lives overseas I don’t know, but they should start documenting the new hardships to prepare for eventual court challenge (since we can’t count on the courts to view the inscription by itself as punishment or compelled speech).

          • January 23, 2023 at 11:16 pm
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            Jacob, instead of complaining, why not be helpful? It would have been great for the author to includes quotes and citations. I agree. But you’re posting multiple comments questioning a wonderfully written piece without doing any due diligence of your own.

            A search for S. 3946 on Google, the first result is the Bill which the author speaks of, with a clearly relevant title: “To reauthorize the Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2017, and for other purposes.”
            https://www.congress.gov/bill/117th-congress/senate-bill/3946/text

            A quick search for “information sharing” in the text reveals the following, confirming the author’s assertions.

            “SEC. 895. RECIPROCAL INFORMATION SHARING.
            “Acting in accordance with a bilateral or multilateral arrangement, the Secretary, in the Secretary’s discretion and on the basis of reciprocity, may provide information from the National Sex Offender Registry relating to a conviction for a sex offense against a minor (as such terms are defined in section 111 of the Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act of 2006 (34 U.S.C. 20911)) to a foreign government upon the request of the foreign government, and may receive comparable information from the foreign government.”.

            A quick search for ‘passport’ in the text leads one right to what the author spoke of.

            “(3) CLARIFICATION WITH RESPECT TO CONTINUING REGISTRATION.—An individual may not be issued or reissued a passport without a unique identifier solely because the individual has moved or otherwise resides outside the United States.”.

          • January 24, 2023 at 6:59 am
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            So the one thing that’s new here is branding of expats passports, as I indicated yesterday in a more constructive comment that FAC did not publish yet. My complaint about the piece concerns not its writing style but the fact that we’re not being told whether this is a real case or a hypothetical one— the implications are quite different depending on which it is.

  • January 22, 2023 at 9:54 am
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    So… Anyone and everyone who currently has a Passport without this Compelled Speech printed in the front will have to pay the $100+ just to have an updated passport printed…?

    I’m curious as to what the long game is as there have been quite a few new laws and such from the Federal Government recently specifically targeted at anyone who has a certain criminal history. Passport documentation, Federal registry, the boost in ICAC funding to provide States with more financial motivation to create more numbers for the Registry, etc., all of these are puzzle pieces that I’ve yet to find how they fit together…

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    • August 16, 2023 at 6:17 pm
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      The long game is to have registrants denied entry into another country.

      Reply
  • January 22, 2023 at 7:54 pm
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    This branding or scarlet letter or mark is a bit much. You talked about Rosa Parks well I’m not to familiar with that but I am familiar with the George Floyd choke hold. Is this registry a choke hold on many. Are we all looking for a passport or a change.
    If we as a Nation don’t stand up than one is only hurting themselves.

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  • January 26, 2023 at 4:34 pm
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    I’ve lived in another country for close to two decades. A passport is used many times throughout the year. A marked passport will open me and my family up to kidnapping, extortion, and possibly death. Just because the United States supposedly can keep people from using the registry against you for illegal means does not make the country where you live offer the same protections. In fact, they can not even protect their own citizens here from vigilantism and organized crime. I can imagine how it would be for me and my family if I become branded.

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    • February 25, 2023 at 10:18 pm
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      I was told recently that if a person does not turn in their passport for the Mark, that is a felony punishable with prison. Does anyone know if that is true?

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      • February 26, 2023 at 9:14 am
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        The responsibility to issue and revoke passports is the State Dept’s, not the registrant’s.

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      • February 26, 2023 at 12:14 pm
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        @debi

        State Dept will revoke it by letter once the system is triggered on the person whose passport needs the mark. The letter will share what the requirements are for the passport holder with the unmarked passport.

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  • August 16, 2023 at 9:52 pm
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    My passport expired a few years ago and don’t plan to get a new one. I gave up traveling anywhere outside of the United States even as an American citizen. -Why put yourself and your family through that aggravation ?

    Reply

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