Rematch: Texas Takes on the TSA Again
by Michael Boldin
Tenth
Amendment Center
Recently
by Michael Boldin: End
the Fed! Whether Congress Wants Us To or Not!
On
Monday, Texas Rep. David Simpson (R-Longview) pre-filed
a bill to stop aggressive TSA groping in the Lone Star
State.
The
Texas Travel Freedom Act, House
Bill 80, would make it a criminal act to intentionally
touch “the anus, breast, buttocks, or sexual organ of
the other person, including touching through clothing,”
without probable cause in the process of determining whether
to grant someone access to a public venue or means of
public transportation.
The act also
provides additional protection for minors.
A
public servant acting under color of his office or employment
commits an offense if he…removes a child younger than
18 years of age from the physical custody or control of
a parent or guardian of the child or a person standing
in the stead of a parent or guardian of the child.
If passed,
the law would prevent TSA agents from carrying out the most intrusive
pat-down searches at airports across Texas. Tenth Amendment Center
communications director Mike Maharrey said it only makes sense to
put limits on these types of personal searches.
“If you walk
up to somebody and grab their crotch out on the street, it will
land you in jail. Blue uniforms and federal badges don’t grant some
goon the power to sexually assault you, or at least they shouldn’t.
A person doesn’t forfeit her or his personal dignity with the purchase
of an airline ticket.”
Simpson said
that since the federal government won’t back off of these intrusive
and unconstitutional searches, the responsibility of protecting
its citizens falls to the states, and ultimately the people themselves.
“Abel
Upshur’s words are pertinent to our cause. ‘It is
indispensably necessary to maintain the States in their
proper position. If their people suffer them to sink into
the insignificance of mere municipal corporations, it
will be in vain to invoke their protection against the
gigantic power of the Federal Government,’” he said. “Note
his emphasis: it is the people through the states –
under God’s favor – that must ultimately protect
the people of our states from federal encroachments.”
Simpson
sponsored a similar bill in the 2010 legislative session.
HB1937
unanimously passed the Texas House. A week later, the
bill passed favorably out of the Senate Transportation
and Homeland Security Committee. But a letter
delivered to key senators from U.S. Attorney John E. Murphy
ultimately stopped the bill dead in its tracks. With the
pressure on, Gov. Rick Perry placed
the bill on a special session agenda, but political
wrangling ultimately torpedoed the bill.
Maharrey says
more Texas lawmakers need to grow a spine and stand up to the feds.
“Last
time around, leadership in the Texas legislature failed
miserably at its most basic duty – protecting its citizens.
Basically, they said, ‘Sorry, we’re afraid. So we are
going to go ahead and let strangers feel up our wives,
sons, daughters and grandparents.’ This will continue
and get worse until somebody puts their foot down and
says, ‘No!’” Maharrey said. “The feds say they will shut
down the skies over Texas? Let them. And then let them
explain to America that they are doing it because they
want to continue molesting innocent people at the airport.
Americans hate this crap, and I think it’s pretty obvious
who they will stand behind.”
ACTION
ITEMS:
If
you live in Texas, begin contacting your representative
and senator and let them know you want them to pass the
Texas Travel Freedom Act. You can find contact information
for your legislators HERE.
If
you don’t live in Texas, contact your lawmakers and encourage
them to introduce travel freedom legislation in your state.
You can find model legislation HERE.
You
can track travel freedom legislation across the U.S. HERE.
FULL
TEXT OF THE LEGISLATION (HERE).
An excerpt:
(a) A public
servant acting under color of his office or employment commits an
offense if he:
(1) intentionally
subjects another to mistreatment or to arrest, detention, search,
seizure, dispossession, assessment, or lien that he knows is unlawful;
(2) intentionally denies or impedes another in the exercise or enjoyment
of any right, privilege, power, or immunity, knowing his conduct
is unlawful; [or]
(3) intentionally subjects another to sexual harassment; or
(4) as part of a determination of whether to grant another person
access to a publicly accessible venue or form of transportation,
intentionally and without probable cause:
(A) touches the anus, breast, buttocks, or sexual organ of the other
person, including touching through clothing;
(B) removes a child younger than 18 years of age from the physical
custody or control of a parent or guardian of the child or a person
standing in the stead of a parent or guardian of the child;
(C) otherwise engages in conduct constituting an offense under Section
22.01(a)(3); or
(D) harasses, delays, coerces, threatens, intimidates, or effectively
denies or conditions access to the other person because of the other
person’s refusal to consent to (A), (B), or (C).
A
public servant acting under color of his office or employment
commits an offense if he…removes a child younger than
18 years of age from the physical custody or control of
a parent or guardian of the child or a person standing
in the stead of a parent or guardian of the child.
(c-1) For purposes
of Subsection (a)(4), “public servant” includes:
(1) an officer, employee, or agent of:
(A) the United States;
(B) a branch, department, or agency of the United States; or
(C) another person acting under a contract with a branch, department,
or agency of the United States to provide a security or law enforcement
service; or
(2) any other person acting under color of federal law.
November
14, 2012
Michael
Boldin [send him
mail] is the founder of the Tenth
Amendment Center. He was raised in Milwaukee, WI, and currently
resides in Los Angeles, CA. Follow him on twitter – @michaelboldin,
on LinkedIn,
and on Facebook.
Copyright
© 2012 Tenth Amendment
Center. Permission to reprint in whole or in part is gladly
granted, provided full credit is given.
The
Best of Michael Boldin
|