The Second Letter to
Pennsylvania's Bureau of Driver Licensing


Bureau of Driver’s Licensing
PO Box 68618
Harrisburg, PA 17106

September 21, 1998

Certified Mail No. X 123 456 789

Sirs,

I sent you a certified letter dated August 19, 1998 for which I received a return receipt indicating delivery occurred on August 21, 1998. Please find a complete copy of that letter enclosed. I sent that letter to your office after one of your personnel refused to process my application for a driver’s license.

Please note that I asked you respond within 10 (ten) days of receipt of that letter and to inform me (in regards to the Privacy Act of 1974 and your responsibility to process driver license applications):

1. what federal statutory authority authorizes you to request a Social Security Account Number, and if such authority exists,

2. what federal statutory authority authorizes you to refuse a driver’s license to those that refuse to give a Social Security Account Number.

Or in lieu of the above inform me how the Privacy Act of 1974 is to be correctly applied to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

I am disappointed to report that as of this writing I have not received a response from you and it has been 30 days since the date indicated on the return receipt of my August 19, 1998 letter. Therefore, I have no choice but to formally demand a response from you within 10 days of receipt of this letter concerning the above questions of law and your authority under it to require a Social Security Account Number from me for purposes of processing my application for a driver’s license.

If I do not receive a response from you via certified postal mail within that time period either citing your federal statutory authority to request a Social Security Account Number from myself or stating how the Privacy Act of 1974 does not require you to possess such federal statutory authority, it will be presumed that you are lacking the necessary lawful authority to request such a number from me.

It will further be presumed that the Bureau of Drivers Licensing of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania shall be in knowing violation of the Privacy Act of 1974 should they solicit a Social Security Account Number from myself for the purpose of processing my application for a driver’s license at any point in the future.

It will further be presumed that the Bureau of Drivers Licensing of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania shall be in knowing violation of the Privacy Act of 1974 should they refuse to process my application for a driver’s license solely due to my refusal to respond to such request for a Social Security Account Number at any point in the future.

Thank you for you time. I look forward to your prompt response.

Sincerely,

[Notorized Signature]

Cornelius J. McIver

enclosures


I enclosed in this letter a complete copy of the original letter and that letter's enclosures. This letter was sent Certified Return Receipt.

This Web Page: http://www.cjmciver.org/sapf/penndot2.shtml

All information presented here is done so under the protection of the First, Fourth, Ninth, and Tenth Amendment of the United States Constitution, and article I section 2 of the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Furthermore, as established in the famous trial of William Penn in August 1670, and contrary to the unlawful instructions given by most American judges, in addition to judging the facts of a case, juries also have the right and duty to pass judgement on the law (meaning they may acquit a violator of the law if they believe the law in question is unconstitutional, immoral, just plain stupid, or if the penalty is deemed too harsh). Juries are also lawfully free to vote according to their conscience, above all other considerations.