The Fourth Amendment protects people from unreasonable searches and seizures…. ICE agents don’t get to kidnap someone, from a coffee shop parking lot, without reasonable suspicion or probable cause. The Fifth Amendment guarantees due process…. Holding someone against their will while refusing to tell them why, or denying them access to contact anyone, is a constitutional violation

Virtual Ministry Archive

BREAKING🚨🏳️‍🌈 Kansas forced Kris Ripper to change her driver's license to say "male." Then a cop pulled her over, looked at that same license — and decided it must be fake. Ripper is a trans woman. Back on March 25, the state made her switch the gender marker on her ID to "M" to comply with Senate Bill 244, a new anti-trans law. She didn't want to. She did it because Kansas required it. On May 5, she was driving home from work in the rain. Her headlights had automatically switched off, so an officer pulled her over. He took her license — the one the state ordered her to carry , and stared at it. "After seeing my license, he spent like 10 minutes questioning me on if my license was real before I explained to him that I am a transgender woman," Ripper said. "It has to say 'M' legally." He handed the license back and let her go with a verbal warning. No citation. She thought that was the end of it. Weeks later a notice showed up: she'd missed an arraignment for a charge she said she never knew existed , operating a motor vehicle without a valid license. A Class B misdemeanor. Up to a $1,000 fine and six months in jail. The paper warned that if she didn't appear within 30 days, her license would be revoked. "I'm just a little scared and freaking out," Ripper said. Kansas forced her ID to say "male." An officer decided that same ID looked wrong. The county tried to jail her for carrying the document the government demanded she carry. The charge was only dismissed after her story spread across LGBTQ+ media and reached readers overseas. Attorney General Kris Kobach insists licenses must list a person's "biological sex" so police can identify people accurately. His law nearly put a woman behind bars for six months for obeying it.