Buried in a 1,100-page bill, Section 24220 mandates AI surveillance technology in every new vehicle sold in America.
An algorithm — not you — decides whether you're allowed to drive. No due process. No public debate. No opt-out.
In November 2021, Congress passed the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act — a 1,100-page bill that received virtually no public debate about one of its most consequential provisions. Tucked inside as Section 24220, the HALT Drunk Driving Act mandates that the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) require every new passenger vehicle sold in America be equipped with "advanced drunk and impaired driving prevention technology."
On the surface, the goal sounds noble. Who opposes stopping drunk driving? But the method is what alarms privacy experts, cybersecurity researchers, constitutional scholars, and civil liberties organizations across the political spectrum.
The mandate requires passive monitoring — systems that watch you continuously while you drive, using cameras, sensors, and AI to determine if you're "impaired." If the algorithm decides you are, it can restrict or prevent your vehicle from operating. You don't get a warning. You don't get to appeal. You don't get due process.
This isn't hypothetical. This is current federal law, and it's moving toward implementation.
Cameras watching your eye movements, sensors analyzing steering patterns, and AI that can restrict or prevent vehicle operation if it decides you're impaired. Always on. Always watching.
Blood-alcohol detection systems that prevent vehicle operation when BAC meets or exceeds 0.08%. Could use touch-based biometric readers embedded in the steering wheel or dashboard.
Machine learning models that analyze your driving patterns — steering corrections, lane positioning, braking behavior — to calculate an "impairment score" that determines if you're allowed to drive.
Modern vehicles are networked. These monitoring systems connect to manufacturer cloud infrastructure, meaning your driving data can be transmitted, stored, and potentially accessed by third parties.
This mandate raises serious concerns across multiple domains. Explore each one.
The mandate requires cameras that continuously monitor driver behavior — eye gaze, head position, facial expressions. Every trip you take is recorded and analyzed. There is no "off" switch.
Steering wheel sensors can collect biometric data — grip patterns, heart rate estimates, skin conductance. This is intimate physiological data collected without meaningful consent.
Section 24220 is completely silent on how long data can be stored, where it can be sent, who can access it, and how it must be protected. This is an open invitation for abuse.
Vehicle manufacturers transmit data to cloud servers. Insurance companies, law enforcement, and data brokers could potentially access your driving behavior data — your routes, your habits, your impairment events.
Georgia Tech researchers modeled scenarios where a coordinated cyberattack activating kill switches on millions of vehicles simultaneously could shut down entire transportation networks. Their estimate: ~3,000 deaths from a single breach.
Modern vehicles are already proven vulnerable to remote hacking. In 2015, researchers remotely hijacked a Jeep Cherokee via its entertainment system. Adding mandatory networked kill switch infrastructure multiplies this attack surface exponentially.
If every new car has a mandated kill switch, that infrastructure becomes a high-value target for nation-state actors. A foreign adversary compromising this system could disable America's transportation network at will.
Continuous surveillance of a driver constitutes a search under the Fourth Amendment. The Supreme Court has ruled (Carpenter v. United States, 2018) that long-term tracking of individuals requires a warrant. Vehicle monitoring systems create a persistent surveillance record without probable cause.
The Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments guarantee that no person shall be deprived of liberty without due process. An algorithm restricting your ability to drive — with no hearing, no appeal, no human review — raises fundamental due process concerns.
The right to travel is a deeply rooted constitutional liberty. A system that can unilaterally restrict vehicle operation based on algorithmic assessment — without conviction, without arrest, without a judge — implicates this fundamental right.
No AI system is perfect. Passive impairment detection systems will produce false positives — flagging sober, alert drivers as "impaired." Here's why that matters:
People with neurological conditions (MS, Parkinson's, epilepsy), sleep disorders, diabetes, or even fatigue from shift work could be falsely flagged as "impaired" by behavioral analysis algorithms.
A parent rushing a child to the ER. Someone fleeing a dangerous situation. An individual driving erratically because of a bee in the car. The algorithm doesn't understand context — it just restricts.
Sun glare, prescription sunglasses, certain lighting conditions, road construction zones, and even rough road surfaces can trigger false impairment readings in camera and sensor-based systems.
AI systems are known to perform differently across demographic groups. Eye-tracking and facial analysis technologies have documented accuracy disparities based on race, age, and gender.
Integrating cameras, sensors, biometric readers, and AI processing units into every vehicle adds significant manufacturing cost — costs that will be passed directly to consumers. Estimates range from $500–$2,500+ per vehicle.
These systems require regular calibration and maintenance. A misaligned camera or degraded sensor could either fail to detect impairment (defeating the purpose) or produce constant false positives (rendering your car undriveable).
In rural America, a vehicle isn't a luxury — it's survival. There's no public transit. There's no Uber. If your kill switch malfunctions and you can't afford the repair, you can't get to work, the doctor, or the grocery store.
Vehicle kill switches are not a concept that originated in free democracies. Here's the global context:
China has explored vehicle restriction technology tied to social credit scores. Citizens with low scores can be barred from purchasing plane tickets or train passes. Vehicle kill switches represent the same principle applied to personal automobiles.
Every time governments have been given surveillance tools "for safety," those tools have eventually been expanded beyond their original purpose. The PATRIOT Act was "just for terrorism." Vehicle data collection will be "just for drunk driving." Until it isn't.
This isn't about safety. It's about the most invasive surveillance system ever mandated for American vehicles.
Cameras monitoring eye movement, sensors tracking steering and braking, biometric readers on your steering wheel — all watching you continuously. Every trip. Every mile.
The law is silent on data retention, security, and who gets access. Insurance companies? Law enforcement? Data brokers? Your behavioral data could be stored and transmitted without your knowledge or consent.
An onboard AI — not you, not a judge, not a human being — decides whether you're "impaired" and can restrict or prevent your vehicle from operating. No human oversight. No due process. No appeal.
Georgia Tech researchers modeled scenarios where activating kill switches on millions of vehicles could shut down entire transportation networks. ~3,000 estimated deaths from one coordinated breach.
This mandate was buried in a 1,100-page infrastructure bill with virtually zero public discussion. Most Americans still don't know it exists. That's by design.
NHTSA's own report admits no commercially available technology meets the law's passive detection standard. They're mandating something that hasn't been invented — and requiring you to pay for it.
If you're having a stroke, a diabetic episode, or a medical emergency that affects your driving, the system could immobilize your vehicle — potentially turning a survivable situation fatal.
60 million Americans live in rural areas with no public transit, no ride-sharing, and long distances to essential services. A malfunctioning kill switch doesn't just inconvenience them — it cuts them off from survival.
Today it's "drunk driving." Tomorrow it could be unpaid tickets, expired registration, political speech, or any condition the government decides warrants restricting your movement.
Section 24220 of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act is signed into law — tucked deep inside a massive bill with virtually no public debate about this specific provision.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration fails to issue the required rule-making by its statutory deadline. No final technical standard exists. The technology still doesn't exist commercially.
Rep. Thomas Massie introduces an amendment to defund Section 24220 entirely. It fails 229-201. The "No Kill Switches in Cars Act" (H.R. 1036) remains stalled in committee.
NHTSA's own Report to Congress admits no commercially available technology meets the law's passive detection standard. Over 3,000 public comments raise privacy and feasibility concerns.
Major media outlets — KBB, Workplace Privacy Report, and others — begin covering the mandate. Privacy lawyers, cybersecurity experts, and civil liberties organizations raise alarms across the political spectrum.
This petition launches with a goal of 1,000,000 signatures. Americans from every state are signing. The message is clear: we won't let an algorithm decide when we can drive.
Stand with hundreds of thousands of Americans who refuse to let the government mandate surveillance in their vehicles. Every signature counts.
"A decision is still being made — other than by the driver — to restrict operation of the vehicle."
Don't take our word for it. Read the primary sources. Verify every claim. This is too important to take on faith.
Americans in all 50 states are standing up. Find your city.
The government doesn't get to decide when you can and cannot drive your own vehicle. An algorithm doesn't get to override your freedom.
SIGN THE PETITION NOW1,000,000 signatures needed. Every one matters.