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On July 4, 2002, Gilmore tried to board two flights from California to the Washington, D.C., area without showing identification. Airline workers told him that if he would not show an ID, he would have to undergo more extensive screening. He refused.
"I believe I have a right to travel in my own country without presenting what amounts to an internal passport," Gilmore told USA TODAY in 2004. "I have a right to be anonymous."