Sources

Primary sources and claim checks.

Use these links when writing, calling, posting, or answering critics.

NHTSA February 2026 Report to Congress

Key support: technology readiness, false positives, no production-ready passive 0.08 BAC or BrAC system, privacy, cybersecurity, consumer acceptance, and countermeasure concerns.

Open source

U.S. DOT ANPRM, Advanced Impaired Driving Prevention Technology

Key support: NHTSA initiated rulemaking to gather information needed for a future performance standard.

Open source

49 U.S.C. 30111 notes, IIJA Section 24220

Key support: statutory text defining advanced drunk and impaired driving prevention technology, including passive monitoring and operation prevention or limitation.

Open source

Congress.gov, H.R. 1137

Key support: No Kill Switches in Cars Act status, title, sponsor, committee referral, and summary.

Open source

FTC final order on GM and OnStar

Key support: federal allegations and settlement terms about geolocation and driving behavior data collection, sale, consent, and consumer reporting agencies.

Open source

Wyden and Markey letter on law-enforcement access

Key support: findings that several automakers disclosed detailed location information to law enforcement with subpoenas rather than warrants and rarely notified owners.

Open source

Mozilla vehicle privacy review

Key support: all 25 reviewed car brands failed Mozilla's consumer privacy test.

Open source

FTC connected-car data warning

Key support: FTC analysis that connected cars can collect sensitive data such as biometric information and location, creating privacy and financial risks.

Open source

Claim check

ClaimUse it?Why
Federal law explicitly gives police a remote kill button.NoThe law does not say that. Do not use this claim.
Federal law pushes passive impaired-driving detection that can prevent or limit vehicle operation.YesThis is in the statutory definition and Congress.gov summary.
NHTSA says the technology is not ready for a nationwide mandate.YesNHTSA's 2026 report cites lack of production-ready passive BAC systems, high error concerns, and unresolved privacy and cybersecurity issues.
Connected vehicle data has already been abused or mishandled.YesThe FTC GM and OnStar order and Wyden-Markey findings support this.
The campaign is anti-safety.NoThe campaign supports stopping drunk driving and targeted, due-process-based countermeasures.