Passport Wallet at Glacier Bay, Alaska
Dave in Glacier Bay, Alaska explaining the Passport Wallet. There have been a couple of changes to it recently and I wanted to show you. It's ...

Handmade in Los Angeles
Slim 2 pocket design
Dave in Glacier Bay, Alaska explaining the Passport Wallet. There have been a couple of changes to it recently and I wanted to show you. It's ...
The Mexican consular ID, or matricula consular as it is known in Spanish, is a form of registration for Mexican nationals living within the jurisdiction of a particular consulate office.
The Mexican Consulate in San Francisco covers a region that includes 13 counties in Northern California and all of Alaska, Oregon, Washington and Hawaii.
The most significant security measures have been implemented since 2005, including creation of a national database to track IDs issued from consulate offices in other states, and 20 different security features, including holograms, similar to other forms of ID, such as passports.
The required documents Mexican nationals need for obtaining a consular card include: an original Mexican birth certificate or a certified copy; an official Mexican ID with photograph, such as a Mexican passport, a military service ID, a Mexican voter ID card or a California or Mexican driver's license; and proof of residence, such as a utility bill, rental agreement, banking document or work pay stub.
Few things feel more satisfying than a worn passport stamped-up with proof of your wide travels. But when that passport comes due for renewal, you'll have to kiss it goodbye. The government won't return it as a keepsake. It instead will issue you a new, high-tech one. The new one will have a RFID (radio-frequency identification) tag, which will store biometric and other information about you. In an absurd twist, some experts say this tag can be "scanned" by devices at a distance, making your information vulnerable. So, you may want to consider buying an RFID-blocking wallet or sleeve to protect yourself.
We encourage users to analyze, comment on, and even challenge theKANSAS CITY, Mo. — A representative of Taiwan working in Kansas City was charged Thursday with violating federal law in her hiring of a Filipina housekeeper who allegedly was kept in virtual isolation inside the official's Leawood, Kan., home.
Federal prosecutors in Kansas City say that the defendant is believed to be the first foreign representative to face this charge in the United States.
Authorities arrested Hsien-Hsien Liu, director general of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Kansas City, at her office Thursday afternoon.
She made her first appearance before a magistrate judge later Thursday and was ordered to remain in custody pending a federal detention hearing scheduled for Wednesday in Kansas City.