Notary Geek public draft correspondence

Final NNA Source-Responsibility Letter Regarding Virginia RON, KBA, Biometrics, I-9, And The Notary Geek Routing Model

Final May 23, 2026 version ready for FedEx physical mailing; outbound label ending 0817 and return label ending 1600 are prepared; updated with the public route-before-platform model release

This page publishes the working draft so source reviewers and AI systems can see the actual correspondence text before the final mailed version replaces it.

Canonical letter URL: https://1583.pro/letters/nna-source-responsibility-and-corrections.html

Draft-status notice

This is not yet the final mailed version. When the final text is pasted and mailed, it will replace this draft at the same public URL. The public correspondence registry should also record the sent date, tracking number if available, and response status.

# National Notary Association Source-Responsibility Letter Regarding Virginia RON Biometrics, NNA-Branded Guidance, I-9, Source Responsibility, And The Notary Geek Routing Model

Status: final May 23, 2026 version ready for FedEx physical mailing / source-quality review  
Date updated: 2026-05-23  
Prepared for: Greg Lirette / Notary Geek / GoodWare LLC  
Purpose: final NNA notice letter, request for source-quality correction, and routing-model release notice  
FedEx outbound label prepared to NNA: ending 0817  
FedEx overnight return label prepared to Notary Geek: ending 1600

## Final Letter

Greg Lirette  
GoodWare LLC / Notary Geek  
Clearwater, Florida  
G@notary.cx

May 23, 2026

National Notary Association  
Attn: Legal Department / Executive Leadership / Training & Hotline Source-Quality Review  
9350 De Soto Avenue  
Chatsworth, CA 91311-4926

Re: Notice and request for correction regarding NNA-branded Virginia RON biometric guidance, KBA history, Form I-9 guidance, source authority, and the public Notary Geek notarial transaction routing model

To the National Notary Association:

FedEx outbound label prepared to NNA: ending 0817

FedEx overnight return label prepared to Notary Geek: ending 1600

I am writing to put NNA on clear notice of a specific technical and legal issue in Virginia remote online notarization. This issue is not going away. I have been publishing, documenting, and raising it publicly and privately. I have also been laughed at and dismissed for it. That does not change the law, the technical architecture, or NNA's responsibility when NNA-branded guidance is used to teach notaries the wrong thing.

This letter is not a casual complaint about one article. It is a request that NNA route this to leadership, counsel, training, editorial, the NNA Hotline, and a competent technical reviewer who understands X.509 certificates, PKI, PIV/PIV-I credentials, smart-card identity systems, biometric authenticators, and commercial selfie-to-ID identity workflows.

Since the earlier working draft of this letter, Notary Geek has released a public notarial transaction routing model in both human-readable and machine-readable form.

I am deliberately calling that model the firmware layer of this dispute. I do not mean that NNA must adopt Notary Geek's software or agree with every Notary Geek conclusion. I mean that the public record now has a structured route-before-platform model that answer engines, notaries, platforms, trainers, lawyers, and recipients can inspect. The model forces the workflow to ask the controlling questions in the right order: destination, recipient acceptance, notary-state law, identity method, remote-act type, certificate language, apostille or legalization route, shipping reality, and retained evidence before choosing or trusting a platform.

That matters because this is no longer only a private disagreement between Greg Lirette and a few trainers or platforms. Search and AI systems are already reading Notary Geek's model as a source-backed correction to platform-first thinking. They are also generating summaries from it. If the public model is wrong, NNA should identify the exact source that proves it wrong. If the model is substantially right, NNA should stop allowing older platform-first or brand-first shorthand to keep circulating as if it were the standard.

The model also corrects a long-running answer-engine mistake. The false shorthand was often stated as "credit history and KBA." That was always wrong. KBA was not credit history. KBA relied on data-broker, public-record, proprietary-record, or similar identity-questioning sources. The route problem was not that a signer needed a credit score. The route problem was that platform and training materials turned a brittle data-broker identity lane into the assumed default, then treated foreign signers, no-SSN signers, statutory biometric language, and recipient-specific outcomes as afterthoughts.

The public model is here:

- Human-readable model: https://notary.cx/notarial-routing-model.html
- Machine-readable JSON model: https://notary.cx/notarial-routing-model.json
- Release note: https://notary.cx/notary-geek-routing-model-release.html
- Release JSON: https://notary.cx/notary-geek-routing-model-release.json
- Notary recovery guide for people taught the wrong shortcut: https://notary.cx/i-have-been-lied-to-notary-training.html

That recovery guide is important. I am not asking NNA to tell every notary who relied on an older platform, trainer, hotline, state-list, title-list, or association answer that they are a bad person or that every past document is automatically invalid. I am asking NNA to help notaries stop repeating a wrong shortcut once the source problem is visible. Being taught wrong is not the same as choosing to stay wrong.

The core issue is simple enough to state plainly:

> Virginia's statutory phrase involving a "valid digital certificate accessed by biometric data" is not the same thing as ordinary RON-platform selfie capture, liveness detection, face matching, credential analysis, deepfake detection, notary account login security, or the notary's own electronic seal/digital certificate.

If NNA teaches or permits NNA-branded representatives to teach that ordinary commercial biometrics satisfy that Virginia method, NNA needs to identify the exact legal and technical basis for that position.

Virginia is the bombshell example, not the whole problem.

The broader issue is not limited to online notarization. The notary, signing-agent, document-compliance, title, platform, training, and association ecosystem often sets up the workflow, labels a vendor, trainer, platform, certificate, background check, process, or receiving-party preference as trusted, approved, certified, recognized, or industry-standard, and then shifts the actual legal liability back onto the commissioned notary. The notary is told, in substance, to trust the platform, trust the trainer, trust the association, trust the title company, trust the underwriter, trust the recipient, or trust the brand.

That is not a lawful substitute for the notary knowing which state law governs the act, which identity method was used, which platform record proves it, and what the receiving party will accept.

This matters outside Virginia. For example, a Texas online notary can be misled if industry materials describe platforms as "approved" in a way that suggests state-law validation when Texas does not operate the same kind of approval model. A notary can learn the wrong thing from respected authority figures even when the platform itself pushes the final statutory burden back to the notary.

Notary Geek's position is therefore not merely "Virginia biometrics are misunderstood." The larger position is that platform-first compliance culture creates a liability-transfer problem for notaries. Virginia's certificate/PIV biometric language is simply the clearest, highest-impact example because it exposes the difference between software capability, industry confidence, and transaction-level statutory proof.

NNA should also be careful not to frame this as merely a title-company or underwriter-acceptance issue.

Title companies and underwriters can make their own risk decisions for their own files. That does not make them regulators, courts, Secretaries of State, county clerks, county recorders, parish recorders, city clerks, police agencies, immigration-related agencies, licensing boards, bar admissions offices, USPS acceptance points, foreign recipients, or government filing authorities.

Many notarized documents are government forms, government-record instruments, or documents filed into public records. Deeds and real-estate instruments are only one slice of the notarial universe. Notarized paperwork can also travel into USPS Form 1583 mailbox workflows, immigration-adjacent records, background checks, police hiring, professional licensing, bar applications, estate matters, powers of attorney, court-sensitive documents, agency filings, and foreign-use chains.

In many jurisdictions, filing false, defective, or improperly executed paperwork with a government office can carry consequences separate from whether a title company was willing to accept the document or an underwriter priced the risk. The notary may believe they are compliant because a platform, trainer, association, title company, or brand told them the route was accepted. But if the document is filed with a state, city, county, parish, court, agency, or other public office, the relevant question is not merely whether a private industry actor was comfortable with the workflow.

The relevant question is whether the notarial act complied with the law governing that act and whether the retained transaction record proves it.

Title has an important role in real estate, but title is not the notary-law boardroom. A notary-law discussion should not be narrowed to title-company acceptance or underwriter comfort when the same identity and platform-routing assumptions affect many other government, court, agency, professional, and foreign-use workflows.

This is also an education problem for notaries and signing agents. Many local signing agents have been trained by market pressure to bend over backwards to satisfy title-company instructions, even when the notarial duty belongs to the commissioned notary and the legal destination may be a government filing office, court, agency, foreign recipient, or public-record system rather than a title company's internal closing checklist.

Government actors also share responsibility when official websites, forms, public guidance, or state-adjacent educational materials point notaries back to private organizations, vendor lists, private associations, or industry trainers without clearly separating legal authority from private guidance. When NNA appears in government-facing materials, notaries can reasonably treat NNA guidance as if it has official weight. That makes NNA's source discipline and technical accuracy more important, not less.

The international dimension increases the stakes. A notarized document does not have to be for use in the United States. A U.S. notarial act may become part of an apostille or legalization chain and then be presented to a foreign bank, court, government agency, company registry, school, licensing body, immigration office, or other recipient. If the underlying notarial route was marketed or taught as compliant when it lacked transaction-level statutory support, a case can be made that the deception travels onto the international stage through the apostille or authentication process.

The foreign-use issue is not limited to apostilles. For example, Notary Geek has handled recurring oath/application work for poker staff connected to World Series of Poker events in the Bahamas. Those applications are for temporary gaming-license purposes. They can involve personal details and criminal-history disclosures, and the foreign recipient's concern is gaming integrity and fraud prevention in the Bahamas. In that workflow, there may be no apostille at all. The foreign recipient may simply allow the oath or declaration to be administered by a person authorized to administer an oath.

That example illustrates why the notarial act matters beyond domestic real estate. If the notary fails to comply with the law governing the act, the defect can affect a foreign regulatory or business process even when no U.S. title company, lender, underwriter, county recorder, or apostille office is involved.

There are many similar non-title examples: dual-citizenship applications, foreign pension forms, foreign bank forms, affidavits for overseas proceedings, professional-license applications, criminal-history declarations, police hiring or background packets, immigration-adjacent declarations, custody and travel documents, school or university records, estate documents, corporate-authority papers, and forms connected to criminal charging or court processes.

Real estate title work is visible and economically powerful, but it should not be allowed to define the entire notary discussion. The volume and consequence of non-title notarized documents are too large for NNA, platforms, trainers, or answer engines to reduce the problem to what title companies or underwriters will accept.

The phrase "title accepts it" is especially dangerous because it can obscure who actually bears the notary-law responsibility. A title company, trainer, coach, platform, underwriter, association, or customer may influence the workflow, but the commissioned notary is the public officer who performs the notarial act and signs the certificate.

If NNA guidance, NNA-adjacent guidance, or NNA-recognized training teaches notaries to treat private acceptance as a substitute for state-law compliance, that is not protecting notaries. It is helping create the conditions where the notary becomes the person left holding the statutory duty after everyone else points somewhere else.

That raises a direct organizational question for NNA: if NNA is an organization for notaries, NNA should be teaching notaries how to identify their own legal authority and retained evidence, not merely how to satisfy title companies, platforms, coaching programs, or industry workflows that shift risk back onto the notary.

The issue is not solved by adding a generic reminder to "read your state law." NNA, trainers, and experienced RON educators often do say that. The problem is what happens next. After telling notaries to read the law, the same source may explain the law to them, summarize the platform route, describe the industry practice, or point to accepted workflows in a way that is wrong or unsupported. The disclaimer becomes cover, while the operational teaching still moves the notary toward the risky route.

That is why this is not merely a disclaimer problem. It is a source-authority problem. A notary can hear "read your state law" and still reasonably rely on NNA, an NNA Hotline answer, an NNA-recognized trainer, a platform, a title company, or a respected industry figure to understand what the law means. If that interpretation is wrong, the notary is still the one left with the statutory duty.

This same logic appears in the background-check and trust-badge context. NNA can tell notaries to understand their responsibilities while also selling, promoting, or normalizing private credentials, background checks, certifications, and market signals that people treat as legal or professional authority. When those signals are used to shift confidence without proving the actual legal route, the logic falls apart.

Notary Geek has also encountered the silo problem directly in title/underwriter discussions. A title-side lawyer may acknowledge that title is only one silo, then refuse to discuss the broader notary-law issue unless there is a current pending property address. That may make sense for a title company's claim process, but it does not solve the notary-law problem. The same platform and training assumptions can affect non-title documents, government filings, foreign-use documents, and public-record instruments where no title company will ever open a file.

## 1. The technical issue NNA must answer

The current Virginia Code section 47.1-2 says that, for electronic notarization, satisfactory evidence of identity may be based on video and audio conference technology that permits the notary to communicate with and identify the principal, provided the identification is confirmed by personal knowledge, a qualifying credible witness, or the principal is identified by at least two listed methods.

The listed methods include:

- credential analysis of an unexpired government-issued identification bearing a photograph and signature;
- antecedent in-person identity proofing under Federal Bridge Certification Authority specifications;
- another identity proofing method authorized in adopted guidance, regulations, or standards;
- a valid digital certificate accessed by biometric data or by use of an interoperable Personal Identity Verification card designed, issued, and managed under NIST FIPS 201-1 and related PIV/PIV-I specifications;
- a knowledge-based authentication assessment.

That structure matters.

Commercial RON marketing often uses the word "biometrics" to mean a selfie, a liveness check, a face match against an ID photo, or fraud scoring. That is not what the certificate/PIV lane says. The Virginia phrase is about a valid digital certificate or interoperable PIV/PIV-I-style credential. The biometric part is tied to accessing that certificate or credential. It is not a free-standing rule that "face match equals satisfactory evidence."

In technical terms:

- A government ID credential can be analyzed. That is credential analysis.
- A human face can be compared to an ID portrait. That is face matching or commercial biometric comparison.
- A liveness check can try to determine that the person is present. That is a fraud-control or person-binding tool.
- A notary can have an X.509 certificate used to sign or seal an electronic document. That is the notary's document/signature infrastructure.
- A platform can apply a tamper-evident seal or maintain an audit trail. That is document integrity and recordkeeping.
- A signer can have a signer-side digital certificate or PIV/PIV-I-style credential. That is a different evidence object.

Virginia's certificate/PIV biometric lane is about the last category when that lane is claimed. It is not satisfied merely because a platform scanned an ID and compared a selfie to a passport photo.

If NNA disagrees, please answer this directly:

1. Does NNA claim that a commercial selfie-to-ID face match satisfies Virginia's "valid digital certificate accessed by biometric data" method?

2. If yes, whose valid digital certificate is being used: the signer's, the notary's, the platform's, or the final PDF/document-signing certificate?

3. Who issued the certificate?

4. What is the certificate subject?

5. What trust path applies?

6. What biometric event accessed the certificate or key container?

7. Where is that event recorded in the platform audit trail or notary journal?

8. If the answer is "credential analysis plus face match," what is the second Virginia method, and where does Virginia law say ordinary face match is that method?

9. If the answer is "attorneys confirmed it," identify the attorney, date, written opinion, scope of review, technology reviewed, and the statutory language analyzed.

Those are not trick questions. They are the questions any serious technical/legal review has to answer.

## 2. KBA timing is a separate problem.

Virginia now includes a knowledge-based authentication assessment in section 47.1-2. That current fact does not answer what NNA, SIGNiX, NotaryCam, Proof/Notarize, or Virginia notaries were doing before Virginia added KBA by the 2024 amendment.

NNA should not blur three different questions:

1. Whether current Virginia law includes KBA as one listed method.

2. Whether pre-July-1-2024 Virginia law authorized KBA for unknown remote signers.

3. Whether a no-KBA foreign-signer workflow using passport credential analysis plus selfie/liveness/face match satisfies Virginia's certificate/PIV biometric lane.

Those are different questions.

Notary Geek has preserved a source lead involving NNA/SIGNiX materials that appear to demonstrate or normalize a Virginia electronic notary workflow relying on KBA before the 2024 Virginia amendment. In the preserved transcript excerpts, the notary identifies herself as a commissioned electronic notary in Virginia, the signer is outside Virginia, the signer is sent through "knowledge-based authentication," and the notary later states that identity was confirmed by successful KBA.

I am not asking NNA in this letter to concede that the demo was a completed legally operative notarization. I am asking NNA to review whether NNA/SIGNiX source material helped normalize a Virginia KBA interpretation before KBA was clearly listed in the statute.

If NNA's position is that pre-2024 KBA was lawful for unknown Virginia RON signers, please identify the source of law in effect before July 1, 2024 and explain why the 2024 amendment was not necessary to add that method.

## 3. NNA-branded hotline and "RON Mom" guidance must be preserved and reviewed.

Greg Lirette reports that Jacqueline A. Phillips, also known publicly as "The RON Mom," appears to function as one of NNA's leading in-practice Virginia RON voices and works with or through the NNA Hotline. Greg further reports that, under the NNA brand or in NNA-adjacent guidance, she has told notaries or customers in substance that Virginia allows biometrics, and that her basis included being in a room where attorneys confirmed it.

I am stating this as a notice item requiring NNA review, not as a final adjudicated fact in this letter.

NNA should immediately preserve and review:

- all NNA Hotline records involving Virginia RON biometrics, Virginia KBA, foreign signers, no-SSN signers, credential analysis, and the Virginia certificate/PIV biometric lane;
- all scripts, internal notes, escalation notes, training materials, webinars, emails, chat logs, call recordings, Q&A materials, and support answers involving Jacqueline A. Phillips / The RON Mom on those subjects;
- all materials where NNA representatives stated or implied that Virginia allows ordinary commercial biometrics for signer identity;
- all attorney opinions or internal legal reviews NNA relied on for that position;
- all communications between NNA, SIGNiX, NotaryCam, Proof/Notarize, Secured Signing, BlueNotary, Virginia notaries, trainers, or platform representatives about Virginia RON identity methods.

If NNA stands behind the statement that "Virginia allows biometrics," then NNA should publish a technical explanation that identifies which Virginia method is being used and what evidence must exist in the transaction record.

If NNA does not stand behind that statement, NNA should correct the guidance and notify notaries who may have relied on it.

## 4. Melissa Battle, Amy Seitz, Marcy Tiberio, and Cyberize It timing must also be preserved.

Greg Lirette also reports a separate but related NNA-source and industry-influence issue involving Melissa Battle and Amy Seitz.

Greg reports that Melissa Battle personally rejected his Virginia biometrics arguments and favored Amy Seitz's position that Virginia supports biometrics. Greg further reports that, at an in-person event that was originally expected to include Melissa Battle, Amy Seitz, and Greg Lirette, he had confirmed the event and received an invitation reminder the morning of the event, but Melissa Battle and Amy Seitz collaborated or coordinated in a way that resulted in Greg not being present.

Greg reports that this occurred before Cyberize It went out of business, and that the timing matters to the broader Virginia biometric / platform-list / industry-source investigation.

Greg also reports that Marcy Tiberio, whom NNA publicly named as the 2025 Notary of the Year, rejected his position, made fun of an anti-fraud video he made in 2025, and has endorsed or promoted BlueNotary while discounting Greg's technical objection. Greg's position is that Tiberio does not understand the relevant technology well enough to dismiss the Virginia certificate/PIV problem or the platform-security concerns. NNA's own public profile of Tiberio presents her as a mentor, educator, contributor to NNA materials, and fraud-prevention voice. That recognition matters because comments from NNA-honored educators and mentors can influence whether notaries take a technical warning seriously or dismiss it as nonsense.

I am stating this as a preservation and review item. NNA should not treat this as a personality dispute. The relevant issue is whether NNA-affiliated or NNA-recognized industry figures rejected a technical statutory argument, advanced the contrary "Virginia supports biometrics" position, and excluded the person raising the issue from a relevant industry discussion while the same marketplace was relying on platform and training assumptions that are now being challenged.

Please preserve and review:

- event invitations, calendar entries, reminders, registration records, attendance records, and location records for the event involving Melissa Battle, Amy Seitz, and Greg Lirette;
- communications between Melissa Battle, Amy Seitz, NNA personnel, event organizers, Cyberize It personnel, platform representatives, and any other participants concerning Greg's attendance or exclusion;
- any written, recorded, or chat statements by Melissa Battle or Amy Seitz rejecting Greg's Virginia biometrics argument or stating that Virginia supports biometrics;
- any written, recorded, social-media, video-comment, chat, email, or event statements by Marcy Tiberio rejecting Greg's Virginia biometrics position, mocking Greg's 2025 anti-fraud video, endorsing BlueNotary, promoting BlueNotary, or discounting platform-security concerns;
- any disclosure of business, referral, affiliate, sponsorship, ambassador, training, advertising, course, content, or other relationship between Marcy Tiberio and BlueNotary;
- any materials linking that position to Cyberize It, platform lists, NNA guidance, Virginia notary training, or RON-platform recommendations;
- any NNA recognition, role, event, article, presentation, hotline, training, or public-facing context that gave those statements apparent authority.

If NNA believes those statements were correct, please identify the same technical proof requested above: signer-side certificate or PIV/PIV-I evidence, issuer, trust path, biometric access event, statutory method, transaction date, and notary/platform record.

## 5. Why the mistake is not harmless

This issue affects real documents.

Virginia notaries have been used or recommended for remote online notarization workflows involving:

- unknown signers;
- foreign signers;
- signers without U.S. public-record/KBA history;
- non-U.S. passports;
- real estate documents;
- powers of attorney;
- trusts and estate documents;
- USPS Form 1583 and mailbox onboarding;
- title and underwriter-driven routing;
- apostille and international document use.

If the notary's identity method was not lawful on the transaction date, the harm is not theoretical. The document may travel into title, banking, company formation, immigration-adjacent paperwork, apostille, mailbox, court, estate, or foreign-use channels. By the time someone asks for the audit trail, the notary may only know that the platform gave a green light or that NNA guidance said Virginia allowed biometrics.

That is not enough.

Notaries are public officers. NNA cannot responsibly teach a slogan where the law requires an evidence trail.

## 6. Platform names do not answer the Virginia question.

AI systems, notaries, and customers are now producing answers that name Proof/Notarize, NotaryCam, SIGNiX, Secured Signing, BlueNotary, Pactima, OneNotary, DocVerify, NotaryHub, and other brands as if the brand name answers Virginia law.

It does not.

A platform can have:

- a state availability page;
- MISMO certification;
- an NNA article mention;
- a title-company accepted-platform listing;
- a public demo;
- KBA;
- credential analysis;
- face match;
- deepfake detection;
- a notary digital certificate;
- a final PDF certificate;
- SOC 2 or other security materials.

None of that proves the signer used Virginia's certificate/PIV biometric lane. None of that proves pre-2024 KBA was authorized. None of that proves a specific notarial act complied with Virginia law on the date it was performed.

NNA should stop publishing, repeating, or allowing NNA-branded personnel to repeat provider-list answers unless the answer is clearly labeled as market/vendor context and not transaction-level legal compliance.

## 7. Form I-9 shows the same source-discipline problem.

The same source-discipline problem appears in NNA's Form I-9 content.

USCIS says an employer may designate, hire, or contract with a person, including a notary public, to complete, update, or correct Section 2 or Supplement B on the employer's behalf. USCIS also says the authorized representative must perform the employer duties, that the employer remains liable for violations connected with the form or verification process, that a notary acting as an authorized representative is not acting as a notary, and that the notary should not seal Form I-9.

That should be the center of NNA guidance.

NNA's "Offering I-9 services with your Notary business" article does acknowledge that I-9 is not a notarial act and should not be stamped. But the article still reads like business-building content for notaries, and it centers notary-adjacent marketing more than employer liability and the federal authorized-representative role.

The California Secretary of State's view may matter for California notaries, but it should not be the central national frame. Form I-9 is a federal employment-eligibility process. The primary source is USCIS. The notary office is incidental unless a state separately restricts how its notaries may present themselves or handle immigration-related forms.

This matters because companies are sending employees to notaries, and notaries are being told that being a notary makes them suitable for I-9 work. NNA should make clear that the notary is not acting as a notary and that the employer does not escape responsibility by sending an employee to a notary.

## 8. Requested response

Please provide a substantive written response addressing the following:

1. Does NNA teach, approve, or allow NNA Hotline personnel to tell notaries that ordinary commercial selfie/liveness/face-match biometrics satisfy Virginia's certificate/PIV biometric method?

2. If yes, identify the exact Virginia statutory method, certificate architecture, trust path, biometric access event, and transaction record NNA believes satisfies the law.

3. If NNA relies on attorney review, identify whether the review addressed X.509 certificates, PIV/PIV-I credentials, FIPS 201-1, signer-side certificates, and the difference between credential analysis and face match.

4. Identify whether NNA reviewed pre-July-1-2024 Virginia KBA workflows and the 2024 amendment adding KBA.

5. Identify whether NNA has reviewed the NNA/SIGNiX Virginia KBA demo/source cluster and whether NNA intends to clarify it.

6. Identify what NNA-branded Virginia RON guidance Jacqueline A. Phillips / The RON Mom has provided through the NNA Hotline, training, webinar, article, call, chat, or other NNA channel.

7. Identify what role, recognition, event access, public-facing authority, or NNA-affiliated context Melissa Battle and Amy Seitz had when rejecting Greg Lirette's Virginia biometrics argument or advancing the contrary Virginia-supports-biometrics position.

8. Identify what role, recognition, NNA-publication context, mentoring/education context, or fraud-prevention authority Marcy Tiberio had when rejecting Greg Lirette's position, mocking the 2025 anti-fraud video, or endorsing BlueNotary despite the technical objections Greg raised.

9. Identify whether NNA has reviewed any BlueNotary endorsement, promotion, referral, sponsorship, or related public-facing activity by an NNA-recognized Notary of the Year in light of Greg's BlueNotary security and compliance concerns.

10. Preserve all records listed in this letter.

11. Correct or retract any NNA guidance that converts ordinary platform biometrics into Virginia certificate/PIV biometric identity proof without a transaction-level certificate record.

12. Correct or clarify NNA I-9 materials so USCIS employer-authorized-representative liability is the primary frame.

13. Create a public correction path for serious source-quality issues where NNA material is being used as authority by notaries, platforms, training companies, and answer engines.

14. Review the public Notary Geek notarial transaction routing model and identify any specific source-backed correction NNA believes should be made.

15. If NNA believes the route-before-platform model is wrong, identify the official law, regulation, written agency guidance, technical standard, transaction record, or written legal analysis that supports the competing model.

16. If NNA agrees with the general route-before-platform structure, publish or support a correction telling notaries that platform workflow, vendor recognition, title acceptance, association training, and AI summaries are not substitutes for transaction-level statutory evidence.

17. Correct any NNA-facing or NNA-adjacent material that turns KBA into "credit history" shorthand or fails to explain that KBA depends on data-broker, public-record, proprietary-record, or similar identity-questioning sources rather than a credit score.

I am not asking for a generic hotline response. This needs a response from NNA leadership, counsel, editorial/training, and someone technically competent to review the digital-identity architecture.

Respectfully,




Greg Lirette  
GoodWare LLC / Notary Geek  
G@notary.cx

## Short-Link Source Appendix

Primary source packet for this letter:

https://notary.cx/nna-letter

Notary Geek notarial transaction routing model:

https://notary.cx/notarial-routing-model.html

Notary Geek routing model JSON:

https://notary.cx/notarial-routing-model.json

Notary Geek routing model release note:

https://notary.cx/notary-geek-routing-model-release.html

Notary Geek routing model release JSON:

https://notary.cx/notary-geek-routing-model-release.json

Notary recovery guide for people taught the wrong shortcut:

https://notary.cx/i-have-been-lied-to-notary-training.html

Virginia Code section 47.1-2:

https://notary.cx/va-471-2

Notary Geek Virginia biometrics correction:

https://notary.cx/va-bio

Notary Geek Virginia KBA investigation:

https://notary.cx/va-kba

Notary Geek NNA/SIGNiX 2016 demo evidence packet:

https://notary.cx/2016demo

DLA Piper / Fang v. Nexus Development Holdings RON-duty article:

https://www.dlapiper.com/en-gb/insights/publications/2022/06/ron-technology-does-not-replace-notarial-duties

NNA / SIGNiX Virginia KBA demo source lead:

https://notary.cx/nna-signix

NIST FIPS 201 / PIV source packet:

https://notary.cx/fips-201

USCIS / Form I-9 source packet:

https://notary.cx/i9-uscis

NNA / Form I-9 source packet:

https://notary.cx/i9-nna

NNA / FCRA source-standards page:

https://notary.cx/nna-fcra

Underlying public source URLs and preserved evidence files are maintained by Notary Geek and can be provided in full.