The Critical Authorization Layer your Security Stack is Missing

Most organizations can identify who is on-site. Far fewer can prove whether that person was actually authorized to be there — in that role, under those conditions, at that moment. That gap is where incidents happen, and where organizations are left unable to defend their own decisions.

SurePass is a Verified Authority Management platform purpose-built to close that gap. It enables public sector and commercial organizations to define, verify, delegate, and document authority for individuals accessing facilities, events, or operational sites.

For government agencies, law enforcement, courts, and critical infrastructure operators, the challenge is especially acute. Authority is frequently delegated across jurisdictions, contractors, and mutual-aid personnel — often under time pressure and without a consistent system to track it. When an incident or investigation occurs, the question shifts from “who was present” to “who authorized them to act”.

Healthcare systems, schools and higher education institutions, large venues, utilities, and enterprise facilities manage rotating contractors, temporary staff, field personnel and distributed teams whose authority is time-bound, conditional, and difficult to verify consistently. SurePass gives these organizations a reliable way to confirm authorization before individuals act, and a defensible record when decisions are later reviewed.

How SurePass Works

SurePass works by making authorization explicit and enforceable. Organizations define roles, permissions, and delegation rules centrally, then verify those permissions in real time at checkpoints or points of action using mobile workflows. Each verification creates an auditable record: who was authorized, by whom, under what conditions, and when.

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SurePass works alongside existing access control, identity, and credentialing tools. Rather than replacing these systems, it adds an authorization layer that ensures decisions about who is allowed to be present and act are explicit, verifiable, and consistently enforced.

  • reduce operational risk
  • improve coordination
  • stand behind authorization decisions.
  • reduce reliance on manual processes, judgment calls, and fragmented systems
  • maintain a clear, auditable record of authorization across people, locations, and time. 

The result is fewer unauthorized actions, less ambiguity under pressure, and organizational confidence both in daily operations and in the moments that matter most.