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PUBLIC LAW 116–277—DEC. 31, 2020
MISSING PERSONS AND UNIDENTIFIED
REMAINS ACT OF 2019
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134 STAT. 3368
PUBLIC LAW 116–277—DEC. 31, 2020
Public Law 116–277
116th Congress
An Act
To the extent provided in advance in appropriations Act, the Attorney General
is authorized to use funds appropriated for the operationalization, maintenance,
and expansion of the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs)
for the purpose of carrying out this Act.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the ‘‘Missing Persons and Unidentified
Remains Act of 2019’’.
SEC. 2. USE OF GRANT FUNDS.
(a) JENNIFER’S LAW.—Jennifer’s Law (34 U.S.C. 40501 et seq.)
is amended—
(1) by striking section 202 (34 U.S.C. 40501) and inserting
the following:
‘‘SEC. 202. PROGRAM AUTHORIZED.
‘‘(a) IN GENERAL.—
‘‘(1) GRANTS
AUTHORIZED.—The Attorney General may
award grants to eligible entities described in paragraph (2)
to enable the eligible entities to improve the transportation,
processing, identification, and reporting of missing persons and
unidentified remains, including migrants.
‘‘(2) ELIGIBLE ENTITIES.—Eligible entities described in this
paragraph are the following:
‘‘(A) States and units of local government.
‘‘(B) Accredited, publicly funded, Combined DNA Index
System (commonly known as ‘CODIS’) forensic laboratories,
which demonstrate the grant funds will be used for DNA
typing and uploading biological family DNA reference sam-
ples, including samples from foreign nationals, into CODIS,
subject to the protocols for inclusion of such forensic DNA
profiles into CODIS, and the privacy protections required
under section 203(c).
‘‘(C) Medical examiners offices.
‘‘(D) Accredited, publicly funded toxicology laboratories.
‘‘(E) Accredited, publicly funded crime laboratories.
‘‘(F) Publicly funded university forensic anthropology
laboratories.
‘‘(G) Nonprofit organizations that have working collabo-
rative agreements with State and county forensic offices,
including medical examiners, coroners, and justices of the
peace, for entry of data into CODIS or the National Missing
34 USC 40501.
34 USC 10101
note.
Missing Persons
and Unidentified
Remains Act
of 2019.
Dec. 31, 2020
[S. 2174]
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134 STAT. 3369
PUBLIC LAW 116–277—DEC. 31, 2020
and Unidentified Persons System (commonly known as
‘NamUs’), or both.’’;
(2) in section 203 (34 U.S.C. 40502)—
(A) in subsection (a), by striking ‘‘a State’’ and inserting
‘‘an entity described in section 202’’;
(B) in subsection (b)—
(i) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by
striking ‘‘State’’ and inserting ‘‘applicant’’;
(ii) by striking paragraph (1) and inserting the
following:
‘‘(1) report to the National Crime Information Center and,
when possible, to law enforcement authorities throughout the
applicant’s jurisdiction regarding every deceased unidentified
person, regardless of age, found in the applicant’s jurisdiction;’’;
(iii) in paragraph (3), by striking ‘‘and’’ at the
end;
(iv) in paragraph (4), by striking the period at
the end and inserting ‘‘; and’’; and
(v) by adding at the end the following:
‘‘(5) collect and report information to the National Missing
and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs) regarding missing
persons and unidentified remains.’’; and
(C) by adding at the end the following:
‘‘(c) PRIVACY PROTECTIONS FOR BIOLOGICAL FAMILY REFERENCE
SAMPLES.—
‘‘(1) IN GENERAL.—Any suspected biological family DNA
reference samples received from citizens of the United States
or foreign nationals and uploaded into the Combined DNA
Index System (commonly referred to as ‘CODIS’) by an accred-
ited, publicly funded CODIS forensic laboratory awarded a
grant under this section may be used only for identifying
missing persons and unidentified remains.
‘‘(2) LIMITATION ON USE.—Any biological family DNA ref-
erence samples from citizens of the United States or foreign
nationals entered into CODIS for purposes of identifying
missing persons and unidentified remains may not be disclosed
to a Federal or State law enforcement agency for law enforce-
ment purposes.’’; and
(3) by striking section 204 (34 U.S.C. 40503) and inserting
the following:
‘‘SEC. 205. USE OF FUNDS.
‘‘An applicant receiving a grant award under this title may
use such funds to—
‘‘(1) pay for the costs incurred during or after fiscal year
2017 for the transportation, processing, identification, and
reporting of missing persons and unidentified remains,
including migrants;
‘‘(2) establish and expand programs developed to improve
the reporting of unidentified persons in accordance with the
assurances provided in the application submitted pursuant to
section 203(b);
‘‘(3) hire and maintain additional DNA case analysts and
technicians, fingerprint examiners, forensic odontologists, and
forensic anthropologists, needed to support such identification
programs; and
34 USC 40503.
Reports.
Reports.
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134 STAT. 3370
PUBLIC LAW 116–277—DEC. 31, 2020
‘‘(4) procure and maintain state of the art multi-modal,
multi-purpose forensic and DNA-typing and analytical equip-
ment.’’.
(b) KRISTEN’S ACT.—Section 102 of Kristen’s Act (34 U.S.C.
40504 note) is amended to read as follows:
‘‘SEC. 102. AUTHORIZATION OF FUNDING.
‘‘To the extent provided in advance in appropriations Acts,
the Attorney General is authorized to use funds appropriated for
the operationalization, maintenance, and expansion of the National
Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs) for the purpose
of carrying out this Act’’.
SEC. 3. RESCUE BEACONS.
Section 411(o) of the Homeland Security Act of 2002 (6 U.S.C.
211(o)) is amended by adding at the end the following:
‘‘(3) RESCUE BEACONS.—Beginning in fiscal year 2019, in
carrying out subsection (c)(8), the Commissioner shall purchase,
deploy, and maintain not more than 170 self-powering, 9–1–
1 cellular relay rescue beacons along the southern border of
the United States at locations determined appropriate by the
Commissioner to mitigate migrant deaths.’’.
SEC. 4. REPORTING ON NATIONAL MISSING AND UNIDENTIFIED PER-
SONS SYSTEM (NAMUS) PROGRAM.
Not later than 18 months after the date of enactment of this
act, and every year thereafter, the Attorney General shall submit
a report to the appropriate committees of Congress regarding—
(1) the number of unidentified person cases processed;
(2) CODIS associations and identifications;
(3) the number of anthropology cases processed;
(4) the number of suspected border crossing cases and
associations made;
(5) the number of trials supported with expert testimony;
(6) the number of students trained and professions of those
students; and
(7) the turnaround time and backlog.
SEC. 5. OTHER REPORTING REQUIREMENTS.
(a) UNIDENTIFIED REMAINS.—
(1) REPORTING REQUIREMENT.—Not later than 1 year after
the date of enactment of this Act, and annually thereafter,
the Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection shall
submit a report to the appropriate committees of Congress
regarding all unidentified remains discovered, during the
reporting period, on or near the border between the United
States and Mexico, including—
(A) for each deceased person—
(i) the cause and manner of death, if known;
(ii) the sex, age (at time of death), and country
of origin (if such information is determinable); and
(iii) the location of each unidentified remain;
(B) the total number of deceased people whose
unidentified remains were discovered by U.S. Customs and
Border Protection during the reporting period;
(C) to the extent such information is available to U.S.
Customs and Border Protection, the total number of
6 USC 224.
34 USC 40505.
Effective date.
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134 STAT. 3371
PUBLIC LAW 116–277—DEC. 31, 2020
deceased people whose unidentified remains were discov-
ered by Federal, State, local or Tribal law enforcement
officers, military personnel, or medical examiners offices;
(D) the efforts of U.S. Customs and Border Protection
to engage with nongovernmental organizations, institutions
of higher education, medical examiners and coroners, and
law enforcement agencies—
(i) to identify and map the locations at which
migrant deaths occur; and
(ii) to count the number of deaths that occur at
such locations; and
(E) a detailed description of U.S. Customs and Border
Protection’s Missing Migrant Program, including how the
program helps mitigate migrant deaths while maintaining
border security.
(2) PUBLIC DISCLOSURE.—Not later than 30 days after each
report required under paragraph (1) is submitted, the Commis-
sioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection shall publish
on the website of the agency the information described in
subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) of paragraph (1) during each
reporting period.
(b) RESCUE BEACONS.—Not later than 1 year after the date
of enactment of this Act, and annually thereafter, the Commissioner
of U.S. Customs and Border Protection shall submit a report to
the appropriate committees of Congress regarding the use of rescue
beacons along the border between the United States and Mexico,
including, for the reporting period—
(1) the number of rescue beacons in each border patrol
sector;
(2) the specific location of each rescue beacon;
(3) the frequency with which each rescue beacon was acti-
vated by a person in distress;
(4) a description of the nature of the distress that resulted
in each rescue beacon activation (if such information is deter-
minable); and
(5) an assessment, in consultation with local stakeholders,
including elected officials, nongovernmental organizations, and
landowners, of necessary additional rescue beacons and rec-
ommendations for locations for deployment to reduce migrant
deaths.
(c) GAO REPORT.—Not later than 6 months after the report
required under subsection (a) is submitted to the appropriate
committees of Congress, the Comptroller General of the United
States shall submit a report to the same committees that
describes—
(1) how U.S. Customs and Border Protection collects and
records border-crossing death data;
(2) the differences (if any) in U.S. Customs and Border
Protection border-crossing death data collection methodology
across its sectors;
(3) how U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s data and
statistical analysis on trends in the numbers, locations, causes,
and characteristics of border-crossing deaths compare to other
sources of data on these deaths, including border county medical
examiners and coroners and the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention;
Assessment.
Consultation.
Mexico.
Web posting.
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134 STAT. 3372
PUBLIC LAW 116–277—DEC. 31, 2020
LEGISLATIVE HISTORY—S. 2174:
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD, Vol. 166 (2020):
Nov. 16, considered and passed Senate.
Dec. 16, considered and passed House, amended.
Dec. 18, Senate concurred in House amendments.
Æ
(4) how U.S. Customs and Border Protection measures
the effectiveness of its programs to mitigate migrant deaths;
and
(5) the extent to which U.S. Customs and Border Protection
engages Federal, State, local, and Tribal governments, foreign
diplomatic and consular posts, and nongovernmental organiza-
tions—
(A) to accurately identify deceased individuals;
(B) to resolve cases involving unidentified remains;
(C) to resolve cases involving unidentified persons; and
(D) to share information on missing persons and
unidentified remains, specifically with the National Missing
and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs).
Approved December 31, 2020.
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