Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle A— - General Military Law › Part PART II— - PERSONNEL › Chapter CHAPTER 76— - MISSING PERSONS › § 1504
When new information that could change a missing person’s status shows up within one year after a report, or when about one year after a report a person is still missing, the Secretary must appoint a board to investigate. If two or more absences are related, one board can handle them. The board must have at least three members. If the subjects are only military, members must be officers of at least the rank of major or lieutenant commander. If the subjects are only DoD civilians or contractors, the board must include at least three DoD employees paid at or above GS–13 and may include military members. If both military and civilians are involved, the board must include at least one officer and one DoD employee, with the mix roughly matching the numbers of subjects. One member must have a similar job specialty and knowledge of the activities the missing person did. The Secretary names a board president who must have the clearance to see all information. The Secretary also gives the board a judge advocate or attorney for legal help. The board must review earlier reports, gather new evidence, decide the person’s whereabouts and status, decide whether the status should change, and send a report and recommendation to the Secretary. Each missing person gets an appointed counsel; the counsel’s name is given to the primary next of kin. Family members and any previously designated person may attend board proceedings. The Secretary must notify them at least 60 days before the board’s first meeting. They must tell the Secretary within 21 days if they plan to attend. A primary next of kin or designated person who attends may have private counsel, see the personnel file and unclassified reports, present information, and object in writing to board recommendations. To object they must send a letter of intent to the board president within 15 days after the recommendations, and send the written objections within 30 days. Attendees get no travel or other expense pay from the United States. The board can request information from any government agency; agencies must release or declassify it as needed. If classified information cannot be declassified, it is shown only to the board president and the missing person’s counsel, and any discussion of classified material is closed to those without clearance. The board may not recommend declaring someone dead unless it follows section 1507. The board’s report and evidence go to the Secretary, who has 30 days to review the report, the counsel’s review, and any objections, and may send the report back for fixes or make a final status decision. Within 60 days after the Secretary’s decision, the Secretary must give the reviewed report to the primary next of kin, immediate family, and any designated person, and must tell them if the person is still missing that further investigation will continue under section 1505. The Secretary’s determination replaces any earlier determination under section 1503 and all agencies must treat it as the person’s official status.
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Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
10 U.S.C. § 1504
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73