Title 15Commerce and TradeRelease 119-73

§8113 Joint Strategic Plan

Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 107— - PROTECTION OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - COORDINATION AND STRATEGIC PLANNING OF FEDERAL EFFORT AGAINST COUNTERFEITING AND INFRINGEMENT › § 8113

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

Makes the Intellectual Property Enforcement Coordinator (IPEC) create a joint strategic plan to fight counterfeit and pirated goods at home and abroad. The plan must be finished within 12 months after October 13, 2008, and then updated and sent to the Judiciary and Appropriations Committees of both the Senate and the House of Representatives by December 31 of every third year after that. IPEC must help coordinate the work of the federal agencies on the advisory committee and may ask private experts for advice. The heads of those agencies must name experienced staff to help and must share relevant information with IPEC and the advisory committee, to the extent allowed by law and law enforcement rules. Each plan must say what the top priorities are, how the government will reach them, how much money and other resources are needed, and what measures will be used to track results for the next year. It must include an analysis of the harms from intellectual property violations, including costs to the U.S. economy and threats to public health and safety, which agencies will work on each priority, and how agencies will coordinate and be held accountable. The plan must include training and technical help programs for other countries, set priorities for which countries to help (guided by the list under 19 U.S.C. 2242(a)), and create ways to measure program success. The plan must be posted on the White House website and otherwise made available to the public.

Full Legal Text

Title 15, §8113

Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)The objectives of the Joint Strategic Plan against counterfeiting and infringement that is referred to in section 8111(b)(1)(B) of this title (in this section referred to as the “joint strategic plan”) are the following:
(1)Reducing counterfeit and infringing goods in the domestic and international supply chain.
(2)Identifying and addressing structural weaknesses, systemic flaws, or other unjustified impediments to effective enforcement action against the financing, production, trafficking, or sale of counterfeit or infringing goods, including identifying duplicative efforts to enforce, investigate, and prosecute intellectual property crimes across the Federal agencies and Departments that comprise the Advisory Committee and recommending how such duplicative efforts may be minimized. Such recommendations may include recommendations on how to reduce duplication in personnel, materials, technologies, and facilities utilized by the agencies and Departments responsible for the enforcement, investigation, or prosecution of intellectual property crimes.
(3)Ensuring that information is identified and shared among the relevant departments and agencies, to the extent permitted by law, including requirements relating to confidentiality and privacy, and to the extent that such sharing of information is consistent with Department of Justice and other law enforcement protocols for handling such information, to aid in the objective of arresting and prosecuting individuals and entities that are knowingly involved in the financing, production, trafficking, or sale of counterfeit or infringing goods.
(4)Disrupting and eliminating domestic and international counterfeiting and infringement networks.
(5)Strengthening the capacity of other countries to protect and enforce intellectual property rights, and reducing the number of countries that fail to enforce laws preventing the financing, production, trafficking, and sale of counterfeit and infringing goods.
(6)Working with other countries to establish international standards and policies for the effective protection and enforcement of intellectual property rights.
(7)Protecting intellectual property rights overseas by—
(A)working with other countries and exchanging information with appropriate law enforcement agencies in other countries relating to individuals and entities involved in the financing, production, trafficking, or sale of counterfeit and infringing goods;
(B)ensuring that the information referred to in subparagraph (A) is provided to appropriate United States law enforcement agencies in order to assist, as warranted, enforcement activities in cooperation with appropriate law enforcement agencies in other countries; and
(C)building a formal process for consulting with companies, industry associations, labor unions, and other interested groups in other countries with respect to intellectual property enforcement.
(b)Not later than 12 months after October 13, 2008, and not later than December 31 of every third year thereafter, the IPEC shall submit the joint strategic plan to the Committee on the Judiciary and the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate, and to the Committee on the Judiciary and the Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives.
(c)During the development of the joint strategic plan, the IPEC—
(1)shall provide assistance to, and coordinate the meetings and efforts of, the appropriate officers and employees of departments and agencies represented on the advisory committee appointed under section 8111(b)(3) of this title who are involved in intellectual property enforcement; and
(2)may consult with private sector experts in intellectual property enforcement in furtherance of providing assistance to the members of the advisory committee appointed under section 8111(b)(3) of this title.
(d)In the development and implementation of the joint strategic plan, the heads of the departments and agencies identified under section 8111(b)(3) of this title shall—
(1)designate personnel with expertise and experience in intellectual property enforcement matters to work with the IPEC and other members of the advisory committee; and
(2)share relevant department or agency information with the IPEC and other members of the advisory committee, including statistical information on the enforcement activities of the department or agency against counterfeiting or infringement, and plans for addressing the joint strategic plan, to the extent permitted by law, including requirements relating to confidentiality and privacy, and to the extent that such sharing of information is consistent with Department of Justice and other law enforcement protocols for handling such information.
(e)Each joint strategic plan shall include the following:
(1)A description of the priorities identified for carrying out the objectives in the joint strategic plan, including activities of the Federal Government relating to intellectual property enforcement.
(2)A description of the means to be employed to achieve the priorities, including the means for improving the efficiency and effectiveness of the Federal Government’s enforcement efforts against counterfeiting and infringement.
(3)Estimates of the resources necessary to fulfill the priorities identified under paragraph (1).
(4)The performance measures to be used to monitor results under the joint strategic plan during the following year.
(5)An analysis of the threat posed by violations of intellectual property rights, including the costs to the economy of the United States resulting from violations of intellectual property laws, and the threats to public health and safety created by counterfeiting and infringement.
(6)An identification of the departments and agencies that will be involved in implementing each priority under paragraph (1).
(7)A strategy for ensuring coordination among the departments and agencies identified under paragraph (6), which will facilitate oversight by the executive branch of, and accountability among, the departments and agencies responsible for carrying out the strategy.
(8)Such other information as is necessary to convey the costs imposed on the United States economy by, and the threats to public health and safety created by, counterfeiting and infringement, and those steps that the Federal Government intends to take over the period covered by the succeeding joint strategic plan to reduce those costs and counter those threats.
(f)The joint strategic plan shall include programs to provide training and technical assistance to foreign governments for the purpose of enhancing the efforts of such governments to enforce laws against counterfeiting and infringement. With respect to such programs, the joint strategic plan shall—
(1)seek to enhance the efficiency and consistency with which Federal resources are expended, and seek to minimize duplication, overlap, or inconsistency of efforts;
(2)identify and give priority to those countries where programs of training and technical assistance can be carried out most effectively and with the greatest benefit to reducing counterfeit and infringing products in the United States market, to protecting the intellectual property rights of United States persons and their licensees, and to protecting the interests of United States persons otherwise harmed by violations of intellectual property rights in those countries;
(3)in identifying the priorities under paragraph (2), be guided by the list of countries identified by the United States Trade Representative under section 2242(a) of title 19; and
(4)develop metrics to measure the effectiveness of the Federal Government’s efforts to improve the laws and enforcement practices of foreign governments against counterfeiting and infringement.
(g)The joint strategic plan shall be posted for public access on the website of the White House, and shall be disseminated to the public through such other means as the IPEC may identify.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

15 U.S.C. § 8113

Title 15Commerce and Trade

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73