Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 95— - ELIMINATE, NEUTRALIZE, AND DISRUPT WILDLIFE TRAFFICKING › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - FRAMEWORK FOR INTERAGENCY RESPONSE › § 7631
Require the Task Force to use the Secretary of State’s yearly report to guide U.S. actions and make sure federal agencies work with each focus country’s wildlife service or similar body. Within 90 days after that report, U.S. missions must help make a threat and capacity assessment for the country. Within 180 days after that assessment, they must help create a mission strategic plan with recommendations. Agencies must then coordinate with each other and with partners (missions, groups, companies, and others) to carry out the plans. The Task Force must meet with outside experts at least once a year. It must push programs to expand and share technology for anti‑poaching, look at illegal wildlife trade on digital platforms and digital payments, help local governments use new tools, work to reduce poaching and demand with measurable benchmarks, and boost cooperation between law enforcement and financial institutions. Agencies must avoid duplicating work and try to be efficient, while acting under their existing powers. One year after October 7, 2016, and every two years after that, the Task Force must report to Congress on its work. The report must review what worked and what did not, name effective and less effective partner countries, list each agency’s priorities, show total U.S. funding each year since fiscal year 2014 for anti‑poaching and trafficking efforts and for Task Force support, give recommendations to improve efforts, and analyze the Task Force’s indicators and baselines. The Task Force’s authorization ends September 30, 2028.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 7631
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73