Title 19 › Chapter CHAPTER 10— - CUSTOMS SERVICE › § 2081
Lets the U.S. Customs Service run undercover investigations and use its appropriated money to do what is needed to catch and charge federal offenders. The Service may buy or lease property and space in the United States and its territories, and it may set up or buy and run secret companies or businesses as part of the operation. Money from the operation and Service funds may be kept in banks and used to pay reasonable operation costs without following some normal federal purchase and deposit rules. If a secret company tied to an operation has a net value over $50,000 and is to be sold or closed, the Service must tell the Secretary of the Treasury as far ahead as the Commissioner or their designee thinks practical. Any money left after paying obligations must go to the U.S. Treasury as miscellaneous receipts. When operation funds are no longer needed, the balance must go to the Treasury. The Service must audit each closed operation, send the audit to the Secretary, and give Congress a report within 180 days. Each year the Service must also tell Congress how many undercover operations it has pending, started, and closed, and give results and any civil claims for closed cases. Closed means either all criminal cases (not counting appeals) are finished or covert work ends, whichever is later. An “undercover operation” for these rules is one with gross receipts over $50,000 or non-salary spending over $150,000 and that is exempt from certain deposit rules. Employees means agency employees as defined in law.
Full Legal Text
Customs Duties — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
19 U.S.C. § 2081
Title 19 — Customs Duties
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73