Title 2 › Chapter CHAPTER 6— - CONGRESSIONAL AND COMMITTEE PROCEDURE; INVESTIGATIONS › § 190l
A congressional committee that is handling a private claim against the United States, and that has been authorized by its House, may have testimony taken and papers checked by a court official (called a standing master in chancery) in the federal district where the evidence will be gathered. The committee must send the master an order signed by its chair with the time, place, topics, known witness names, and the kind of documents to be looked at. The master must give the private parties reasonable notice unless notice was already given or waived. The master can issue subpoenas for witnesses named by the committee, for others the United States’ representative asks for, and for witnesses the private parties request within the district. The United States will not pay subpoena service fees or witness fees for a private party. The committee may ask the U.S. attorney for that district to attend and run the examination for the government, and if asked the U.S. attorney must attend in person or send an assistant. Or the committee can appoint its own agent, lawyer, or a member to act for the government; if the committee is not unanimous, the minority may also appoint someone.
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The Congress — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Reference
Citation
2 U.S.C. § 190l
Title 2 — The Congress
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73