Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 23— - PROTECTION OF CITIZENS ABROAD › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - HOSTAGE RECOVERY AND HOSTAGE-TAKING ACCOUNTABILITY › § 1741
The Secretary of State must quickly review cases when there is credible information that a U.S. citizen is being held unlawfully or wrongfully abroad. The review looks at things like evidence of innocence, whether the person is detained because they are American, to pressure the U.S. government, for exercising free speech, religion, or assembly, if the detention breaks local law, reports from NGOs or journalists, whether the detention is a pretext, problems with the local courts, harsh conditions, lack of due process, or if U.S. diplomacy is needed. If the Secretary finds credible information of unlawful or wrongful detention, the case must be moved from the Consular Affairs bureau to the Special Presidential Envoy for Hostage Affairs and Congress must be told within 14 days (the notice may be classified). The State Department must also send an annual unclassified report (with a classified annex if needed) listing current estimates, case details (name unless blocked by the Privacy Act), why the detention may be unlawful or wrongful, actions taken, and planned next steps. By 180 days after December 27, 2020, the Secretary had to write guidance for families and officials about policy, contacts, options, and how to seek help. The Department can pay travel costs to Washington, D.C. for family members who live more than 50 miles away so they can meet the government: up to 2 trips per fiscal year per detained person (a third trip can be approved), up to 2 people per trip, and up to 2 nights lodging (more only if approved). The Department may pay return travel if no other help is available. Physical and mental health services and other support must be offered to detainees and families and may continue for up to 5 years after return. The Secretary must tell Congress within 14 days if annual spending on these travel and support items exceeds $250,000. Detailed expenditure and support reports are due within 90 days after each fiscal year. The travel and support authorities end on December 31, 2027. The Assistant Secretary for Consular Affairs and the Special Envoy must review potential wrongful detention cases at least every 180 days, send a classified list to Congress within 30 days of each review, and notify families within 30 days of that transmittal. The Secretary must decide within 180 days after receiving an assessment whether detention is unlawful or wrongful, unless a classified waiver is used for safety or national security (waivers last 180 days and can be renewed). When a person determined to have been unlawfully or wrongfully detained is released and returns, the President must give them a letter declaring the detention invalid to help clear records. Defined term: “family member” means close relatives, in‑laws, step‑relatives, and half‑relatives.
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Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
22 U.S.C. § 1741
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73