Title 22Foreign Relations and IntercourseRelease 119-73

§9121 Response to international child abductions

Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 98— - INTERNATIONAL CHILD ABDUCTION PREVENTION AND RETURN › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - ACTIONS BY THE SECRETARY OF STATE › § 9121

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

Require the Secretary of State to check child abduction cases where the child’s usual home was the United States if the case is still open 12 months after the U.S. Central Authority sent it to another country. If the Secretary finds the foreign government did not take proper steps, the Secretary must act quickly using the tools the law allows and tell the U.S. Chief of Mission in that country to press senior foreign officials. The Secretary can wait up to 1 year longer if that will help, but if the Secretary delays or decides not to act, a written report explaining why must be sent to Congress within 15 days and a detailed briefing must be provided if Congress asks. When acting, the State Department should first try to work with the foreign Central Authority, then focus actions on the parts of the foreign government responsible and respect the country’s courts. It should try to avoid hurting the people of that country, humanitarian programs, or U.S. national security. Also, once an abducted child turns 16, a U.S. consular officer in the country must try every year to contact the person (by welfare checks and other means) until the left‑behind parent or the person after age 18 asks to stop. The officer must give information about U.S. citizenship rights (like passports) and any benefits from the left‑behind parent (including G.I. education and health benefits) and confirm the person’s location.

Full Legal Text

Title 22, §9121

Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)It is the policy of the United States—
(1)to promote the best interest of children wrongfully abducted from the United States by—
(A)establishing legal rights and procedures for their prompt return; and
(B)ensuring the enforcement of reciprocal international obligations under the Hague Abduction Convention or arrangements under bilateral procedures;
(2)to promote the timely resolution of abduction cases through 1 or more of the actions described in section 9122 of this title; and
(3)to ensure appropriate coordination within the Federal Government and between Federal, State, and local agencies involved in abduction prevention, investigation, and resolution.
(b)(1)For each abduction or access case relating to a child whose habitual residence is in the United States that remains pending or is otherwise unresolved on the date that is 12 months after the date on which the Central Authority of the United States submits such case to a foreign country, the Secretary of State shall determine whether the government of such foreign country has failed to take appropriate steps to resolve the case. If the Secretary of State determines that such failure occurred, the Secretary should, as expeditiously as practicable—
(A)take 1 or more of the actions described in subsections (d) and (e) of section 9122 of this title; and
(B)direct the Chief of Mission in that foreign country to directly address the resolution of the case with senior officials in the foreign government.
(2)The Secretary of State may delay any action described in paragraph (1) if the Secretary determines that an additional period of time, not to exceed 1 year, will substantially assist in resolving the case.
(3)If the Secretary of State delays any action pursuant to paragraph (2) or decides not to take an action described in subsection (d) or (e) of section 9122 of this title after making the determination described in paragraph (1), the Secretary, not later than 15 days after such delay or decision, shall provide a report to the appropriate congressional committees that details the reasons for delaying action or not taking action, as appropriate.
(4)At the request of the appropriate congressional committees, the Secretary of State shall provide a detailed briefing, including a written report, if requested, on actions taken to resolve a case or the cause for delay.
(c)(1)In carrying out subsection (b), the Secretary of State should—
(A)take 1 or more actions that most appropriately respond to the nature and severity of the governmental failure to resolve the unresolved abduction case; and
(B)seek, to the fullest extent possible—
(i)to initially respond by communicating with the Central Authority of the country; and
(ii)if clause (i) is unsuccessful, to target subsequent actions—
(I)as narrowly as practicable, with respect to the agencies or instrumentalities of the foreign government that are responsible for such failures; and
(II)in ways that respect the separation of powers and independence of the judiciary of the country, as applicable.
(2)In addition to the guidelines under paragraph (1), the Secretary of State, in determining whether to take 1 or more actions under paragraphs (5) through (7) of section 9122(d) of this title or section 9122(e) of this title, shall seek to minimize any adverse impact on—
(A)the population of the country whose government is targeted by the action or actions;
(B)the humanitarian activities of United States and nongovernmental organizations in the country; and
(C)the national security interests of the United States.
(d)When an individual who is an abducted child attains 16 years of age, a consular officer from a United States diplomatic mission in the country in which such individual resides shall, until either the left-behind parent seeking assistance or the individual (after attaining 18 years of age) requests the officer to cease, annually attempt to contact such individual, through welfare and whereabout visits and by engaging other agencies and foreign counterparts as necessary, to provide information, as relevant, on rights and privileges as a United States citizen, such as passports, and any eligible benefits from left-behind parent, such as G.I. educational and health benefits and to obtain a verified location of such individual.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Editorial Notes

Amendments

2024—Subsec. (d). Pub. L. 118–159 added subsec. (d).

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

22 U.S.C. § 9121

Title 22Foreign Relations and Intercourse

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73