Title 25 › Chapter CHAPTER 30— - INDIAN LAW ENFORCEMENT REFORM › § 2804
The Secretary must create rules within 180 days after July 29, 2010 to make agreements with Federal, tribal, State, or other government agencies to use their people or facilities (with or without payment) to help enforce U.S. or tribal laws in Indian country when a tribe has allowed the Secretary to enforce tribal laws. The Secretary can let those agency officers do duties the Secretary is allowed to authorize. The rules must include a plan to give special law enforcement commissions to tribal (and, as allowed, State and local) officers, hold regional training in Indian country at least biannually to certify candidates, and set minimum agreement requirements in consultation with tribes within 180 days after July 29, 2010. Once requirements are met, the Secretary must offer a commission agreement to the tribe within 60 days. Any agreement for enforcing U.S. criminal law must match any agreement the Secretary has with the Attorney General. The Secretary may not use non‑Federal agency staff in a tribe’s area if that tribe passes a resolution objecting, and must consult tribes before making such agreements. A head of a Federal agency may still make these agreements with the Secretary (regardless of other Federal rules) and may also make agreements directly with tribes about tribal law enforcement or carrying out U.S. or tribal laws. While acting under the Secretary’s authority, a non‑Federal person is treated as a Department of the Interior employee for certain legal protections and is eligible for certain federal officer benefits. The Bureau may accept reimbursement, help, or funding from other government agencies or the Indian Law Enforcement Foundation.
Full Legal Text
Indians — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
25 U.S.C. § 2804
Title 25 — Indians
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73