Title 25 › Chapter CHAPTER 32B— - SAFEGUARD TRIBAL OBJECTS OF PATRIMONY › § 3073
Makes it illegal to export, try to export, plan, or hide cultural or archaeological items that are banned from leaving the United States. A first criminal offense can bring a fine under federal law and up to 1 year and 1 day in jail; repeat offenses can bring up to 10 years. Customs must seize such banned items, they can be forfeited to the U.S., and then quickly returned to the right Indian Tribe or Native Hawaiian organization under existing repatriation laws. Requires a new export certification for certain cultural or archaeological items before they can leave the country. The Secretary must publish clear rules saying which items need certification and which do not, using basic definitions for terms like “cultural items” and “archaeological resource.” To get a certificate, an item must not be under federal investigation, must not break other laws, and must either be legally excavated with a permit or have written confirmation from the tribe or Native Hawaiian organization that the exporter has the right to the item or that the tribe gave up control. Exporters must apply with descriptions, photos, and provenance and must promise they are not exporting a banned item. False statements can bring criminal penalties and future restrictions. Applications go into a secure database for tribes and organizations to review. Tribes get 9 business days to review after being notified within 1 business day; the Secretary then has 7 business days to act if a tribe raises an issue, or 1 business day if not, with possible extensions up to 30 business days for credible concerns. Customs will detain items sent without certification and the Secretary must decide within 60 days if the item is banned; if not proven banned, the item is returned. Civil penalties apply for exporting without a certificate, and penalties for exporting banned items equal the cost to store and return them. Voluntarily returning an item before an active federal investigation begins avoids prosecution. The Secretary may charge fees only as allowed by Congress. Agencies must train staff and work with tribes and Native Hawaiian organizations, and the President may seek foreign agreements to discourage trade in banned items, encourage returns, and promote Native art.
Full Legal Text
Indians — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
25 U.S.C. § 3073
Title 25 — Indians
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73