Title 25 › Chapter CHAPTER 34— - INDIAN CHILD PROTECTION AND FAMILY VIOLENCE PREVENTION › § 3207
Require the Secretary and the Secretary of Health and Human Services to make a list of jobs that have regular contact with or control over Indian children, check the background of current and job candidates for those jobs, and write rules that set minimum character standards for hiring. The standards must stop anyone who has been found guilty of, or who entered a guilty or nolo contendere plea to, a felony or two or more misdemeanors for violent crimes, sexual crimes, crimes against people, or offenses against children from being hired. Tribes or tribal organizations that get certain federal education or self‑determination funds must do the same checks and use rules that are at least as strict. Define a few key terms in simple ways: “covered individual” means adults or others the tribal social services agency says need a check; “foster care placement” means a temporary removal of a child when the parent or custodian cannot get the child back on demand and parental rights aren’t fully ended or the child isn’t permanently placed; “Indian custodian,” “parent,” “tribal court,” and “tribal social services agency” are the tribe’s people or bodies that handle custody or foster care. Before a foster home or institution is finally approved or licensed, the tribal social services agency must run criminal records checks on everyone living or working there and decide they meet tribal standards. Those checks must include fingerprint checks of national crime databases, tribe abuse lists, and State child abuse registries (including requests to other States for the last 5 years). If a check shows a covered individual was found by a court to have committed any crime listed in 42 U.S.C. 671(a)(20)(A)(i) or (ii), the placement cannot be ordered. Emergency foster placements can be treated differently by the tribal social services agency. Not later than 2 years after June 3, 2016, each tribe must set up recertification rules for foster homes and institutions and the Secretary must, within the same 2‑year period and after talking with tribes, issue guidance on checks for new residents or staff, self‑reporting, emergency placement practices, and how to certify compliance.
Full Legal Text
Indians — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
25 U.S.C. § 3207
Title 25 — Indians
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73