Title 28 › Part PART IV— - JURISDICTION AND VENUE › Chapter CHAPTER 89— - DISTRICT COURTS; REMOVAL OF CASES FROM STATE COURTS › § 1442
Lets federal agencies, the United States, and certain federal officers or people acting for them move a civil lawsuit or criminal charge filed in a state court into the federal district court that covers the place where the state case is pending. It covers cases against the United States or its agencies, officers acting in their official role or claiming federal authority for catching criminals or collecting revenue, property owners whose title comes from such officers when the case questions a federal law, officers of federal courts for acts done while doing their jobs, and officers of either House of Congress for acts done under that House’s orders. A foreign person suing a nonresident U.S. civil officer in state court can also have the case moved if the officer was served in the federal district. For deciding a move in a criminal case, a law enforcement officer is treated as acting in their job if they protected someone from a violent crime in their presence, gave immediate help to someone hurt or threatened, or stopped a person they reasonably believed had committed or would commit a violent crime that could cause death or serious injury. Short definitions: “crime of violence” = meaning in section 16 of title 18; “serious bodily injury” = meaning in section 1365 of title 18; “law enforcement officer” = those in section 8401(17) of title 5 and Diplomatic Security special agents; “State” and “State court” include DC, U.S. territories, and tribal and territorial courts (see section 1151 of title 18 for Indian country).
Full Legal Text
Judiciary and Judicial Procedure — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
28 U.S.C. § 1442
Title 28 — Judiciary and Judicial Procedure
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73