Title 34 › Subtitle Subtitle II— - Protection of Children and Other Persons › Chapter CHAPTER 219— - ASHANTI ALERT COMMUNICATIONS NETWORK › § 21903
The Attorney General must pick someone in the Office of Justice Programs to be the national Ashanti Alert coordinator. The coordinator must help states and Indian Tribes start and improve Ashanti Alert plans. They must write voluntary guidance to make plans work well together. The guidance must cover what resources are needed, clear rules for when an alert is needed (including the missing adult’s mental capacity, any history of violence or trafficking, and whether the person reporting is credible), how to use the Ashanti Alert name, and how to protect the missing adult’s privacy, dignity, independence, and safety. The coordinator must also create suggested procedures for finding missing adults and returning them safely, such as public safety communications, case handling, command center work, reunification, incident review, and when not to issue an alert. They must help coordinate the network regionally and set up an advisory group with law enforcement, victim advocates, broadcasters, first responders, and other needed experts. The coordinator is the nationwide contact for building the network and for regional alert coordination. The coordinator must work with the Department of Transportation, the Federal Communications Commission, the Assistant Secretary for Aging at HHS, and other DOJ offices (including the Office on Violence Against Women). They must consult local broadcasters and law enforcement when setting minimum standards. Not later than 1 year after December 31, 2018, and every year after, the coordinator must report to Congress on their work and on each State or Tribe’s Ashanti Alert plan. Reports must list which States or Tribes have plans or are developing plans and, when available, give details for each plan: number of alerts, number of adults found, average time to locate, the issuing agency and how alerts are sent, costs, the criteria used, whether cases crossed borders, steps to protect privacy and dignity, how communication improved, and any other relevant information.
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Reference
Citation
34 U.S.C. § 21903
Title 34 — Navy
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73