Title 6 › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - HOMELAND SECURITY ORGANIZATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - BORDER, MARITIME, AND TRANSPORTATION SECURITY › Part Part B— - U.S. Customs and Border Protection › § 224
The Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection must send Congress a report within 1 year after December 31, 2020, and every year after that about all unidentified human remains found on or near the U.S.–Mexico border during the reporting period. The report must list, when known, each person’s cause and manner of death, sex, age at death, country of origin, and the location where the remains were found. It must give the total number of unidentified remains found by CBP and, if available, totals found by other federal, State, local, Tribal, military, or medical examiner offices. The report must describe how CBP works with nongovernmental groups, colleges, medical examiners, coroners, and law enforcement to identify and map where migrant deaths happen and to count those deaths. It must also explain CBP’s Missing Migrant Program and how it helps reduce deaths while keeping the border secure. Within 30 days after each report, CBP must put the basic person-level and total numbers on its website. CBP must also send an annual report about rescue beacons on the border. That report must say how many beacons are in each Border Patrol sector, where each beacon is, how often each was activated, what kind of distress caused each activation (if known), and recommendations, made with local officials and stakeholders, for where more beacons are needed. Within 6 months after the CBP report is sent, the Comptroller General must report to the same Congressional committees on how CBP collects and records border-death data, any differences across sectors, how CBP’s data compares to other sources like county medical examiners and the CDC, how CBP measures the success of its death-mitigation programs, and how much CBP works with other governments, consular posts, and NGOs to identify people, resolve unidentified-remains and missing-person cases, and share information with NamUs.
Full Legal Text
Domestic Security — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
6 U.S.C. § 224
Title 6 — Domestic Security
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73