Title 6 › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - HOMELAND SECURITY ORGANIZATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER VIII— - COORDINATION WITH NON-FEDERAL ENTITIES; INSPECTOR GENERAL; UNITED STATES SECRET SERVICE; COAST GUARD; GENERAL PROVISIONS › Part Part H— - Miscellaneous Provisions › § 473
The Secretary must run a Cyber Crimes Center inside ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations. The Center must help with cybercrime investigations by giving investigative help, training, and equipment. Inside the Center, there must be three units: a Child Exploitation Investigations Unit (CEIU), a Computer Forensics Unit (CFU), and a Cyber Crimes Unit (CCU). The CEIU coordinates child-exploitation work for ICE, including cases about child exploitation, child pornography, identifying child victims, traveling child sex offenders, and forced child labor (including sexual abuse). It focuses on prevention, building investigation skills, enforcement, and training other law enforcement on request. The CEIU must provide counseling for ICE staff exposed to child abuse material. It can work with the Department of Defense, the National Association to Protect Children, and other approved groups, and it can accept money or donated services from groups like the Virtual Global Taskforce, national labs, and schools to support public awareness. The CEIU must collect data on suspects, arrests (including number of child victims found and arrests of people in positions of trust), cases opened, and prosecutions, and must share that data in annual reports with specific Congressional committees starting within 1 year after May 29, 2015 and each year for the next 4 years, and post the reports on the Department website. The CFU must train and support digital forensics, run the department’s digital-forensics and media-exploitation program, supply forensic tools, and do research. The CCU must lead ICE’s cyber strategy and fight internet-based criminal networks, focusing on things like cyber economic crime, IP theft, illicit e‑commerce (including hidden marketplaces), internet-enabled arms and tech proliferation, and cyber-enabled smuggling and money laundering. The law creates a HERO Child-Rescue Corps Program to recruit, train, equip, and hire active-duty service members and wounded, ill, or injured veterans for investigative, forensic, analyst, and intelligence roles; the program includes internships where participants work on the child-exploitation topics listed above. The Secretary must set up a paid internship and hiring program for HERO participants, with internships up to 12 months, pay between GS-5 and GS-7 rates for those not on active duty, preference to Homeland Security Investigations, and new permanent jobs beyond those that existed on December 21, 2019. Congress may fund what is needed, and for fiscal years 2022 through 2027 no more than $10,000,000 per year may go to the HERO program and at least $2,000,000 per year must go to the paid internship and hiring program.
Full Legal Text
Domestic Security — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
6 U.S.C. § 473
Title 6 — Domestic Security
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73