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 I— - Information Sharing › § 482
The President must create and run rules so federal agencies share homeland security information with each other and with the right State and local officials. Agencies must also find and protect sensitive but unclassified information, and, when needed, remove classified parts before sharing. The rules must apply to every federal agency and must not change how classified information is defined or how protected sources and methods are kept safe. Information shared must include judgments about how credible it is. The systems used to share information must be able to send both unclassified and classified material, limit who gets what by place, job, or need-to-know, work efficiently, be available to authorized State and local people, and use existing systems like NLETS, RISS, and the FBI’s Terrorist Threat Warning System when possible. The rules must stop improper redistribution, keep the information secure and private, protect people’s legal rights, and remove wrong or old names and data. Federal agencies and authorized State and local users must be able to access and, when appropriate, share their own jurisdiction’s information in the systems; federal officials will review and fold that information into intelligence as needed. The President may allow some classified information to be shared with State and local people under special procedures, which could include security clearances, nondisclosure agreements, or inclusion in joint task forces. Definitions and other duties: “Homeland security information” — information about terrorist threats, ways to prevent or investigate them, or ways to respond. “Intelligence community” — the group defined in 50 U.S.C. 3003(4). “State and local personnel” — governors, mayors, police, firefighters, public health workers, emergency managers (including adjutant generals), other emergency responders, and designated private-sector employees tied to critical infrastructure. “State” — includes DC and U.S. territories. Agency heads must name an official to run these rules for their agency. Information given to State or local governments stays under federal control, and laws that would force public disclosure do not apply. Federal agencies cannot share confidential statistical-only data in ways that break other laws.
Full Legal Text
Domestic Security — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
6 U.S.C. § 482
Title 6 — Domestic Security
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73