Title 8 › Chapter CHAPTER 12— - IMMIGRATION AND NATIONALITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - IMMIGRATION › Part Part I— - Selection System › § 1153a
Require Department of Homeland Security employees, including the Secretary and certain USCIS officials, to be neutral and not give special treatment to anyone in the immigrant visa program under section 1153(b)(5). For cases pending on or after March 15, 2022, officials must put all case-specific written communications with outside advocates into the case file (except routine interagency messages). Any substantive oral contacts with outside advocates must be recorded or have detailed minutes and put in the file. If an official gets evidence about a case from someone who is not the affected person or a federal law source, that information cannot be added to the file or used unless the affected person is told and, if the information is harmful, allowed to respond. Evidence from law enforcement or intelligence agencies needs the agency’s consent before going into the file. Information from whistleblowers or confidential sources must be handled so identities and classified material stay protected. Communications not included in the case file cannot be used in deciding a case unless the Secretary waives that rule for national security or law enforcement reasons. USCIS must keep an email or similar contact point for questions about specific cases or the general program. Within 40 days after March 15, 2022, USCIS must say that outside parties can only use that email, the National Customer Service Center, or the Office of Public Engagement (Immigrant Investor Program Office) to contact DHS about these cases, and officials must send inquiries to those channels. USCIS must keep a written log of these contacts (date, time, subject, participants, and which official saw it) and make the log available under the Freedom of Information Act (section 552 of title 5). If someone gets non-case-specific information from DHS that was not public, USCIS must post it online within 30 days. Intentional violations of the no-favor and reporting rules will be punished. The Secretary must set graduated sanctions within 90 days after March 15, 2022, which may include reprimand, suspension, demotion, removal, and any applicable civil or criminal penalties. Nothing here changes rules about classified information or creates a private right to sue. The rules take effect on March 15, 2022.
Full Legal Text
Aliens and Nationality — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
8 U.S.C. § 1153a
Title 8 — Aliens and Nationality
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73