Title 8 › Chapter CHAPTER 12— - IMMIGRATION AND NATIONALITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - IMMIGRATION › Part Part IV— - Inspection, Apprehension, Examination, Exclusion, and Removal › § 1232
Requires the Secretary of Homeland Security, working with the Secretaries of State and Health and Human Services and the Attorney General, to make rules that safely return unaccompanied foreign children to their country of nationality or last home. If a child is from a country next to the United States, an immigration officer may let the child withdraw an application and send the child back only after a case-by-case check that the child is not a trafficking victim or at risk of trafficking, does not have a credible fear of persecution, and can decide to withdraw on the child’s own. The child must be screened within 48 hours of being caught and before any return; if the child does not meet those checks or no decision is made in 48 hours, the child must be transferred to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). The Secretary of State must make agreements with neighboring countries to ensure safe returns, including handing children to proper officials, returning them during reasonable business hours, and training border staff. Gives HHS responsibility for the care and custody of unaccompanied children (see the one-line definition in section 279(g) of title 6). Federal agencies must tell HHS within 48 hours if they find a child or suspect someone is under 18 and must usually transfer custody to HHS within 72 hours. HHS and DHS must use multiple types of evidence to check age. Children must be placed in the least restrictive, safest setting; secure detention is allowed only if the child is dangerous or charged with a crime, and such placements must be reviewed monthly. HHS must check sponsors’ suitability and may require home studies for trafficking victims, disabled children, abused children, or risky sponsors; DHS must give needed background information within 2 weeks. HHS should try to provide free legal help and legal orientation to custodians, and may appoint independent child advocates. The law requires child advocate programs at 3 new detention sites within 2 years after March 7, 2013, and up to 3 more sites within 3 years; these programs may spend no more than 10% of federal funds on administration, must provide a 25% non‑Federal match (in‑kind limited to 40% of that match), and must be reported on starting 1 year after March 7, 2013 and annually. The Comptroller General must study the program and report within 3 years after March 7, 2013. Special immigrant status applications must be decided by DHS within 180 days. The rule took effect 90 days after December 23, 2008 and applies to cases pending on that date. HHS may give grants or contracts to voluntary agencies to help carry out these rules. Funding authorized for child advocate activities is $1,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2014 and 2015, and $2,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2018 through 2021.
Full Legal Text
Aliens and Nationality — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
8 U.S.C. § 1232
Title 8 — Aliens and Nationality
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73