Title 8 › Chapter CHAPTER 14— - RESTRICTING WELFARE AND PUBLIC BENEFITS FOR ALIENS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - GENERAL PROVISIONS › § 1642
The U.S. Attorney General must make rules to check that people applying for certain federal benefits are eligible and are qualified aliens. He must work with the Secretary of Health and Human Services and finish those rules within 18 months after August 22, 1996. When possible, the rules should use forms and methods like other federal programs. By 90 days after August 5, 1997, the Attorney General must issue interim guidance. He must also set up fair, nondiscriminatory ways for applicants to prove citizenship within the same 18 months. By 90 days after August 5, 1997, he must also make rules for states and local governments to check whether an immigrant is a qualified alien, a nonimmigrant, or was paroled into the U.S. for less than 1 year, so they can decide benefit eligibility. States running programs that give federal benefits must have a verification system that follows those rules within 24 months after the rules are adopted. Money can be provided as needed to carry this out. Except as covered by the rules above, nonprofit charities do not have to check or prove applicants’ eligibility when they give federal or state or local public benefits.
Full Legal Text
Aliens and Nationality — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
8 U.S.C. § 1642
Title 8 — Aliens and Nationality
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73