Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle A— General Military Law › Part II— PERSONNEL › Chapter 76— MISSING PERSONS › § 1503
When someone is recommended to be listed as missing, the Secretary who gets that recommendation must set up a board to investigate within 10 days. If two or more disappearances seem connected, the Secretary may put them all under one board. The board must include at least one person with experience in the kind of military operation where the person went missing — an officer for a service member or a civilian for a DoD employee or contractor. Everyone on the board must have the security clearance needed to see all the case information. The Secretary must also give the board legal help from a judge advocate or an attorney with missing‑person and family‑rights experience. The board must gather, protect, and study all evidence and records, write findings, and recommend whether each person should be declared missing, a deserter, absent without leave, or dead. A lawyer called a “missing person’s counsel” must be named to represent each missing person (not the family). That lawyer must have the qualifications for general court‑martial counsel, the right security clearance, and missing‑person law expertise. The lawyer can see all evidence, attend and watch the board, question witnesses, help keep records, and file an independent review of the board’s report. Board proceedings are closed to the public, including family and designated persons. The board must send its report to the Secretary within 30 days, say what it looked at, give its recommendation, and note any classified material (a classified annex is allowed). The report generally cannot be made public until one year after it is sent. The Secretary must review the report within 30 days, fix errors if needed, then decide each person’s official status. Within 30 days of that decision, the Secretary must give next of kin an unclassified summary of the unit report and the board report (including board members’ names) and tell them a follow‑up inquiry will occur about one year after the first official notice unless new information appears. The Secretary’s decision is binding on all U.S. departments and agencies.
Full Legal Text
Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
10 U.S.C. § 1503
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60