Title 18 › Part I— CRIMES › Chapter 84— PRESIDENTIAL AND PRESIDENTIAL STAFF ASSASSINATION, KIDNAPPING, AND ASSAULT › § 1751
It makes it a federal crime to kill, kidnap, try to kill or kidnap, agree with others to kill or kidnap, or assault certain top U.S. leaders and some of their staff. Covered people are the President, President-elect, Vice President, Vice President-elect, anyone acting as President, the next officer in line if there is no Vice President, and staff appointed under section 105(a)(2)(A) of title 3 for the Executive Office of the President or section 106(a)(1)(A) of title 3 for the Office of the Vice President. "President-elect" and "Vice-President-elect" mean the apparent winners shown by the general election results under title 3, sections 1 and 2. Killing one of these people is treated as murder and punished under sections 1111 and 1112. Kidnapping can bring any number of years in prison or life; if the victim dies, the penalty can include death. Attempts and conspiracies carry long prison terms or life, and death is possible if the victim dies. Assault penalties vary: up to 10 years for the top officials, up to 1 year for the listed staff unless a weapon or injury is involved, then up to 10 years. The Attorney General may pay up to $100,000 for tips about killings of top officials, but government employees who acted in their jobs cannot get that payment. The FBI investigates, can get help from other agencies (including the military), federal action pauses state or local prosecution while it runs, the government does not have to prove the attacker knew the victim was protected, and the law applies outside the United States.
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Crimes and Criminal Procedure — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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18 U.S.C. § 1751
Title 18 — Crimes and Criminal Procedure
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60