Title 50 › Chapter 36— FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE SURVEILLANCE › Subchapter V— OVERSIGHT › § 1871
The Attorney General must send a report every six months to the House and Senate intelligence and judiciary committees that, while protecting national security, says what happened in the past six months. The report must give the total number of people targeted by orders under this chapter and break that down by six types of orders (electronic surveillance under section 1805, physical searches under 1824, pen registers under 1842, access to records under 1861, and acquisitions under 1881b and 1881c). It must also say how many people were covered by orders under section 1801(b)(1)(C), how many times the Attorney General allowed information from this chapter to be used in criminal cases, summarize important legal interpretations given to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court or the Court of Review, and include copies of court decisions or orders that meaningfully interpret the law. The first report was due within 6 months after December 17, 2004, and reports continue every six months after that. Within 45 days after the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court or its Court of Review issues a decision, order, or opinion that meaningfully interprets or changes how the law is applied, the Attorney General must give the committees a copy and related papers. The Attorney General must also provide copies of such decisions from the 5-year period ending on July 10, 2008, if not already sent. For hearings with transcripts, the Attorney General must notify the committees within 45 days after getting the final transcript or after the matter ends, and must allow committee review of an existing transcript within 3 business days of a request. Declassified documents reviewed under section 1872 must be provided. The Attorney General, with the Director of National Intelligence, may redact parts of materials to protect national security, limited to sensitive sources and methods or target identities. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court: the court set up under section 1803(a). Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review: the court set up under section 1803(b).
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War and National Defense — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
50 U.S.C. § 1871
Title 50 — War and National Defense
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60