Title 6 › Chapter 1— HOMELAND SECURITY ORGANIZATION › Subchapter II— INFORMATION ANALYSIS › Part A— Information and Analysis; Access to Information › § 124k
Creates an Interagency Threat Assessment and Coordination Group (ITACG) to help share homeland security, terrorism, and weapons-of-mass-destruction information with state, local, tribal, and private sector partners. The Director of National Intelligence, through the information-sharing program manager and working with the Secretary of Homeland Security, must set up and run the ITACG. The ITACG has two parts: an Advisory Council that makes policy and rules for integrating, analyzing, and sharing information, and a Detail of state, local, and tribal officers and analysts who work inside the National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC) with federal analysts to help prepare and share products through channels the Council picks. The Secretary of Homeland Security must create standards for products, set timely sharing processes, mark how reliable information is, and teach the intelligence community what state, local, and tribal partners need. The Secretary must keep and manage the Detail, which will advise NCTC analysts, help make versions of products that are unclassified or as low-classified as possible for state, local, tribal, and private use, follow Council rules, use approved channels, recommend wider sharing when helpful, and report to a senior DHS official. A senior DHS official must be detailed to NCTC to run daily ITACG operations and may pick an FBI deputy. The Council must include DHS (chair), FBI, NCTC, DOD, DOE, State, other federal members, the information-sharing program manager, and executive-level state, local, and tribal officials, with at least 50 percent from state, local, or tribal governments. The Council must meet regularly, at least quarterly, starting no later than 90 days after August 3, 2007, at NCTC. Detailees must have needed access, clearances, and training (including privacy and civil liberties). Chapter 10 of title 5 does not apply. Funding is authorized as needed for fiscal years 2008 through 2012, including for security clearances.
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Domestic Security — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
6 U.S.C. § 124k
Title 6 — Domestic Security
Last Updated
Apr 18, 2026
Release point: 119-83