HR-8742-119
Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
Sponsored by Sharice Davids (D-KS)
What it does
This bill would amend the Immigration and Nationality Act to require all Department of Homeland Security officers and employees who perform immigration enforcement duties to complete training on Native American tribal documents and tribal interactions. The training — developed within 180 days in collaboration with the Bureau of Indian Affairs and federally recognized tribes — would cover how to identify and accept tribal documents as proof of U.S. citizenship, appropriate protocols for interacting with tribal members, and the federal government's trust responsibility to tribes. Officers would be required to complete the training annually and each time they are reassigned to a new region, and DHS would report to Congress on the curriculum's development within one year.
Who benefits
Enrolled members of federally recognized Indian tribes — particularly those living near international borders or in regions with active immigration enforcement — who may currently face difficulty having tribal documents accepted as proof of citizenship. Tribes themselves, whose sovereign authority to issue identity documents would receive formal federal recognition in enforcement practice. Border-area tribes such as the Tohono O'odham Nation, whose members regularly cross areas with heavy DHS presence. DHS officers who would gain clearer guidance and legal cover for accepting tribal documents. Federal courts and administrative bodies that handle wrongful detention claims.
Who is hurt
DHS as an agency would bear administrative costs of developing, maintaining, and delivering the training curriculum annually across all regions. Individual DHS officers would face an additional mandatory training requirement. Taxpayers would indirectly bear the cost of curriculum development, database maintenance, and ongoing training delivery. Tribes with limited administrative capacity may face burdens in consulting on curriculum development or keeping document format information current in the DHS database.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that enrolled tribal members are U.S. citizens by birthright under the Indian Citizenship Act of 1924, yet documented cases exist of Native Americans being detained or questioned by immigration authorities who failed to recognize tribal enrollment cards as valid identity documents. They contend that tribes near international borders — such as the Tohono O'odham, whose traditional lands straddle the U.S.-Mexico border — face disproportionate enforcement encounters, and that standardized training directly addresses a concrete, recurring harm to a population whose citizenship is legally unambiguous.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that DHS already has broad discretion to set internal training priorities and that legislating specific curriculum content — including mandatory annual repetition and regional reassignment triggers — imposes rigid procedural requirements that may divert training resources from other enforcement needs. They contend that the bill's broad definition of acceptable tribal documents, including letters on tribal letterhead, could create verification challenges or be exploited to circumvent immigration enforcement, and that these concerns would be better addressed through agency rulemaking rather than a statutory mandate.