S-4009-119
Committee on Foreign Relations. Ordered to be reported with an amendment in the nature of a substitute favorably.
Sponsored by Ted Cruz (R-TX)
What it does
This bill would require the President to identify and sanction foreign individuals and entities determined to have knowingly participated in or facilitated forced organ harvesting in China. Sanctions would include freezing U.S.-held assets under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) and barring sanctioned individuals from entering the United States. The bill also requires the Secretary of State to submit a report to Congress within one year on China's organ transplant policies and practices, including an assessment of whether forced organ harvesting constitutes an "atrocity" under existing law. The sanctions authority would expire after five years unless reauthorized.
Who benefits
Falun Gong practitioners and other prisoners of conscience in China who are alleged victims of forced organ harvesting. Human rights organizations that have advocated for accountability on this issue. U.S. and international transplant ethics advocates. American patients on organ transplant waiting lists who compete with "transplant tourism" that may draw on illicitly sourced organs. Researchers and policymakers who would gain access to the mandated State Department report. Members of Congress who gain oversight visibility through required reporting and waiver disclosures.
Who is hurt
Chinese government officials, military personnel, and medical professionals who could be placed on the sanctions list and lose access to U.S. financial systems or travel to the United States. Chinese hospitals and medical entities with U.S. financial ties. U.S. academic and research institutions that have collaborated with Chinese transplant researchers and could face disruption to ongoing grants (the bill requires disclosure of such grants over the past 10 years). U.S. businesses with financial relationships to sanctioned entities. Sanctioned individuals' family members who may face indirect financial consequences.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that credible independent investigations — including the China Tribunal (2019), a UK-based independent panel — concluded with certainty that forced organ harvesting from prisoners of conscience, including Falun Gong practitioners, has occurred in China at a significant scale. They contend that the documented gap between China's reported voluntary donor numbers and its transplant volume — with wait times of days rather than months — is consistent only with an on-demand supply from non-consenting sources. Supporters further argue that targeted sanctions are a proportionate, well-established tool that holds individual perpetrators accountable without broadly penalizing the Chinese population.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the evidentiary basis for the specific scale and current status of forced organ harvesting remains contested among independent researchers, and that mandatory sanctions based on a presidential determination could be applied inconsistently or diplomatically counterproductively. They contend that the bill's "should have known" standard for the term "knowingly" is broad enough to sweep in medical professionals with attenuated connections to any harvesting program, raising due process concerns about designations made without judicial review. Critics also argue that the five-year sunset and waiver provisions give the executive branch significant discretion that could render the sanctions largely symbolic.