7 FAM 000
CONSULAR PROTECTION OF U.S. NATIONALS ABROAD
7 FAM 010
INTRODUCTION
(CT:Con-822; 07-16-2018)
(Office of Origin: CA/OCS)
7 FAM 011 SUMMARY
(CT:CON-427; 12-10-2012)
a. The U.S. Department of State and our embassies and
consulates abroad have no greater responsibility than the protection of U.S.
citizens overseas. Article 5 of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations
(VCCR) provides that consular functions include.
Article 5, VCCR, Consular Functions
Consular functions consist in:
(a) protecting in the receiving State the
interests of the sending State and of its nationals, both individuals and
bodies corporate, within the limits permitted by international law. . . .
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b. Bureau of Consular Affairs: Primary
responsibility for protection of U.S. citizens abroad is carried out by the
Bureau of Consular Affairs (CA) in the Department of State and by dedicated
consular officers, locally engaged staff and consular agents abroad. 1 FAM 250
outlines the duties and responsibilities of the Bureau of Consular Affairs. It
is imperative that consular officers participate fully in post Emergency Action
Committees (EAC) to ensure that the interests of private U.S. citizens
traveling and residing abroad are considered in post strategic planning and
decision-making. (See 12 FAH-1 H-230,
Emergency Action Committees).
c. Overseas Citizens Services:
Within CA, the Directorate of Overseas Citizens Services (CA/OCS) is charged
with exercising the Secretary of States responsibility to provide consular
protection and services to United States citizens abroad. OCS serves as a
liaison between concerned family members, friends and members of Congress in
the United States and consular posts and U.S. citizens abroad. OCS is
responsible for the ongoing development, delivery and oversight of a broad
range of highly technical and complex programs and services requiring an
in-depth knowledge of the laws, regulations, treaties, conventions, and
precedents governing those programs. CA/OCS is comprised of three offices: American
Citizen Services and Crisis Management (ACS), Childrens Issues (CI), and Legal
Affairs (L). These offices are under the leadership of a Managing Director and
the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Overseas Citizens Services.
d. The Office of American Citizens Services (ACS) and
Crisis Management (CA/OCS/ACS) is in effect the Departments America Desk. ACS
helps U.S. citizens/nationals abroad and their families and friends at home
with emergencies such as deaths, arrests, illnesses and injuries. ACS provides
vital assistance to U.S. citizens/nationals during periods of crisis such as
transportation accidents, natural disasters, and civil unrest, including the
evacuation of U.S. citizens. In addition to ACSs emergency and crisis work,
it provides assistance on a wide variety of other issues, including estates,
property, voting and adjudicating acquisition and loss of U.S. citizenship.
e. The Office of Children's Issues (CA/OCS/CI) provides
assistance to the public on international parental child abduction and
international adoption cases. CI serves as the U.S. Central Authority for the
Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction (Hague
Abduction Convention) and for the Hague Convention on the Protection of
Children and Cooperation in Respect of International Adoption. CI also
formulates and coordinates policy and provides direction to posts on
international parental child abduction cases and international adoption policy
issues. See 7
FAM 1710 and 7
FAM 1790.
f. The Office of Legal Affairs (CA/OCS/L) participates
in formulating policies relating to emergency and non-emergency services to
U.S. citizens residing or traveling abroad and to interested parties in the
United States. L provides legal and technical guidance relating to OCS
programs carried out by all OCS personnel and by consular officers worldwide. Ls
primary responsibilities, stated briefly, include policy formulation, program
analysis and planning, litigation, legislation, regulations, treaties, advisory
opinions involving complex legal analysis, liaison with other agencies and
private-sector counterparts. Posts can contact L at ASK-OCS-L@state.gov.
7 FAM 012 ELIGIBLITY
(CT:CON-416; 07-26-2012)
a. U.S. Nationals Eligible for
Consular Protection and Other Services: Nationality is the principal
relationship that connects an individual to a State. International law
recognizes the right of a State to afford diplomatic and consular protection to
its nationals and to represent their interests. Under U.S. law the term
"national" is inclusive of citizens but "citizen" is not
inclusive of nationals. All U.S. citizens are U.S. nationals. Section
101(a)(22) INA (8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(22)) provides that the term national of the
United States means (A) a citizen of the United States, or (B) a person who,
though not a citizen of the United States, owes permanent allegiance to the
United States. U.S. nationals are eligible for U.S. consular protection.
b. U.S. Non-Citizen Nationals: A
non-citizen national of the United States is a person who, though not a
citizen, owes permanent allegiance to the United States. Section 308(1) INA (8
U.S.C. 1408(1)) provides that nationals, but not citizens of the United States,
include people born in an outlying possession of the United States on or after
the date of formal acquisition of such possession, in addition to several other
limited categories. Section 101(a)(29) INA (8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(29)) defines the
term outlying possessions of the United States to mean American Samoa and
Swains Island. Some statutes and treaties, such as Section 302 of the Covenant
to Establish a Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (48 U.S.C. 1801, 48
U.S.C. 1801 Notes), have specified means by which persons who automatically
acquired U.S. citizenship could instead opt to be noncitizen nationals, see:
7 FAM 1100, Acquisition and Retention of U.S. Citizenship and
Nationality
7
FAM 1121.4, Laws Governing Status of Persons Born in Outlying Possessions
7
FAM 1125, American Samoa and the Swains Island
7
FAM 1126, Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands
c. Lawful permanent resident aliens
(LPRs): Section 101(a)(20) INA (8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(20)) defines the term
lawfully admitted for permanent residence as the status of having been
lawfully accorded the privilege of residing permanently in the United States as
an immigrant in accordance with the immigration laws, whose status has not
changed. LPRs generally are not entitled to emergency and protective services
provided by the U.S. Government. Refer such persons to the nearest diplomatic
representative of the country of which they are a national or citizen. When an
LPR applicant has exceptionally close and strong ties to the United States, and
overriding humanitarian and compassionate grounds exist, request guidance from
CA/OCS/ACS about the propriety of providing the service, with the understanding
that the host government may not, and is not obligated to, honor a request from
the U.S. Government on behalf of such an individual. The Privacy Act (5
U.S.C. 552a) does pertain to LPRs. (See also 7 FAM 060).
d. No Ties to the United States:
Persons with no ties or allegiance to the United States may not be provided
emergency or protective services except under the most extraordinary
circumstances, and then only with the prior approval of the Department
(CA/OCS).
e. Availability of Certain ACS
Consular Services to Foreign Nationals: Notarial and Authentication
services are available to foreign nationals under certain circumstances. (See
7 FAM 800).
7 FAM 013 DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR
PREMISES
(CT:CON-300; 05-20-2009)
The status of diplomatic and consular premises arises from
the rules of law relating to inviolability and immunity from the jurisdiction
of the receiving State; the premises are not part of the territory of the
sending State (the United States of America). Therefore, contrary to popular
belief, a U.S. embassy or consulate is not U.S. soil. (See 7 FAM 180,
Refuge Temporary Emergency Protection Of Private U.S. Nationals At Overseas
Posts).
7 FAM 014 UNASSIGNED
(CT:CON-822; 07-16-2018)
7 FAM 015 NOTE ABOUT DIPLOMATIC AND
CONSULAR TERMINOLOGY
(CT:CON-106; 06-06-2005)
In the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations (VCCR) and
bilateral consular conventions, the country that sent the consular officer to
serve abroad is referred to as the sending State. The receiving State is
the country where that consular officer will serve (the host country). You
should become accustomed to this way of referring to countries in your formal
dialogue with the authorities of the country where you serve abroad. Of
course, diplomatic parlance is not useful or necessary when speaking informally
at the working level.
7 FAM 016 Reporting
(CT:CON-686; 11-15-2016)
a. Each subchapter of the 7 FAM provides specific
guidance regarding reporting requirements for posts concerning consular
protection and passport and citizenship cases.
b. Most American Citizen Services (ACS) reporting is
now done in the ACS system and via record email. Certain high profile cases
continue to be reported via cable using appropriate TAGS to ensure appropriate
distribution in the Department of State.
c. As the Bureau of Consular Affairs (CA) moves to
adopt a more person-centric casework model, posts must scan pertinent documents
as defined below and enter case notes, where appropriate, into the ACS system
record of a U.S. citizen in actual or potential high-visibility cases. This
will ensure that both Washington and posts have a complete picture of what work
has been completed on a case, allowing us to respond quickly to urgent
inquiries.
d. Consular One will eventually consolidate all citizen
and passport services systems, including ACS (American Citizens Services), TDIS
(Travel Document Issuance System), ACRQ (American Citizen Record Query), PIERS
(Passport Issuance Electronic Record System), PLOTS (Passport Lookout Tracking
System), ECAS (Enterprise Case Assessment Service), STEP (Smart Traveler
Enrollment Program), MASCOT (Message Alert System for Citizens Overseas Tool,
CTF (Consular Task Force), TFA (Task Force Alert), ATS (Adoption Tracking
Service), and IPCA (International Parental Child Abduction). A critical
feature of this system is a person-centric case work model. No longer will
information be held in many systems, in separate case files, in emails, or
elsewhere. You will be able to access a U.S. citizen's record literally from
cradle to grave or, with a naturalized citizen, from visa application to
passport issuance and, following conferral of citizenship, to the same extent
as other U.S. citizens' records. Our goal is to put the right information at
the fingertips of the right people when they need it most, whether in a routine
passport application, an Information Memorandum to the Secretary, or during a
crisis.
e. This system is intended to provide for a better,
more well-informed consular team that enjoys improved system support. We aim
to give action officers the information and documents they need for a swift
response to requests for briefings by senior officials, for assistance in a
crisis, or for routine consular services.
f. Where you think an ACS case might draw press or
Congressional attention or involve a post or senior Department principal,
please scan or attach electronic copies of pertinent U.S. and host-country
official documents, incoming letters from the public in high profile cases,
Congressional responses, memos prepared on the case, etc., to the U.S.
citizen's ACS subject record. CA/OCS will do the same. If the case is unusual
and requires further explanation, include a case note that provides pertinent
details that CA or post need to prepare a written response to any inquiry. The
documents post should scan include:
(1) Congressional Correspondence for any case;
(2) Diplomatic notes exchanged for any case;
(3) Action, Information, and Briefing Memoranda;
(4) Key press clippings or coverage;
(5) Talking Points and Press Guidance;
(6) Privacy Act Waivers;
(7) Welfare and Whereabouts messages passed;
(8) Notarial Documents where service is refused (for
U.S. citizens only); and
(9) Incoming correspondence for the cases above.
g. Please note that we are not suggesting scanning
every document in every case (or even in most cases), but rather only in
high-profile cases likely to draw attention outside of the Consular Section. While
there will be some additional scanning involved, we do not intend to task large
volumes of new work. Posts should not be scanning documents for routine cases.
Likewise, scanning these documents can be achieved using the existing
equipment already in the field and in Washington.
h. To scan a record or file into ACS, posts can use
existing flatbed scanners and will not require additional equipment. When you
attach a document in subject's ACS Activity Log, users should click the
"Add" button and set the "Type" to Attach File, which along
with a description then enables the "File Attach" function near the
bottom of the window. Users will have two choices. First, users can click the
button with three periods to bring up an "Open file" window to select
the scanned file. If you do have a scanner at your workstation, users can
click the "Scan Doc" button to scan the documents directly. It
should be noted that ACS has a file size limitation of a maximum of 2MB per
file attached. Larger files will need to be broken up and attached as separate
files.
i. What about legacy documents for long running cases
that have not been scanned in? You only need to scan new documents. However,
please do keep in mind the records retention requirements referenced in 7 FAH-1 H-457
and contained in Chapter 9 of the Foreign Records Disposition Schedule;
Chapters 13, 14, and 15 of the Domestic Records Disposition Schedule may also
be relevant in some cases. Many ACS case files can be retired or destroyed one
to five years after the case is closed. Therefore, you might not need to scan
documents for cases that are closed, although high profile case records that
meet the tests above should be scanned. Please seek guidance from your
CA/OCS/ACS country officer about scanning old documents for such cases.
j. The following table provides a summary and cross
references to certain critical case reporting requirements. Reporting on other
subjects are found throughout the 7 FAM:
SUBJECT
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REPORTING
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Arrests
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All events in arrest cases must be entered in the ACS
system. In addition, immediate reporting via email is required as specified
in the following 7 FAM sections:
7 FAM 424 -
Reporting An Arrest - report within 24 hours of host country notification to
post of arrest; initial report via email with complete report in the ACS
System;
7 FAM 426.2-1
Failure to Notify Post of Arrest - report via email;
7 FAM 426.2-2
- Mistreatment - report immediately via email;
7 FAM 434 -
Prison Visits - reports on prison visits in the ACS system;
7 FAM 453 -
Request Authorization to Protest Judicial Discrimination;
7 FAM 455 -
Trial - report each step of the trial/judicial process in the ACS system and
via email;
7 FAM 456.2
Death Penalty cases - report via email;
7 FAM 400 Appendix A - Requests for Clemency, Pardons,
Prisoner Release - report via email. For emergencies after hours,
contact CA/OCS duty officer.
7 FAM 472.1
- Death of a Prisoner - report via email.
7 FAM 473.1 -
Escaped Prisoners - report via email.
7 FAM 474.6
- Hunger Strikes - report via email to CA/OCS/ACS.
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Welfare and Whereabouts - Child Abduction
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7 FAM
1715.6-1 - Reporting to Department - via record email with follow up
cable in sensitive, high-profile cases
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Welfare and Whereabouts - ACS
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7 FAM 142 -
Reporting to Department via record email with follow up cable in sensitive
high profile cases.
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Deaths
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7 FAM 221 b -
Notifying the Department - enter information in the ACS system and alert your
CA/OCS/ACS counterpart via email
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7 FAM 017 guarantees and letters of
introduction on behalf of u.s. citizens
(CT:CON-460; 06-03-2013)
a. Department officials are often requested by private
U.S. citizen or host-country officials to provide a "guarantee" or
similar assurances that a private U.S. citizens will remain in country or
appear at judicial or similar proceedings. Department officials have no legal
authority to provide such assurances and must not submit any documentation to
that affect to host-country authorities, except the rare cases where permission
has been explicitly provided by the Department.
b. Such guarantees or assurances have the potential
seriously to embarrass the conduct of U.S. foreign policy or result in persona
non grata (P.N.G.) or pecuniary liability for the Department official(s)
involved in the event something goes amiss, e.g., if the U.S. citizen flees the
country or causes damage to persons or property while at large in the host
country because of U.S. requests or assurances.
c. The Department recognizes that some cases warrant
special consideration and wishes to do whatever it reasonably can to protect
U.S. citizens who are under threat of incarceration or detention abroad. Regardless,
Department officers are not to provide any "guarantees" or assurances
to local authorities on behalf of U.S. citizens - either in their
"personal" or "official" capacities - without first
obtaining the express approval of the Department from all appropriate offices,
including the relevant regional Bureau, CA and L.
d. Similarly, posts must not provide letters of
introduction on behalf of U.S. citizens. Generally, requests for these types
of letters are made to the Department by private U.S. citizens who are planning
to travel to a country where sponsorship from an individual or company is
required.
e. The U.S. Government cannot appear to be sponsoring a
private U.S. citizen's travel to the country issuing the visa. Further, we
cannot be put in a position of appearing to be prepared to bear any costs
involved in either the issuance of the visa or any other aspects of the
citizen's travel. In addition, Department/Posts cannot be put in the position
of guaranteeing the issuance of visas to persons who appear to post with
letters of introduction from other foreign embassies (i.e., reciprocity).
f. Any questions regarding this section may be sent to
Ask-OCS-L@state.gov.
7 FAM 018 and 019 UNASSIGNED