ABOUT THE OFFICE AND THE UNITED STATES CODE
The
Office of the Law Revision Counsel of the U.S. House of Representatives
prepares and publishes the United States Code pursuant to section 285b
of title 2 of the Code. The Code is a consolidation and codification by
subject matter of the general and permanent laws of the United States.
The
Code does not include regulations issued by executive branch agencies,
decisions of the Federal courts, treaties, or laws enacted by State or
local governments.
Regulations issued by executive branch agencies are
available in the Code of Federal Regulations. Proposed and recently adopted regulations may be found in the Federal Register.
Certain
titles of the Code have been enacted into positive law, and pursuant to
section 204 of title 1 of the Code, the text of those titles is legal
evidence of the law contained in those titles. The other titles of the
Code are prima facie evidence of the laws contained in those titles. The
following titles of the Code have been enacted into positive law: 1, 3,
4, 5, 9, 10, 11, 13, 14, 17, 18, 23, 28, 31, 32, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39,
40, 44, 46, and 49.
Titles
1 through 41 and the Table of Popular Names are based on Supplement II
of the 2006 edition (January 5, 2009) of the Code. Titles 42 through 50
Appendix and Tables I-VI are based on Supplement I of the 2006 edition
(January 8, 2008) of the Code.
The Organic Laws are
based on the 2006 edition (January 3, 2007) of the Code. Each section
of the Code database contains a date in the top-right corner indicating
that laws enacted as of that date and affecting that section are
included in the text of that section. When a search is made for a
specific section of the Code, as opposed to a search for certain words
appearing in the Code, the hit list will include an "Update" item
listing any amendments not already reflected in the text of that
section.
The
Classification Tables include Public Laws 110-181 to 111-140, approved
February 16, 2010. The tables show where recently enacted laws will
appear in the Code and which sections of the Code have been amended by
those laws. They provide a separate method of identifying any amendments
to a section not already reflected in the text of that section.
While
every effort has been made to ensure that the Code database on the web
site is accurate, those using it for legal research should verify their
results against the printed version of the United States Code available through the Government Printing Office.
Please send your comments by e-mail to uscode@mail.house.gov
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