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Contact Congress about H.R. 3591: Carla Walker Act

Public agencies could get federal money for advanced DNA testing in cold cases and unidentified remains cases. The bill also helps some public labs buy equipment for that work. The Justice Department would oversee the grants and require reports.

Modern Action explains legislation in plain English, helps you choose whether to support, oppose, or ask for changes, and drafts a message tied to the bill, your stance, and the elected officials who can act on it.

Carla Walker Act is a House bill in committee. The latest recorded action: Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.

Latest action on H.R. 3591: Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.

Who this affects: This bill mainly affects public agencies that investigate violent crimes and identify unknown remains. It could also matter to families waiting for answers in cold cases, homicide cases, or missing-person cases where DNA evidence exists but standard searches have failed.

Why this matters: This bill matters because some serious cases stay unsolved after normal DNA database searches come up empty. This funding could give agencies another tool to find leads, identify unknown victims, and solve some cold cases. It also matters because the bill does not just hand out money. It ties the grants to Justice Department rules, audits, and reporting, which could shape how this technology spreads and what safeguards are used. At the same time, the bill does not change broader privacy law, so some real-world effects would depend on how current and future policies are applied.

Key provisions in H.R. 3591

  • Sets up two federal grant programs for forensic genetic genealogy, a DNA method used to find family links in investigations.
  • Only certain public agencies can get the DNA testing grants. Those include states, Tribal and local police, prosecutor offices with lab capacity, and medical examiner and coroner offices.
  • The testing must use whole genome sequencing with a high level of detail. It has to read at least 100,000 genetic markers and work with multiple genealogy databases approved for law enforcement.
  • The grants are aimed at cases where CODIS, the national DNA database, already failed to produce a lead or identify someone. That includes unidentified remains believed to be from homicide victims.
  • Grant recipients can send the testing out to accredited public or private forensic labs. They can also use a private lab that legally agrees to become accredited within two years of first getting the work.

How Modern Action helps you take action on H.R. 3591

You do not have to start with a blank letter. Modern Action turns the bill, your position, and the relevant congressional context into a message you can edit and send. The goal is to make contacting Congress clear, specific, and useful without forcing you to parse bill text or figure out the right office on your own.

Questions people ask about H.R. 3591

What is H.R. 3591?
Public agencies could get federal money for advanced DNA testing in cold cases and unidentified remains cases. The bill also helps some public labs buy equipment for that work. The Justice Department would oversee the grants and require reports.
How do I support or oppose H.R. 3591?
Choose support, oppose, or ask for changes on Modern Action. The action flow drafts the message for you and keeps the wording tied to this bill.
Who should I contact about H.R. 3591?
Modern Action uses your location to route the action to the congressional offices relevant to the bill and your representation.
Can Modern Action explain H.R. 3591 before I act?
Yes. Modern Action gives you a plain-English summary, current status, and action context before you send anything.

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Related bills

  • Take action on S. 1890: Carla Walker Act