To amend the State Department Basic Authorities Act of 1956 to increase the maximum amount of an award available under the Department of State rewards program for information leading to the capture of Osama bin Laden.
Other Bill Titles (1 more) 10/15/2007--Introduced.
Amends the State Department Basic Authorities Act of 1956 to specify that an award under the Department of State rewards program may be made for information leading to the capture of Osama bin Laden. Authorizes the Secretary of State to make a reward of up to $5... moreSee Full Bill Text
Committees
Amendments
This bill has no amendments.
Bill Status
| Introduced | ![]() | Voted on by House | ![]() | Voted on by Senate | ![]() | Considered By President | ![]() | Bill Becomes Law |
| October 15, 2007 |
In the News
January 11, 2008 NAACP Calls for Passage of Bill to Prevent Youth from Joining Gangs
Congressman Robert “Bobby” Scott (VA) has introduced HR 3826, the “Youth Prison Reduction through Opportunities, Mentoring, Intervention, ...
October 16, 2007 Boren's bill would increase bin Laden bounty
If HR 3826 is passed, the reward for the al-Qaida leader would grow from $25 million to $500 million as part of the US Rewards for Justice program. ...
Blog Coverage
April 17, 2008 Peace March Saturday
à She hopes to bring awareness about HR 3826 sponsored by Congressman Robert (Bobby) Scott from Virginia. The Youth Promise Act looks to reduce crime before it happens by investing in research based programs in the United States. ...
Source: Second Life
April 17, 2008 Peace March Saturday
She hopes to bring awareness about HR 3826 sponsored by Congressman Robert (Bobby) Scott from Virginia. The Youth Promise Act looks to reduce crime before it happens by investing in research based programs in the United States. ...
Source: Second Life Herald
October 16, 2007 Boren Wants $500 Million Bounty On Bin Laden
If passed, HR 3826 will increase the reward from $25 million to $500 million. The reward is administered through the US State Departmentâs âRewards for Justiceâ program. âAs we spend nearly $300 million a day for on-going operations in
Source: The McCarville Report Online










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