United States Code: Helpful Hints The United States Code is the codification of the general and permanent laws of the United States. It is prepared and published by the Office of the Law Revision Counsel, U.S. House of Representatives, every six years. GPO Access contains the text from the most recent print revision of the U.S. Code in 1994, which codifies the laws that were in effect as of January 4, 1995. GPO Access also contains supplemental databases, which reflect changes to the U.S. Code on an annual basis. Supplement 1 contains the laws that were in effect as of January 16, 1996; supplement 2 contains the laws that were in effect as of January 6, 1997; and supplement 3 contains the laws that were in effect as of January 26, 1998. Supplements 1 and 2 are complete and contain all 50 titles. At this time, supplement 3 contains only titles 1 through 25; titles will be added incrementally as they become available. Documents are available only as ASCII text files. When a section is affected by a law passed after a supplement's revision date, the header for that section includes a note that identifies the public law affecting it. In order to find the updated information, you must search the public laws databases for the referenced public law number. Identification Codes In the list that displays your query results, the title of each U.S. Code document is preceded by an identification code. The identification code consists of a U.S. Code citation, which contains a title number, the database abbreviation "USC," and a section number. For example, in the listing "17USC Sec. 305. Duration of copyright: Terminal date," 17 is the title number, "USC" stands for United States Code, "Sec. 305" is the section number, and "Duration of copyright: Terminal date" is the title. A section number may indicate a subsection, as in the citation "7USC Sec. 511a." Note: Instead of a U.S. Code citation, popular-name listings are identified with the abbreviation "POPNAM." Sample Searches (5) The following sample searches are provided as guides to general types of searches in the U.S. Code databases. Unless otherwise indicated, the searches are performed in supplement 2 to the U.S. Code for 1994. For the sake of space, only the top three hits in each results list are included with each example below. Whenever you enter a query, make sure that you deselect any default settings that may interfere with your search. The U.S. Code search page automatically default to the original U.S. Code database for 1994. Note: The results of these sample searches are described as they appear on the Web interface. The display of the results may vary for users of the WAIS client and SWAIS software. 1. Search by U.S. Code Citation This type of search returns sections of the U.S. Code based on U.S. Code citations. A U.S. Code citation includes a title number, the abbreviation "USC," and a section number. The use of truncation in a query returns subsections, as well as full sections. Query: 7USC511* Results: 7USC Sec. 511q. Short title 7USC Sec. 511j. Publication of violations 7USC Sec. 511o. Separability 2. Search by Popular Name This type of search returns legislative information based on a popular name in the U.S. Code. If you know the popular name of law, you may use this type of search to find its U.S. Code citation, public law number, and Statutes at Large citation. For the best results, your query should include the phrase "popular name" in quotation marks and a keyword from the popular name of the law. Query: "popular name" AND bonds Results: POPNAM Official and Penal Bonds POPNAM Baby Bonds POPNAM Public Works Act (Bonds of Contractors) 3. Search by Public Law Number This type of search returns sections of the U.S. Code based on public law numbers. The public law numbers may appear anywhere within the document, including the header and the body of the text. This type of search also retrieves the popular-names entry that references a given public law number. The correct abbreviation for "public law" in the U.S. Code databases is "pub. l."; it may also be written without punctuation as "pub l". The entire query should be enclosed in quotation marks for the most accurate results. Query: "pub. l. 103-40" Results: 44USC Sec. 4101. Electronic directory; online access to publications; 44USC Sec. 4103. Biennial report POPNAM Government Printing Office Electronic Information Access Enhancement Act 4. Search by Statutes at Large Citation This type of search returns sections of the U.S. Code based on Statutes at Large citations. It also retrieves the popular-names entry that references a given Statutes at Large citation. A Statutes at Large citation includes a volume number, the abbreviation "stat," and the number of a session law as assigned in the Statutes at Large. Volumes 109 and 110 of the Statutes at Large contain the laws from the 104th Congress, volumes 111 and 112 contain the laws from the 105th Congress, and so on. The entire query should be enclosed in quotation marks for the most accurate results. Query: "107 stat 112" Results: POPNAM Government Printing Office Electronic Information Access Enhancement Act 44USC Sec. 4101. Electronic directory; online access to publications; 44USC Sec. 101. Joint Committee on Printing: membership 5. Search for Legislation that Amends a U.S. Code Section When a section of the U.S. Code is affected by a law passed after a supplement's revision date, the header for that section includes a note that identifies the public law affecting it. In order to find the updated information, you must search the public laws databases for the referenced public-law number. For example, the header for "2USC Sec. 661c. Budgetary treatment" in supplement 2 of the U.S. Code indicates that the section was "affected by Public Law 105-33 Section 10117(b)." To view the text that affected this U.S. Code section, you would perform a search in the public laws database for the 105th Congress, using the query "public law 105-33". After you retrieve the document "Pub.L. 105-33 To provide for reconciliation pursuant to subsections (b)(1) and (c) of section 105 of the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 1998," you would look for section 10117(b). Last updated: September 8, 1999