Army Cemeteries, 57640-57659 [2020-17801]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 179 / Tuesday, September 15, 2020 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Department of the Army
32 CFR Part 553
[Docket No. USA–2019–HQ–0032]
RIN 0702–AB08
Army Cemeteries
Department of the Army, DoD.
Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Department of the Army
proposes to amend this regulation in
order to revise eligibility criteria for
interment (in ground) and inurnment
(above ground) at Arlington National
Cemetery. This rule does not affect
veterans’ burial benefits or eligibility at
Department of Veterans Affairs’ national
cemeteries.
DATES: Consideration will be given to all
comments received by November 16,
2020.
SUMMARY:
You may submit comments,
identified by 32 CFR part 553, Docket
No. USA–2019–HQ–0032 and/or by
Regulatory Information Number (RIN)
0702–AB08, or by any of the following
methods:
* Federal Rulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
* Mail: DoD cannot receive written
comments at this time due to the
COVID–19 pandemic. Comments should
be sent electronically to the docket
listed above.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the agency name and
docket number or RIN for this Federal
Register document. The general policy
for comments and other submissions
from members of the public is to make
these submissions available for public
viewing on the internet at https://
www.regulations.gov as they are
received without change, including any
personal identifiers or contact
information.
ADDRESSES:
Ms.
Renea Yates, Arlington National
Cemetery, usarmy.pentagon.hqda-ancosa.mbx.anc-revised-eligibility@mail.mil
or 1–877–907–8585.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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Background
Arlington National Cemetery
represents the American people for past,
present and future generations by laying
to rest those few who have served our
nation with dignity and honor, while
immersing guests in the cemetery’s
living history. However, without this
action, Arlington National Cemetery
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would run out of space for new burials
by the year 2041 (or the year 2055 with
construction of Southern Expansion in
the vicinity of the Air Force Memorial),
even for those Killed in Action (KIA)
and Medal of Honor recipients. Changes
to eligibility at Arlington National
Cemetery will preserve this national
symbol and shrine as an active burial
ground for current and future
generations of military service members.
The Department of the Army
amended 32 CFR part 553 and
published rules pertaining to the
development, operation, maintenance,
and administration of Army National
Military Cemeteries on September 26,
2016 (80 FR 65875), and August 29,
2019 (84 FR 45406). The rule published
on August 29, 2019, also incorporated
Army post cemeteries for the first time.
The Department of the Army is
proposing these amendments in
response to Section 598 of the John S.
McCain National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2019, Public Law
115–232 which requires the Secretary of
the Army to prescribe revised criteria
for internment at Arlington National
Cemetery that preserve Arlington
National Cemetery as an active burial
ground well into the future. These
amendments revise eligibility criteria
for interment (in ground) and inurnment
(above ground) at Arlington National
Cemetery.
The Army also considered additional
physical expansion of Arlington
National Cemetery to include adjacent
land in developing this regulation.
While costly, the Army determined
additional land would not extend the
active life of the cemetery sufficiently
given the intent of Section 598 of Public
Law 115–232.
Legal Authority for This Program
The legal basis for this rulemaking
can be found in section 7722 of Title 10,
U.S. Code: ‘‘The Secretary of the Army,
with the approval of the Secretary of
Defense, shall determine eligibility for
interment or inurnment’’ at Arlington
National Cemetery and the U.S.
Soldiers’ and Airmen’s Home National
Cemetery. Additional legal authority is
also found in section 7721 of Title 10,
U.S. Code which directs the Secretary of
the Army to operate, manage,
administer, oversee, and fund the
cemeteries covered by this regulation.
Finally, section 598 of Public Law
115–232 (John S. McCain National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2019) states ‘‘The Secretary of the
Army, in consultation with the
Secretary of Defense, shall prescribe
revised criteria for interment at
Arlington National Cemetery that
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preserve Arlington National Cemetery as
an active burial ground ‘well into the
future’ [defined as 150 years] . . . the
Secretary of the Army shall establish the
criteria . . . not later than September
30, 2019.’’
Changes Proposed in This Rulemaking
Currently, one percent of the veteran
population is laid to rest at Arlington
National Cemetery, utilizing 3,691 new
graves in Fiscal Year 2019. Current
eligibility is summarized at https://
www.arlingtoncemetery.mil/Portals/0/
Docs/Eligibilty-Fact-Sheet20170701.pdf. Changes to eligibility at
Arlington National Cemetery will
preserve this national symbol and
shrine as an active burial ground for
current and future generations of
military service members. This rule
does not affect veterans’ burial benefits
or eligibility at Department of Veterans
Affairs’ national cemeteries.
With the proposed criteria,
approximately 700 new interments (in
ground) of eligible service members,
veterans, and family members will be
conducted annually at Arlington
National Cemetery. Most veterans no
longer eligible for in-ground interment
at Arlington National Cemetery will
remain eligible for above-ground
inurnment. Without other eligibility, the
largest affected groups with this
proposed revisions are veterans retired
from the U.S. Armed Forces and entitled
to receive military retired pay, and
service members eligible to retire from
the U.S. Armed Forces and entitled to
receive military retired pay on the date
of their death. Annually, approximately
1,900 of these personnel entitled to
receive retired pay will remain eligible
for above-ground inurnment.
Service members who die on active
duty, but neither as the result of armed
conflict service nor from preparations or
operations related to combat, both
defined in § 553.1, are no longer eligible
for in-ground interment or above-ground
inurnment at Arlington National
Cemetery. Based on recent trends,
approximately 43 service members
annually fit this description and were
interred or inurned at Arlington
National Cemetery.
With the proposed criteria,
approximately 1,950 new inurnments
(above ground) of eligible service
members, veterans, and family members
will be conducted annually at Arlington
National Cemetery. Without other
eligibility, veterans and service
members who served on active duty
(other than active duty for training) for
no less than 24 months and performed
armed conflict service, as defined in
§ 553.1, remain eligible for above-
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 179 / Tuesday, September 15, 2020 / Proposed Rules
ground inurnment at Arlington National
Cemetery.
Veterans and service members no
longer eligible for in-ground interment
or above-ground inurnment at Arlington
National Cemetery have multiple
options.
(a) Nationwide. The Department of
Veterans Affairs’ National Cemetery
Administration operates, maintains, and
funds veterans’ cemeteries across the
country. Their strategic goal is to
provide reasonable access (within 75
miles of a veteran’s residence) to a
burial option in a VA national cemetery
or VA-funded state or tribal veterans’
cemetery to reach 95 percent of eligible
veterans living in the United States.
This vast cemetery network continues to
expand in order to serve veterans and
their families throughout the country.
(b) Washington, DC metropolitan area.
Veterans and their families who live in
the Washington, DC metropolitan area
have multiple options for burial at their
time of need, including nearby Quantico
National Cemetery, which provides
ample burial opportunities for those
veterans that are no longer eligible at
Arlington National Cemetery.
This rule amends multiple sections of
32 CFR 553, including the following.
a. Section 553.1 is amended to add
definitions for armed conflict service,
preparations or operations related to
combat, positions of significant
governmental responsibility, and other
important terms as they relate to Army
cemeteries. These definitions were
added to assist in revising eligibility
criteria in §§ 553.12 and 553.13.
b. Section 553.9 is amended to set
aside 1,000 gravesites at Arlington
National Cemetery for current and
future Medal of Honor recipients, as
directed by the Secretary of the Army.
c. Section 553.10 is amended to add
the date of July 27, 1953, the date the
Armistice was signed ending combat
activities in Korea, it established a start
date for the requirement for service
members who die on active duty to
provide a statement of honorable service
from the first General Courts-Martial
Convening Authority.
d. Section 553.12 is amended to revise
eligibility criteria for interment (in
ground) at Arlington National Cemetery
to meet the intent of section 598 of
Public Law 115–232. The major change
to this section is that military retirees
without other eligibility are no longer
eligible for interment (in ground), but
remain eligible for inurnment (above
ground).
e. Section 553.13 is amended to revise
eligibility criteria for inurnment (above
ground) at Arlington National Cemetery
to meet the intent of section 598 of
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Public Law 115–232. The major change
to this section is that veterans and
service members who neither served on
active duty (other than active duty for
training) for 24 months nor performed
armed conflict service, as defined in
§ 553.1, are no longer for inurnment
(above ground). Additionally, eligibility
is maintained for those veterans who
served during any armed conflict prior
to July 27, 1953, and their service ended
honorably.
f. Sections 553.20 and 553.47 are
amended to strengthen prohibitions
related to capital crimes such as murder
and Tier III sex offenses.
g. Section 553.28 is amended to
prohibit the construction and
installation of private markers in Army
National Military Cemeteries unless
approved prior to December 1, 2017.
Private markers have been prohibited in
new sections of the cemetery since
1947. Now that previously authorized
sections are full, this change provides
continuity and consistency with
established policy for Army National
Military Cemeteries and Department of
Veterans Affairs’ national cemeteries.
h. Section 553.50 is added to include
procedures for requesting disinterment
or disinurnment of remains at Army
post cemeteries.
i. Section 553.51 is added to prohibit
the construction and installation of
private markers in Army post cemeteries
unless approved by the Executive
Director prior to October 1, 2020. This
addition provides continuity and
consistency with established policy for
Army National Military Cemeteries and
Department of Veterans Affairs’ national
cemeteries.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Army has determined that the
Regulatory Flexibility Act does not
apply because the rule does not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
within the meaning of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601–612.
C. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
The Army has determined that the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act does
not apply because the rule does not
include a mandate that may result in
estimated costs to State, local, or tribal
governments in the aggregate, or the
private sector, of $100 million or more.
D. National Environmental Policy Act
Neither an environmental analysis nor
an environmental impact statement
under the National Environmental
Policy Act is required.
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E. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Army has determined that this
rule does not impose additional
reporting or recordkeeping requirements
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995, as the Army does not require a
form. The Army collects, reviews, and
maintains existing documents provided
by families as specified in §§ 553.10,
553.22, and 553.25, which have not
changed. Department of Veterans Affairs
Form 40–1330 (Claim for Standard
Government Headstone or Marker)
already has an OMB control number
assigned OMB Control Number 2900–
0222.
F. Executive Order 12630 (Government
Actions and Interference With
Constitutionally Protected Property
Rights)
The Army has determined that E.O.
12630 does not apply because the rule
does not impair private property rights.
G. Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory
Planning and Review) and Executive
Order 13563 (Improving Regulation
and Regulatory Review)
Executive Orders 13563 and 12866
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distribute impacts, and equity).
Executive Order 13563 emphasizes the
importance of quantifying both costs
and benefits, of reducing costs, of
harmonizing rules, and of promoting
flexibility. This rule has been
designated a ‘‘significant regulatory
action,’’ although not economically
significant, under section 3(f) of
Executive Order.
H. Executive Order 13045 (Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risk and Safety Risks)
The Army has determined that
according to the criteria defined in
Executive Order 13045, the
requirements of that Order do not apply
to this rule.
I. Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
The Army has determined that,
according to the criteria defined in
Executive Order 13132, the
requirements of that Order do not apply
to this rule because the rule will not
have a substantial effect on the States,
on the relationship between the Federal
Government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.
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J. Executive Order 13771 (Reducing
Regulation and Controlling Regulatory
Costs)
This proposed rule is not expected to
be an E.O. 13771 action because this
rule is expected to be related to agency
management, personnel, or
organization.
K. Congressional Review Act
This proposed rule is not a ‘‘major
rule’’ as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
List of Subjects in 32 CFR part 553
Armed Forces, Eligibility, Military
personnel, Monuments and memorials,
Reserve components, Service members,
Veterans.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Department of the Army
proposes to revise 32 CFR part 553 to
read as follows:
PART 553—ARMY CEMETERIES
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Subpart A—Army National Military
Cemeteries
Sec.
553.1 Definitions.
553.2 Purpose.
553.3 Statutory authorities.
553.4 Scope and applicability.
553.5 Maintaining order.
553.6 Standards for managing Army
National Military Cemeteries.
553.7 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater.
553.8 Permission to install utilities.
553.9 Assignment of gravesites or niches.
553.10 Proof of eligibility.
553.11 General rules governing eligibility
for interment, inurnment, and
memorialization at Arlington National
Cemetery.
553.12 Eligibility for interment in Arlington
National Cemetery.
553.13 Eligibility for inurnment in
Arlington National Cemetery
Columbarium.
553.14 Eligibility for interment of cremated
remains in the Arlington National
Cemetery Unmarked Area.
553.15 Eligibility for group burial in
Arlington National Cemetery.
553.16 Eligibility for memorialization in an
Arlington National Cemetery memorial
area.
553.17 Arlington National Cemetery
interment/inurnment agreement.
553.18 Eligibility for burial in U.S. Soldiers’
and Airmen’s Home National Cemetery.
553.19 Ineligibility for interment,
inurnment, or memorialization in an
Army National Military Cemetery.
553.20 Prohibition of interment, inurnment,
or memorialization in an Army National
Military Cemetery of persons who have
committed certain crimes.
553.21 Findings concerning the
commission of certain crimes where a
person has not been convicted due to
death or flight to avoid prosecution.
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553.22 Exceptions to policies for interment,
inurnment, or memorialization at
Arlington National Cemetery.
553.23 Placement of cremated remains at
Army National Military Cemeteries.
553.24 Subsequently recovered remains.
553.25 Disinterment and disinurnment of
remains.
553.26 Design of Government-furnished
headstones, niche covers, and memorial
markers.
553.27 Inscriptions on Governmentfurnished headstones, niche covers, and
memorial markers.
553.28 Private headstones and markers.
553.29 Permission to construct or amend
private headstones and markers.
553.30 Inscriptions on private headstones
and markers.
553.31 Memorial and commemorative
monuments (other than private
headstones or markers).
553.32 Conduct of memorial services and
ceremonies.
553.33 Visitors rules for Army National
Military Cemeteries.
553.34 Soliciting and vending.
553.35 Media.
Subpart B—Army Post Cemeteries
553.36 Definitions.
553.37 Purpose.
553.38 Statutory authorities.
553.39 Scope and applicability.
553.40 Assignment of gravesites or niches.
553.41 Proof of eligibility.
553.42 General rules governing eligibility
for interment or inurnment in Army Post
Cemeteries.
553.43 Eligibility for interment and
inurnment in Army Post Cemeteries.
553.44 Eligibility for interment and
inurnment in the West Point Post
Cemetery.
553.45 Eligibility for interment in U.S.
Disciplinary Barracks Cemetery at Fort
Leavenworth.
553.46 Ineligibility for interment,
inurnment, or memorialization in an
Army Post Cemetery.
553.47 Prohibition of interment, inurnment,
or memorialization in an Army Post
Cemetery of persons who have
committed certain crimes.
553.48 Findings concerning the
commission of certain crimes where a
person has not been convicted due to
death or flight to avoid prosecution.
553.49 Exceptions to policies for interment
or inurnment at Army Post Cemeteries.
553.50 Disinterment and disinurnment of
remains.
553.51 Private headstones and markers.
Authority: 10 U.S.C. 985, 1128, 1481, 1482,
3013, 7721–7726; 24 U.S.C. 295a, 412; 38
U.S.C. 2402 note, 2409–2411, 2413; 40 U.S.C.
9102; Pub. L. 93–43, 87 Stat. 75; and Pub. L.
115–232, Sec. 598.
Subpart A—Army National Military
Cemeteries
§ 553.1
Definitions.
As used in this subpart, the following
terms have these meanings:
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Active duty. Full-time duty in the
active military service of the United
States.
(1) This includes:
(i) Active Reserve component duty
performed pursuant to title 10, United
States Code.
(ii) Service as a cadet or midshipman
currently on the rolls at the U.S.
Military, U.S. Naval, U.S. Air Force, or
U.S. Coast Guard Academies.
(iii) Active duty for operational
support.
(iv) Persons whose service has been
determined to be active duty service
pursuant to section 401 of the GI Bill
Improvement Act of 1977 (Pub. L. 95–
202; 38 U.S.C. 106 note) as of May 20,
2016 and whose remains were not
already formally interred or inurned as
of May 20, 2016 or who died on or after
May 20, 2016.
(2) This does not include:
(i) Full-time National Guard duty
performed under title 32, United States
Code.
(ii) Active duty for training, initial
entry training, annual training duty, or
inactive-duty training for members of
the Reserve components.
Active duty designee. A person whose
service has been determined to be active
duty service pursuant to section 401 of
the GI Bill Improvement Act of 1977, as
amended by Public Law 114–158 of May
20, 2016.
Active duty for operational support
(formerly active duty for special work).
A tour of active duty for Reserve
personnel authorized from military or
Reserve personnel appropriations for
work on Active component or Reserve
component programs. The purpose of
active duty for operational support is to
provide the necessary skilled manpower
assets to support existing or emerging
requirements and may include training.
Active duty for training. A category of
active duty used to provide structured
individual and/or unit training,
including on-the-job training, or
educational courses to Reserve
component members. Included in the
active duty for training category are
annual training, initial active duty for
training, or any other training duty.
Annual training. The minimum
period of active duty for training that
Reserve members must perform each
year to satisfy the training requirements
associated with their Reserve
component assignment.
Armed conflict service. Service in a
hostile fire area during a period of
armed conflict. Such service must be
evidenced by receipt of: Combat pay,
imminent danger or hostile fire pay, or
the receipt of a qualifying medal.
Examples of qualifying medals include,
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but are not limited to, the Korean
Service Medal, Vietnam Service Medal,
Southwest Asia Service Medal, Armed
Forces Expeditionary Medal, Navy and
Marine Expeditionary Medal, Kosovo
Campaign Medal, Afghanistan
Campaign Medal, Iraq Campaign Medal,
Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary
Medal, and Inherent Resolve Campaign
Medal.
Armed Forces. The U.S. Army, Navy,
Marine Corps, Coast Guard, Air Force,
Space Force and their Reserve
components.
Army National Military Cemeteries.
Arlington National Cemetery and the
U.S. Soldiers’ and Airmen’s Home
National Cemetery.
Child, minor child, permanently
dependent child, unmarried adult
child—(1) Child. (i) Natural child of a
primarily eligible person, born in
wedlock;
(ii) Natural child of a female primarily
eligible person, born out of wedlock;
(iii) Natural child of a male primarily
eligible person, who was born out of
wedlock and:
(A) Has been acknowledged in a
writing signed by the male primarily
eligible person;
(B) Has been judicially determined to
be the male primarily eligible person’s
child;
(C) Whom the male primarily eligible
person has been judicially ordered to
support; or
(D) Has been otherwise proved, by
evidence satisfactory to the Executive
Director, to be the child of the male
primarily eligible person;
(iv) Adopted child of a primarily
eligible person; or
(v) Stepchild who was part of the
primarily eligible person’s household at
the time of death of the individual who
is to be interred or inurned.
(2) Minor child. A child of the
primarily eligible person who:
(i) Is unmarried;
(ii) Has no dependents; and
(iii) Is under the age of twenty-one
years, or is under the age of twentythree years and is taking a full-time
course of instruction at an educational
institution that the U.S. Department of
Education acknowledges as an
accredited educational institution.
(3) Permanently dependent child. A
child of the primarily eligible person
who:
(i) Is unmarried;
(ii) Has no dependents; and
(iii) Is permanently and fully
dependent on one or both of the child’s
parents because of a physical or mental
disability incurred before attaining the
age of twenty-one years or before the age
of twenty-three years while taking a full-
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time course of instruction at an
educational institution that the U.S.
Department of Education acknowledges
as an accredited educational institution.
(4) Unmarried adult child. A child of
the primarily eligible person who:
(i) Is unmarried;
(ii) Has no dependents; and
(iii) Has attained the age of twentyone years.
Close relative. The spouse, parents,
adult brothers and sisters, adult natural
children, adult stepchildren, and adult
adopted children of a decedent.
Commemorative monuments.
Monuments or other structures or
landscape features that serve to honor
events in history, units of the Armed
Forces, individuals, or groups of
individuals that served in the Armed
Forces, and that do not contain human
remains or mark the location of remains
in close proximity. The term does not
include memorial markers erected
pursuant to § 553.16.
Derivatively eligible person. Any
person who is entitled to interment or
inurnment solely based on his or her
relationship to a primarily eligible
person, as set forth in §§ 553.12(b) and
553.13(b), respectively.
Disinterment. The permanent removal
of interred human remains from a
particular gravesite.
Disinurnment. The permanent
removal of remains from a particular
niche.
Executive Director. The person
statutorily charged with exercising
authority, direction, and control over all
aspects of Army National Military
Cemeteries, and the person charged by
the Secretary of the Army to serve as the
functional proponent for policies and
procedures pertaining to the
administration, operation, and
maintenance of all military cemeteries
under the jurisdiction of the Army.
Formal interment or inurnment.
Interment or inurnment of identified
human remains in a cemetery, crypt
mausoleum, columbarium or similar
formal location. Formal interment or
inurnment includes interment or
inurnment in private cemeteries or
private burial locations at the direction
of the person authorized to direct
disposition or the primary next of kin.
Formal interment or inurnment does not
include temporary battlefield interments
or inurnments, or interment or
inurnment while the person was
detained by or in the custody of a
government other than the United
States.
Former prisoner of war. A person who
is eligible for or has been awarded the
Prisoner of War Medal.
Former spouse. See spouse.
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Government. The U.S. government
and its agencies and instrumentalities.
Group burial. (1) Interment in one
gravesite of one or more service
members on active duty killed in the
same incident or location where:
(i) The remains cannot be
individually identified; or
(ii) The person authorized to direct
disposition of subsequently identified
remains has authorized their interment
with the other service members.
(2) Group remains may contain
incidental remains of civilians and
foreign nationals.
Human remains. The deceased
human body or portions of the body,
including but not limited to: Amputated
limbs and individual bones. Human
remains do not include portions of the
human body that are naturally and/or
intentionally shed or expelled by the
body during the lifetime of a human.
Examples of those items excluded from
this definition include, but are not
limited to, the following when removed,
cut, or expelled prior to death: Hair,
teeth, skin cells, sperm, eggs, blood, and
stem cells.
Inactive-duty training. (1) Duty
prescribed for members of the Reserve
components by the Secretary concerned
under 37 U.S.C. 206 or any other
provision of law.
(2) Special additional duties
authorized for members of the Reserve
components by an authority designated
by the Secretary concerned and
performed by them on a voluntary basis
in connection with the prescribed
training or maintenance activities of the
units to which they are assigned.
(3) In the case of a member of the
Army National Guard or Air National
Guard of any State, duty (other than
full-time duty) under 32 U.S.C. 316,
502, 503, 504, or 505 or the prior
corresponding provisions of law.
(4) This term does not include:
(i) Work or study performed in
connection with correspondence
courses,
(ii) Attendance at an educational
institution in an inactive status, or
(iii) Duty performed as a temporary
member of the Coast Guard Reserve.
Interment. The ground burial of
casketed or cremated human remains.
Inurnment. The placement of
cremated human remains in a niche.
Killed in Action. A service member, as
defined in this section, whose death
occurred as a direct result of action
against a force hostile to the United
States.
Media. Individuals and agencies that
print, broadcast, or gather and transmit
news, and their reporters,
photographers, and employees.
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Memorial marker. A headstone used
to memorialize a service member or
veteran whose remains are unavailable
for reasons listed in § 553.16.
Memorial service or ceremony. Any
activity intended to honor the memory
of a person or persons interred, inurned,
or memorialized in the Army National
Military Cemeteries. This term includes
private memorial services, public
memorial services, public wreath laying
ceremonies, and official ceremonies.
Minor child. See child.
Murder. Pursuant to any Federal or
State law, the causing the death of
another human being when:
(1) It is committed purposely or
knowingly; or
(2) It is committed recklessly under
circumstances manifesting extreme
indifference to the value of human life.
Such recklessness and indifference are
presumed if the actor is engaged or is an
accomplice in the commission of, or an
attempt to commit, or flight after
committing or attempting to commit
robbery, rape or deviant sexual
intercourse by force or threat of force,
arson, burglary, kidnapping or felonious
escape.
Niche. An aboveground space
constructed specifically for the
placement of cremated human remains.
Official ceremony. A memorial service
or ceremony approved by the Executive
Director in which the primary
participants are representatives of the
Government, a State government, a
foreign government, or an international
organization authorized by the U.S.
Department of State to participate in an
official capacity.
Parent. A natural parent, a stepparent,
a parent by adoption, or a person who
for a period of not less than one year
stood in loco parentis, or was granted
legal custody by a court decree or
statutory provision.
Permanently dependent child. See
child.
Person authorized to direct
disposition. The person primarily
entitled to direct disposition of human
remains and who elects to exercise that
entitlement. Determination of such
entitlement shall be made in accordance
with applicable law and regulations.
Personal representative. A person
who has legal authority to act on behalf
of another through applicable law,
order, and regulation.
Positions of significant governmental
responsibility. Persons permanently
(i.e., not acting in the position, or
performing the duties of that position)
holding or who formerly permanently
(i.e., not acting in the position, or
performing the duties of that position)
held the following positions in the
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government of the United States of
America: Elected Members of Congress,
Chief Justice and Associate Justices of
the Supreme Court, Secretary of State,
Secretary of Treasury, Secretary of
Defense, Attorney General, Secretary of
the Interior, Secretary of Agriculture,
Secretary of Commerce, Secretary of
Labor, Secretary of Health and Human
Services, Secretary of Housing and
Urban Development, Secretary of
Transportation, Secretary of Energy,
Secretary of Education, Secretary of
Veterans Affairs, Secretary of Homeland
Security, Director of Office of
Management and Budget, Director of
National Intelligence, Director of the
Central Intelligence Agency, Assistant to
the President for National Security
Affairs, Administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency,
Secretary of the Army, Secretary of the
Navy, Secretary of the Air Force,
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and
Senior Enlisted Advisor, Chief of Staff
of the Army and Senior Enlisted
Advisor, Chief of Naval Operations and
Senior Enlisted Advisor, Commandant
of the Marine Corps and Senior Enlisted
Advisor, Chief of Staff of the Air Force
and Senior Enlisted Advisor, Chief of
Space Operations and Senior Enlisted
Advisor, Chief of the National Guard
Bureau and Senior Enlisted Advisor,
Commandant of the Coast Guard and
Senior Enlisted Advisor, and Combatant
Commanders and their Senior Enlisted
Advisors.
Preparations or operations related to
combat. Military operations, individual
or collective training for battle-related
tasks, or transportation to or from such
operations or training in a vehicle,
vessel or aircraft whose primary
purpose is combat or direct support of
combat. Examples include, but are not
limited to, military parachuting, convoy
operations, live-fire operations, at-sea
operations or flight operations.
Activities excluded from this category
include, but are not limited to,
personally conducted physical training
(i.e., not organized unit physical
training), disease or illness, or operator
or passenger in a private or
commercially owned vehicle not under
contract to the United States
Government, and suicide on or off duty.
Primarily eligible person. Any person
who is entitled to interment or
inurnment based on his or her service
as specified in §§ 553.12(a) and
553.13(a), respectively.
Primary next of kin. (1) In the absence
of a valid written document from the
decedent identifying the primary next of
kin, the order of precedence for
designating a decedent’s primary next of
kin is as follows:
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(i) Spouse, even if a minor;
(ii) Children, age 18 years and over (if
under 18 years of age, their surviving
parent or legal guardian shall exercise
the rights of the minor);
(iii) Parents;
(iv) Siblings, to include half-blood
and those acquired through adoption,
age 18 years and over;
(v) Grandparents; and
(vi) Other next of kin, in order of
relationship to the decedent as
determined by the laws of the
decedent’s state of domicile.
(2) Absent a court order or written
document from the deceased, the
precedence of next of kin with equal
relationships to the decedent is
governed by seniority (age), older
having higher priority than younger.
Equal relationship situations include
those involving divorced parents of the
decedent, children of the decedent, and
siblings of the decedent.
Private headstones or markers. A
headstone or individual memorial
marker provided at private expense, in
lieu of a headstone or individual
memorial marker furnished by the
Government.
Private memorial service. A memorial
service or ceremony conducted at the
decedent’s gravesite, memorial
headstone, or niche.
Public memorial service. A ceremony
conducted by members of the public at
a historic site in an Army National
Military Cemetery.
Public wreath-laying ceremony. A
ceremony in which members of the
public, assisted by the Tomb Guards,
present a wreath or similar memento at
the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.
Reserve component. See definition in
10 U.S.C. 101.
Senior Enlisted Advisor. A service
member in the grade of E–9 who is
nominatively selected and permanently
appointed (i.e., is not holding the
position in an acting or temporary
status) to serve as the senior advisor to
an officer in the Armed Forces in the
grade of O–10.
Spouse, former spouse, subsequently
remarried spouse—(1) Spouse. A person
who is legally married to another
person.
(2) Former spouse. A person who was
legally married to another person at one
time, but was not legally married to that
person at the time of one of their deaths.
(3) Subsequently remarried spouse. A
derivatively eligible spouse who was
married to the primarily eligible person
at the time of the primarily eligible
person’s death and who subsequently
remarried another person.
Subsequently recovered remains.
Additional remains belonging to the
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decedent that are recovered or identified
after the decedent’s interment or
inurnment.
Subsequently remarried spouse. See
spouse.
Unmarried adult child. See child.
Veteran. A person who served in the
U.S. Armed Forces and who was
discharged or released under honorable
conditions (general discharge under
honorable conditions is not sufficient to
meet this definition).
§ 553.2
Purpose.
This subpart specifies the authorities
and assigns the responsibilities for the
development, operation, maintenance,
and administration of the Army
National Military Cemeteries.
§ 553.3
Statutory authorities.
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(a) Historical. Act of July 17, 1862,
Sec. 18, 12 Stat. 594, 596; Act of
February 22, 1867, Ch. 61, 14 Stat. 399;
and the National Cemeteries Act of
1973, Public Law 93–43, 87 Stat. 75
(1973). The National Cemeteries Act
established the National Cemetery
System, which primarily consists of
national cemeteries transferred from the
management authority of the
Department of the Army to the (now)
Department of Veterans Affairs. Section
6(a) of the Act exempted Arlington
National Cemetery and the Soldiers’ and
Airmen’s Home National Cemetery from
transfer to the National Cemetery
System, leaving them under the
management authority of the Secretary
of the Army.
(b) Current. Pursuant to 10 U.S.C.
7721(a), the Secretary of the Army shall
develop, operate, manage, oversee, and
fund the Army National Military
Cemeteries. Section 10 U.S.C. 7721(c)
provides that the Army National
Military Cemeteries are under the
jurisdiction of Headquarters,
Department of the Army, and 10 U.S.C.
7721(d) provides that the Secretary of
the Army shall prescribe such
regulations and policies as may be
necessary to administer the Army
National Military Cemeteries. The
responsibilities of Headquarters,
Department of the Army with regard to
the Army National Military Cemeteries
are enumerated in 10 U.S.C. 7721–7726
and Army General Orders 2014–74,
2014–75, 2020–01, and 2020–02.
§ 553.4
Scope and applicability.
(a) Scope. The development,
maintenance, administration, and
operation of the Army National Military
Cemeteries are governed by this subpart,
Army Regulation 290–5, and
Department of the Army Pamphlet 290–
5. The development, maintenance,
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administration, and operation of Army
post cemeteries are not covered by this
subpart.
(b) Applicability. This subpart is
applicable to all persons on, engaging in
business with, or seeking access to or
benefits from the Army National
Military Cemeteries, unless otherwise
specified.
§ 553.5
Maintaining order.
The Executive Director may order the
removal from, and bar the re-entry onto,
Army National Military Cemeteries of
any person who acts in violation of any
law or regulation, including but not
limited to demonstrations and
disturbances as outlined in 38 U.S.C.
2413, and in this subpart. This authority
may not be re-delegated.
§ 553.6 Standards for managing Army
National Military Cemeteries.
(a) The Executive Director is
responsible for establishing and
maintaining cemetery layout plans,
including plans setting forth sections
with gravesites, memorial areas with
markers, columbaria with niches, and
landscape planting plans.
(b) New sections or areas may be
opened and prepared for interments or
for installing memorial markers only
with the approval of the Executive
Director.
§ 553.7
Arlington Memorial Amphitheater.
(a) In accordance with 24 U.S.C. 295a:
(1) No memorial may be erected and
no remains may be entombed in the
Arlington Memorial Amphitheater
unless specifically authorized by
Congress; and
(2) The character, design, or location
of any memorial authorized by Congress
for placement in the Amphitheater is
subject to the approval of the Secretary
of Defense.
(b) The Secretary of Defense will seek
the advice of the Commission of Fine
Arts in such matters, in accordance with
40 U.S.C. 9102.
(c) Tributes offered for those interred
in the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier for
placement in the Arlington Memorial
Amphitheater display room are not
memorials for purposes of this section.
§ 553.8
Permission to install utilities.
(a) The installation of utilities in
Army National Military Cemeteries,
including but not limited to, telephone
and fiber optic lines, electric lines,
natural gas lines, water pipes, storm
drains, and sanitary sewers, must be
authorized by the Executive Director.
(b) Requests for licenses, permits, or
easements to install water, gas, or sewer
lines, or other utilities or equipment on
or across an Army National Military
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Cemetery or an approach road in which
the Government has a right-of-way, fee
simple title, or other interest, must be
sent to the Executive Director, who will
process the request in accordance with
Army policy. Requests must include a
complete description of the type of
license, permit, or easement desired and
a map showing the location of the
project.
§ 553.9 Assignment of gravesites or
niches.
(a) All eligible persons will be
assigned gravesites or niches without
discrimination as to race, color, sex,
religion, age, or national origin and
without preference to military grade or
rank.
(b) The Army National Military
Cemeteries will enforce a one-gravesiteper-family policy. Once the initial
interment or inurnment is made in a
gravesite or niche, each additional
interment or inurnment of eligible
persons must be made in the same
gravesite or niche, except as noted in
paragraph (f) of this section. This
includes multiple primarily eligible
persons if they are married to each
other.
(c) In accordance with 38 U.S.C.
2410A(a)(2) the Secretary of the Army
may waive the prohibition in paragraph
(b) of this section as the Secretary of the
Army deems appropriate.
(d) A gravesite reservation will be
honored if it meets the following
requirements, unless cancelled by the
Executive Director:
(1) The gravesite was properly
reserved by law before January 1, 1962;
and
(2) An eligible person was interred in
the reserved gravesite prior to January 1,
2017.
(e) The Executive Director may cancel
a gravesite reservation:
(1) Upon determination that a
derivatively eligible spouse has
remarried;
(2) Upon determination that the
reservee’s remains have been buried
elsewhere or otherwise disposed of;
(3) Upon determination that the
reservee desires to or will be interred in
the same gravesite with the
predeceased, and doing so is feasible; or
(4) Upon determination that the
reservee would be 120 years of age and
there is no record of correspondence
with the reservee within the last two
decades.
(f) In cases of reservations meeting the
requirements of 38 U.S.C. 2410A note,
where more than one gravesite was
reserved (on the basis of the veteran’s
eligibility at the time the reservation
was made) and no interment has yet
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been made in any of the sites, the onegravesite-per-family policy will be
enforced, unless waived by the
Executive Director. Gravesite
reservations will be honored only if the
decedents meet the eligibility criteria for
interment in Arlington National
Cemetery that are in effect at the time
of need, and the reserved gravesite is
available.
(g) Where a primarily eligible person
has been or will be interred as part of
a group burial or has been or will be
memorialized in a memorial area at
Arlington National Cemetery, the
Executive Director will assign a
gravesite or niche for interment or
inurnment of a derivatively eligible
person.
(h) Gravesites or niches shall not be
reserved or assigned prior to the time of
need.
(i) The selection of gravesites and
niches is the responsibility of the
Executive Director. The selection of
specific gravesites or niches by the
family or other representatives of the
deceased is prohibited.
(j) The Executive Director shall set
aside 1,000 gravesites at Arlington
National Cemetery to be used for the
interment of Medal of Honor recipients
who meet the criteria of § 553.12 or are
granted an exception to policy pursuant
to § 553.22. Derivatively eligible
persons, as defined in § 553.1, of the
Medal of Honor recipient may be
interred in the same grave as the
recipient. These gravesites shall not be
located in a singular defined area within
the cemetery. These gravesites shall be
disbursed throughout the cemetery at
the direction of the Executive Director.
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§ 553.10
Proof of eligibility.
(a) The personal representative or
primary next of kin is responsible for
providing appropriate documentation to
verify the decedent’s eligibility for
interment or inurnment.
(b) The personal representative or
primary next of kin must certify in
writing that the decedent is not
prohibited from interment, inurnment,
or memorialization under § 553.20
because he or she has committed or
been convicted of a Federal or State
capital crime or is a convicted Tier III
sex offender as defined in 38 U.S.C.
2411.
(c) For service members who die on
active duty after July 27, 1953, a
statement of honorable service is
required from the first General CourtsMartial Convening Authority in the
service member’s chain of command. If
the certificate of honorable service
cannot be granted, the service member
is ineligible for interment, inurnment,
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and memorialization pursuant to
§ 553.19(h).
(d) When applicable, the following
documents are required:
(1) Death certificate;
(2) Proof of eligibility as required by
paragraphs (e) through (g) of this
section;
(3) Any additional documentation to
establish the decedent’s eligibility (e.g.,
marriage certificate, birth certificate,
waivers, statements that the decedent
had no children);
(4) Burial agreement;
(5) Notarized statement that the
remains are unavailable for the reasons
set forth in § 553.16; and
(6) A certificate of cremation or
notarized statement attesting to the
authenticity of the cremated human
remains and that 100% of the cremated
remains received from the crematorium
are present. The Executive Director may,
however, allow a portion of the
cremated remains to be removed by the
crematorium for the sole purpose of
producing commemorative items.
(7) Any other document as required
by the Executive Director.
(e) The following documents may be
used to establish the eligibility of a
primarily eligible person:
(1) DD Form 214, Certificate of
Release or Discharge from Active Duty;
(2) WD AGO 53 or 53–55, Enlisted
Record and Report of Separation
Honorable Discharge;
(3) WD AGO 53–98, Military Record
and Report of Separation Certificate of
Service;
(4) NAVPERS–553, Notice of
Separation from U.S. Naval Service;
(5) NAVMC 70–PD, Honorable
Discharge, U.S. Marine Corps;
(6) DD Form 1300, Report of Casualty
(required in the case of death of an
active duty service member); or
(7) NGB Form 22, National Guard
Report of Separation and Record of
Service (must indicate a minimum of 20
years total service for pay).
(f) In addition to the documents
otherwise required by this section, a
request for interment or inurnment of a
subsequently remarried spouse must be
accompanied by:
(1) A notarized statement from the
new spouse of the subsequently
remarried spouse agreeing to the
interment or inurnment and
relinquishing any claim for interment or
inurnment in the same gravesite or
niche.
(2) Notarized statement(s) from all of
the children, age 18 years and over,
from the prior marriage agreeing to the
interment or inurnment of their parents
in the same gravesite or niche.
(g) In addition to the documents
otherwise required by this section, a
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request for interment or inurnment of a
permanently dependent child must be
accompanied by:
(1) A notarized statement as to the
marital status and degree of dependency
of the decedent from an individual with
direct knowledge; and
(2) A physician’s statement regarding
the nature and duration of the physical
or mental disability; and
(3) A statement from someone with
direct knowledge demonstrating the
following factors:
(i) The deceased lived most of his or
her adult life with one or both parents,
who are otherwise eligible for
interment;
(ii) The decedent’s children and
siblings age 18 years and over, or other
family members, other than the eligible
parent, waive any derivative claim to be
interred at Arlington National Cemetery,
in accordance with the Arlington
National Cemetery Burial Agreement.
(h) Veterans or primary next of kin of
deceased veterans may obtain copies of
their military records by writing to the
National Personnel Records Center,
Attention: Military Personnel Records, 1
Archives Drive, St. Louis, Missouri
63132–1002 or using their website. All
others may request a record by
completing and submitting Standard
Form 180.
(i) The burden of proving eligibility
lies with the party who requests the
burial. The Executive Director will
determine whether the submitted
evidence is sufficient to support a
finding of eligibility.
§ 553.11 General rules governing eligibility
for interment, inurnment, and
memorialization at Arlington National
Cemetery.
(a) Only those persons who are not
formally interred or inurned as of the
date of publication of this rule and who
meet the criteria of § 553.12 or are
granted an exception to policy pursuant
to § 553.22 may be interred in Arlington
National Cemetery. Only those persons
who are not formally interred or
inurned as of the date of publication of
this rule and who meet the criteria of
§ 553.13 or are granted an exception to
policy pursuant to § 553.22 may be
inurned in Arlington National
Cemetery. Only those persons who meet
the criteria of § 553.14 may be interred
in the Arlington National Cemetery
Unmarked Area. Only those persons
who meet the criteria of § 553.15 may be
interred in an Arlington National
Cemetery group burial. Only those
persons who meet the criteria of
§ 553.16 may be memorialized in
Arlington National Cemetery.
(b) Derivative eligibility for interment
or inurnment may be established only
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through a decedent’s connection to a
primarily eligible person and not to
another derivatively eligible person.
(c) No veteran is eligible for
interment, inurnment, or
memorialization in Arlington National
Cemetery unless the veteran’s last
period of active duty ended with an
honorable discharge. A general
discharge under honorable conditions is
not sufficient for interment, inurnment
or memorialization in Arlington
National Cemetery.
(d) For purposes of determining
whether a service member has received
an honorable discharge, final
determinations regarding discharges
made in accordance with procedures
established by chapter 79 of title 10,
United States Code, will be considered
authoritative.
(e) The Secretary of the Army has the
authority to act on requests for
exceptions to the provisions of the
interment, inurnment, and
memorialization eligibility policies
contained in this subpart. The Secretary
of the Army may delegate this authority
in writing to the Executive Director on
such terms deemed appropriate.
(f) Individuals who do not qualify as
a primarily eligible person or a
derivatively eligible person, but who are
granted an exception to policy to be
interred or inurned pursuant to § 553.22
in a new gravesite or niche, will be
treated as a primarily eligible person for
purposes of this subpart.
(g) Notwithstanding any other section
in this subpart, memorialization with an
individual memorial marker, interment,
or inurnment in Army National Military
Cemeteries is prohibited if there is a
gravesite, niche, or individual memorial
marker for the decedent in any other
Government-operated cemetery or the
Government has provided an individual
grave marker, individual memorial
marker or niche cover for placement in
a private cemetery.
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§ 553.12 Eligibility for interment in
Arlington National Cemetery.
Only those who qualify as a primarily
eligible person or a derivatively eligible
person are eligible for interment in
Arlington National Cemetery, unless
otherwise prohibited as provided for in
§§ 553.19 and 553.20, provided that the
last period of active duty of the service
member or veteran ended with an
honorable discharge.
(a) Primarily eligible persons. The
following are primarily eligible persons
for purposes of interment:
(1) Any service member who is killed
in action, as defined in § 553.1, while
serving in the U.S. Armed Forces, if the
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Authority grants a certificate of
honorable service.
(2) Any service member whose death
results from preparations or operations
related to combat, as defined in § 553.1,
if the General Courts-Martial Convening
Authority grants a certificate of
honorable service and confirms the
circumstances of death.
(3) Any service member or veteran
who has performed armed conflict
service, as defined in § 553.1, whose last
period of active duty ended with an
honorable discharge or the General
Courts-Martial Convening Authority
grants a certificate of honorable service,
and is awarded one of the following
decorations:
(i) Medal of Honor;
(ii) Distinguished Service Cross, Navy
Cross, Air Force Cross, Coast Guard
Cross;
(iii) Department of Defense
Distinguished Service Medal, Army
Distinguished Service Medal, Navy
Distinguished Service Medal, Air Force
Distinguished Service Medal, Coast
Guard Distinguished Service Medal;
(iv) Silver Star; or
(v) Purple Heart.
(4) Any person who served in the
position of President or Vice President
of the United States.
(5) Any service member or veteran
who served on active duty, performed
armed conflict service, as defined in
§ 553.1, and served in a position of
significant governmental responsibility,
as defined in § 553.1.
(6) Any former prisoner of war who,
while a prisoner of war, served
honorably in the active military service
and who died on or after November 30,
1993.
(b) Derivatively eligible persons. The
following individuals are derivatively
eligible persons for purposes of
interment who may be interred if space
is available in the gravesite of the
primarily eligible person:
(1) The spouse of a primarily eligible
person who is or will be interred in
Arlington National Cemetery. A former
spouse of a primarily eligible person is
not eligible for interment in Arlington
National Cemetery under this section.
(2) The spouse of an active duty
service member or an eligible veteran,
who was:
(i) Lost or buried at sea, temporarily
interred overseas due to action by the
Government, or officially determined to
be missing in action;
(ii) Buried in a U.S. military cemetery
maintained by the American Battle
Monuments Commission; or
(iii) Interred in Arlington National
Cemetery as part of a group burial (the
derivatively eligible spouse may not be
buried in the group burial gravesite).
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(3) A subsequently remarried spouse
if the remarriage is terminated by
divorce, annulment or the death of the
subsequently remarried spouse’s
subsequent spouse.
(4) The parents of a minor child or a
permanently dependent adult child,
whose remains were interred in
Arlington National Cemetery based on
the eligibility of a parent at the time of
the child’s death, unless eligibility of
the non-service connected parent is lost
through divorce from the primarily
eligible parent.
(5) A minor child or permanently
dependent child of a primarily eligible
person who is or will be interred in
Arlington National Cemetery.
(6) An honorably discharged veteran
who does not qualify as a primarily
eligible person, if the veteran will be
buried in the same gravesite as an
already interred primarily eligible
person who is a close relative, where the
interment meets the following
conditions:
(i) The veteran is without minor or
unmarried adult dependent children;
(ii) The veteran will not occupy space
reserved for the spouse, a minor child,
or a permanently dependent adult child;
(iii) All other close relatives of the
primarily eligible person concur with
the interment of the veteran with the
primarily eligible person by signing a
notarized statement;
(iv) The veteran’s spouse waives any
entitlement to interment in Arlington
National Cemetery, where such
entitlement might be based on the
veteran’s interment in Arlington
National Cemetery. The Executive
Director may set aside the spouse’s
waiver, provided space is available in
the same gravesite, and all close
relatives of the primarily eligible person
concur; and
(v) Any cost of moving, re-casketing,
or re-vaulting the remains will be paid
from private funds.
§ 553.13 Eligibility for inurnment in
Arlington National Cemetery Columbarium.
The following persons are eligible for
inurnment in the Arlington National
Cemetery Columbarium, unless
otherwise prohibited as provided for in
§§ 553.19 and 553.20, provided that the
last period of active duty of the service
member or veteran ended with an
honorable discharge.
(a) Primarily eligible persons. The
following are primarily eligible persons
for purposes of inurnment:
(1) Any person eligible for interment
in Arlington National Cemetery, as
provided for in § 553.12(a).
(2) Any veteran retired from the U.S.
Armed Forces, and entitled to receive
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military retired pay on the date of their
death.
(3) Any service member eligible to
retire from the U.S. Armed Forces, and
entitled to receive military retired pay
on the date of their death.
(4) Any service member or veteran
who served on active duty (other than
active duty for training) for no less than
24 months and performed armed
conflict service.
(5) Any veteran who:
(i) Received an honorable discharge
from the Armed Forces prior to October
1, 1949, and
(ii) Who was discharged for a
permanent physical disability, and
(iii) Who served on active duty (other
than active duty for training), and
(iv) Who would have been eligible for
military medical retirement (as
authorized under 10 U.S.C. 1201) had
this statute been in effect on the date of
separation.
(6) Any service member or veteran
who served on active duty (other than
active duty for training) and served in
a position of significant governmental
responsibility, as defined in § 553.1.
(7) Any citizen of the United States
who, during any armed conflict prior to
July 27, 1953, in which the United
States has been or may hereafter be
engaged, served in the armed forces of
any government allied with the United
States during that armed conflict, whose
last service ended honorably, as
determined by the Executive Director,
by death or otherwise, and who was a
citizen of the United States at the time
of entry into that service and at the time
of death.
(8) Any commissioned officer of the
United States Coast and Geodetic
Survey who died during or subsequent
to the service specified in the following
categories and whose last service
terminated honorably:
(i) Assignment to areas of immediate
military hazard prior to September 3,
1945; or
(ii) Served in the Philippine Islands
on December 7, 1941.
(9) Any commissioned officer of the
United States Public Health Service:
(i) Who performed active service prior
to July 29, 1945;
(ii) Such active service was in time of
war; and
(iii) The officer was detailed for duty
with the U.S. Armed Forces.
(10) Any Active Duty Designee as
defined in § 553.1.
(b) Derivatively eligible persons.
Those connected to an individual
described in paragraph (a) of this
section through a relationship described
in § 553.12(b). Such individuals may be
inurned if space is available in the
primarily eligible person’s niche.
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§ 553.14 Eligibility for interment of
cremated remains in the Arlington National
Cemetery Unmarked Area.
(a) The cremated remains of any
person eligible for interment in
Arlington National Cemetery as
described in § 553.12 may be interred in
the designated Arlington National
Cemetery Unmarked Area.
(b) Cremated remains must be interred
in a biodegradable container or placed
directly into the ground without a
container. Cremated remains are not
authorized to be scattered at this site or
at any location within Arlington
National Cemetery.
(c) There will be no headstone or
marker for any person choosing this
method of interment. The Executive
Director will maintain a permanent
register.
(d) Consistent with the one-gravesiteper-family policy, once a person is
interred in the Unmarked Area, any
derivatively eligible persons and
spouses must be interred in this
manner. This includes spouses who are
also primarily eligible persons. No
additional gravesite, niche, or memorial
marker in a memorial area will be
authorized.
§ 553.15 Eligibility for group burial in
Arlington National Cemetery.
(a) The Executive Director may
authorize a group burial in Arlington
National Cemetery whenever several
people, at least one of whom is an active
duty service member, die during a
military-related activity and not all
remains can be individually identified.
(b) Before authorizing a group burial
that includes both United States and
foreign decedents, the Executive
Director will notify the Department of
State and request that the Department of
State notify the appropriate foreign
embassy.
§ 553.16 Eligibility for memorialization in
an Arlington National Cemetery memorial
area.
(a) With the authority granted by 38
U.S.C. 2409, a memorial marker may be
placed in an Arlington National
Cemetery memorial area to honor the
memory of service members or veterans,
who are eligible for interment under
§ 553.12(a) and:
(1) Who are missing in action;
(2) Whose remains have not been
recovered or identified;
(3) Whose remains were buried at sea,
whether by the member’s or veteran’s
own choice or otherwise;
(4) Whose remains were donated to
science; or
(5) Whose remains were cremated and
the cremated remains were scattered
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without interment or inurnment of any
portion of those remains.
(b) When the remains of a primarily
eligible person are unavailable for one
of the reasons listed in paragraph (a) of
this section, and a derivatively eligible
person who predeceased the primarily
eligible person is already interred or
inurned in Arlington National
Cemetery, the primarily eligible person
may be memorialized only on the
existing headstone or niche cover, or on
a replacement headstone or niche cover
ordered with a new inscription.
Consistent with the one-gravesite-perfamily policy, a separate marker in a
memorial area is not authorized.
(c) When a memorial marker for a
primarily eligible person is already in
place in a memorial area, and a
derivatively eligible person is
subsequently interred or inurned in
Arlington National Cemetery, an
inscription memorializing the primarily
eligible person will be placed on the
new headstone or niche cover.
Consistent with the one-gravesite-perfamily policy, the memorial marker will
then be removed from the memorial
area.
§ 553.17 Arlington National Cemetery
interment/inurnment agreement.
(a) A derivatively eligible person who
predeceases the primarily eligible
person may be interred or inurned in
Arlington National Cemetery only if the
primarily eligible person agrees in
writing to be interred in the same
gravesite or inurned in the same niche
at his or her time of need and that his
or her estate shall pay for all expenses
related to disinterment or disinurnment
of the predeceased person from
Arlington National Cemetery if the
primarily eligible person is not interred
or inurned as agreed.
(b) If the primarily eligible person
becomes ineligible for interment or
inurnment in Arlington National
Cemetery or the personal representative
or primary next of kin decides that the
primarily eligible person will be
interred or inurned elsewhere, the
remains of any predeceased person may
be removed from Arlington National
Cemetery at no cost to the Government.
§ 553.18 Eligibility for burial in U.S.
Soldiers’ and Airmen’s Home National
Cemetery.
Only the residents of the Armed
Forces Retirement Home are eligible for
interment in the U.S. Soldiers’ and
Airmen’s Home National Cemetery.
Resident eligibility criteria for the
Armed Forces Retirement Home is
provided for at 24 U.S.C. 412.
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§ 553.19 Ineligibility for interment,
inurnment, or memorialization in an Army
National Military Cemetery.
The following persons are not eligible
for interment, inurnment, or
memorialization in an Army National
Military Cemetery:
(a) A father, mother, brother, sister, or
in-law solely on the basis of his or her
relationship to a primarily eligible
person, even though the individual is:
(1) Dependent on the primarily
eligible person for support; or
(2) A member of the primarily eligible
person’s household.
(b) A person whose last period of
service was not characterized with an
honorable discharge (e.g., they received
a separation or discharge under general
but honorable conditions, other than
honorable conditions, a bad conduct
discharge, a dishonorable discharge, or
a dismissal), regardless of whether the
person:
(1) Received any other veterans’
benefits; or
(2) Was treated at a Department of
Veterans Affairs hospital or died in such
a hospital.
(c) A person who has volunteered for
service with the U.S. Armed Forces, but
has not yet entered on active duty.
(d) A former spouse whose marriage
to the primarily eligible person ended in
divorce.
(e) A spouse who predeceases the
primarily eligible person and is interred
or inurned in a location other than
Arlington National Cemetery, and the
primarily eligible person remarries.
(f) A divorced spouse of a primarily
eligible person.
(g) Otherwise derivatively eligible
persons, such as a spouse or minor
child, if the primarily eligible person
was not or will not be interred or
inurned at Arlington National Cemetery.
(h) A service member who dies while
on active duty, if the first General
Courts-Martial Convening Authority in
the service member’s chain of command
determines that there is clear and
convincing evidence that the service
member engaged in conduct that would
have resulted in a separation or
discharge not characterized as an
honorable discharge (e.g., a separation
or discharge under general but
honorable conditions, other than
honorable conditions, a bad conduct
discharge, a dishonorable discharge, or
a dismissal) being imposed, but for the
death of the service member.
(i) Animal remains that are
unintentionally commingled with
human remains due to a natural
disaster, unforeseen accident, act of war
or terrorism, violent explosion, or
similar incident, and such remains
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cannot be separated from the remains of
an eligible person, then the remains may
be interred or inurned with the eligible
person, but the identity of the animal
remains shall not be inscribed or
identified on a niche, marker,
headstone, or otherwise.
§ 553.20 Prohibition of interment,
inurnment, or memorialization in an Army
National Military Cemetery of persons who
have committed certain crimes.
(a) Prohibition. Notwithstanding
§§ 553.12 through 553.16, 553.18, and
553.22, the interment, inurnment, or
memorialization in an Army National
Military Cemetery of any of the
following persons is prohibited:
(1) Any person identified in writing to
the Executive Director by the Attorney
General of the United States, prior to his
or her interment, inurnment, or
memorialization, as a person who has
been convicted of a Federal capital
crime, as defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411, and
whose conviction is final (other than a
person whose sentence was commuted
by the President).
(2) Any person identified in writing to
the Executive Director by an appropriate
State official, prior to his or her
interment, inurnment, or
memorialization, as a person who has
been convicted of a State capital crime,
as defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411, and whose
conviction is final (other than a person
whose sentence was commuted by the
Governor of the State).
(3) Any person identified in writing to
the Executive Director by the Attorney
General of the United States or by an
appropriate State official, prior to his or
her interment, inurnment, or
memorialization, as a person who has
been convicted of murder, as defined in
§ 553.1, and whose conviction is final
(other than a person whose sentence
was commuted by the President or the
Governor of a State, as the case may be).
(4) Any person identified in writing to
the Executive Director by the Attorney
General of the United States or by an
appropriate State official, prior to his or
her interment, inurnment, or
memorialization, as a person who has
been convicted of a Federal capital
crime or a State capital crime, as
defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411, or other
criminal offense causing the person to
be a Tier III sex offender for purposes
of the Sex Offender Registration and
Notification Act, who for such crime is
sentenced to a minimum of life
imprisonment and whose conviction is
final (other than a person whose
sentence was commuted by the
President or the Governor of a State, or
the appropriate commutation authority
as dictated by the law in the jurisdiction
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where the conviction was finalized, as
the case may be).
(5) Any person found under
procedures specified in § 553.21 to have
committed any crime identified in
§ 553.20(a)(1) through (4), but who has
not been convicted of such crime by
reason of such person not being
available for trial due to death or flight
to avoid prosecution. Notice from
officials is not required for this
prohibition to apply.
(b) Notice. The Executive Director is
designated as the Secretary of the
Army’s representative authorized to
receive from the appropriate Federal or
State officials notification of conviction
of capital crimes referred to in this
section.
(c) Confirmation of person’s
eligibility. (1) If notice has not been
received, but the Executive Director has
reason to believe that the person may
have been convicted of a Federal capital
crime or a State capital crime, as
defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411, the Executive
Director shall seek written confirmation
from:
(i) The Attorney General of the United
States, with respect to a suspected
Federal capital crime; or
(ii) An appropriate State official, with
respect to a suspected State capital
crime.
(2) The Executive Director will defer
the decision on whether to inter, inurn,
or memorialize a decedent until a
written response is received.
§ 553.21 Findings concerning the
commission of certain crimes where a
person has not been convicted due to death
or flight to avoid prosecution.
(a) Preliminary inquiry. If the
Executive Director has reason to believe
that a decedent may have committed a
Federal capital crime or a State capital
crime, as defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411, but
has not been convicted of such crime by
reason of such person not being
available for trial due to death or flight
to avoid prosecution, the Executive
Director shall submit the issue to the
General Counsel of the Department of
the Army. The General Counsel of the
Department of the Army shall initiate a
preliminary inquiry seeking information
from Federal, State, or local law
enforcement officials, or other sources
of potentially relevant information.
(b) Decision after preliminary inquiry.
If, after conducting the preliminary
inquiry described in paragraph (a) of
this section, the General Counsel of the
Department of the Army determines that
credible evidence exists suggesting the
decedent may have committed a Federal
capital crime or State capital crime, as
defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411, then further
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proceedings under this section are
warranted to determine whether the
decedent committed such crime.
Consequently the General Counsel of
the Department of the Army shall
present the personal representative with
a written notification of such
preliminary determination and a dated,
written notice of the personal
representative’s procedural options.
(c) Notice and procedural options.
The notice of procedural options shall
indicate that, within fifteen days, the
personal representative may:
(1) Request a hearing;
(2) Withdraw the request for
interment, inurnment, or
memorialization; or
(3) Do nothing, in which case the
request for interment, inurnment, or
memorialization will be considered to
have been withdrawn.
(d) Time computation. The fifteen-day
time period begins on the calendar day
immediately following the earlier of the
day the notice of procedural options is
delivered in person to the personal
representative or is sent by U.S.
registered mail or, if available, by
electronic means to the personal
representative. It ends at midnight on
the fifteenth day. The period includes
weekends and holidays.
(e) Hearing. The purpose of the
hearing is to allow the personal
representative to present additional
information regarding whether the
decedent committed a Federal capital
crime or a State capital crime, as
defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411. In lieu of
making a personal appearance at the
hearing, the personal representative may
submit relevant documents for
consideration.
(1) If a hearing is requested, the
General Counsel of the Department of
the Army shall conduct the hearing.
(2) The hearing shall be conducted in
an informal manner.
(3) The rules of evidence shall not
apply.
(4) The personal representative and
witnesses may appear, at no expense to
the Government, and subject to the
discretion of the General Counsel of the
Department of the Army, they may
testify. All testimony shall be under
oath and a person who possesses the
legal authority to administer oaths shall
administer the oath.
(5) The General Counsel of the
Department of the Army shall consider
all relevant information obtained.
(6) The hearing shall be appropriately
recorded. Upon request, a copy of the
record shall be provided to the personal
representative.
(f) Final determination. After
considering the opinion of the General
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Counsel of the Department of the Army,
and any additional information
submitted by the personal
representative, the Secretary of the
Army shall determine the decedent’s
eligibility for interment, inurnment, or
memorialization. This determination is
final and not appealable.
(1) The determination shall be based
on evidence that supports or
undermines a conclusion that the
decedent’s actions satisfied the elements
of the crime as established by the law
of the jurisdiction in which the
decedent would have been prosecuted.
(2) If an affirmative defense is offered
by the decedent’s personal
representative, a determination as to
whether the defense was met shall be
made according to the law of the
jurisdiction in which the decedent
would have been prosecuted.
(3) Mitigating evidence shall not be
considered.
(4) The opinion of the local, State, or
Federal prosecutor as to whether he or
she would have brought charges against
the decedent had the decedent been
available is relevant but not binding and
shall be given no more weight than
other facts presented.
(g) Notice of decision. The Executive
Director shall provide written
notification of the Secretary’s decision
to the personal representative.
§ 553.22 Exceptions to policies for
interment, inurnment, or memorialization at
Arlington National Cemetery.
(a) As a national military cemetery,
eligibility standards for interment,
inurnment, or memorialization are
based on honorable military service.
Exceptions to the eligibility standards
for new graves are rarely granted. When
granted, exceptions are for those
persons who have made significant
contributions that directly and
substantially benefited the U.S. military.
Exceptions to the interment or
inurnment eligibility policies shall be
decided by the Secretary of the Army.
(b) Requests for an exception to the
interment or inurnment eligibility
policies shall be considered only after
the individual’s death.
(c) Requests for an exception to the
interment or inurnment eligibility
policies shall be submitted to the
Executive Director and shall include
any documents required by the
Executive Director.
(d) The primary next of kin is
responsible for providing and certifying
the authenticity of all documents and
swearing to the accuracy of the
accounting provided to support the
request for exception to the interment or
inurnment eligibility policies.
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(e) Disapproved requests will be
reconsidered only when the personal
representative or next of kin submits
new and substantive information not
previously considered by the Secretary
of the Army. Requests for
reconsideration shall be submitted
directly to the Executive Director. The
Executive Director will deny requests
for reconsideration not supported by
new and substantive information after
review and advice from the General
Counsel of the Department of the Army.
The Executive Director shall notify the
personal representative or next of kin of
the decision of the reconsideration.
(f) The decision by the Secretary of
the Army or the Executive Director, as
the case may be, is final and not
appealable.
(g) Under no circumstances, will
exceptions to policies be considered or
granted for those individuals prohibited
from interment or inurnment by virtue
of § 553.20 or § 553.21.
§ 553.23 Placement of cremated remains at
Army National Military Cemeteries.
All cremated remains shall be interred
or inurned. The scattering of cremated
remains and the burial of symbolic
containers are prohibited in Army
National Military Cemeteries.
§ 553.24
Subsequently recovered remains.
Subsequently recovered identified
remains of a decedent shall be reunited
in one gravesite or urn, or as part of a
group burial, in either an Army National
Military Cemetery or other cemetery.
Subsequently recovered identified
remains may also be interred in the
Arlington National Cemetery Tomb of
Remembrance. Unidentified remains
(which may or may not be commingled)
may also be interred in the Arlington
National Cemetery Tomb of
Remembrance.
§ 553.25 Disinterment and disinurnment of
remains.
(a) Interments and inurnments in
Army National Military Cemeteries are
considered permanent.
(b) Requests for the permanent (i.e.,
the remains will not be immediately
returned to the same gravesite or niche)
disinterment or disinurnment of
individually interred or inurned
remains are considered requests for
exceptions to this policy, and must be
addressed to the Executive Director for
decision. The request must include:
(1) A full statement of the reasons for
the disinterment or disinurnment of the
remains from the personal
representative or primary next of kin
who directed the original interment or
inurnment if still living, or if not, the
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current personal representative or
primary next of kin;
(2) A notarized statement from each
living close relative of the decedent that
he or she does not object to the
proposed disinterment or disinurnment;
(3) A notarized statement by a person
who has personal knowledge of the
decedent’s relatives stating that the
persons giving statements comprise all
of the decedent’s living close relatives;
and
(4) An appropriate funding source for
the disinterment or disinurnment, as
disinterments and disinurnments of
individually interred or inurned
remains must be accomplished without
expense to the Government, unless done
in accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section.
(c) Disinterments performed at the
direction of the Secretary of Defense for
the purpose of the identification of
remains shall be done in compliance
with, and as directed by, Department of
Defense regulation and policy.
(d) The Executive Director shall carry
out disinterments and disinurnments
directed by a court of competent
jurisdiction upon presentation of a
lawful, original court order and after
consulting with the General Counsel of
the Department of the Army.
(e) Disinterment or disinurnment is
not permitted for the sole purpose of
splitting remains or keeping a portion of
the remains in a location other than
Arlington National Cemetery.
(f) Disinterment of previously
designated group remains for the sole
purpose of individually segregating the
group remains is not permitted unless
the requirements of paragraph (d) of this
section are met.
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§ 553.26 Design of Government-furnished
headstones, niche covers, and memorial
markers.
(a) Headstones and memorial markers
shall be white marble in an upright slab
design. Flat-type granite markers may be
used, at the Executive Director’s
discretion, when the terrain or other
obstruction precludes use of an upright
marble headstone or memorial marker.
(b) Niche covers shall be white
marble.
(c) The Executive Director shall
approve the design of headstones and
memorial markers erected for group
burials, consistent with the policies of
the Secretary of Veterans Affairs.
§ 553.27 Inscriptions on Governmentfurnished headstones, niche covers, and
memorial markers.
(a) Inscriptions on Governmentfurnished headstones, niche covers, and
memorial markers will be made
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according to the policies and
specifications of the Secretary of the
Army, consistent with the policies of
the Secretary of Veterans Affairs.
(b) No grades, titles, or ranks other
than military grades granted pursuant to
title 10, United States Code, will be
engraved on Government-furnished
headstones, niche covers, and memorial
markers. Honorary grades, titles, or
ranks granted by States, governors, and
others shall not be inscribed on
headstones, niche covers, or memorial
markers.
(c) Memorial markers must include
the words ‘‘In Memory of’’ preceding
the inscription.
(d) The words ‘‘In Memory of’’ shall
not precede the inscription of a
decedent whose remains are interred or
inurned.
§ 553.28
Private headstones and markers.
(a) Construction and installation of
private headstones and markers, in lieu
of Government-furnished headstones,
are prohibited in Army National
Military Cemeteries unless approved
prior to December 1, 2017. Repair or
replacement of private headstones and
markers that were approved prior to
December 1, 2017, and are in sections of
Army National Military Cemeteries in
which private memorials and markers
were authorized as of January 1, 1947,
must be of simple design, dignified, and
appropriate for a military cemetery as
determined by the Executive Director.
(b) The design and inscription of a
private headstone or marker must be
approved by the Executive Director
prior to its construction and placement.
All private headstones and markers will
conform to the dimensions and profiles
specified by the Executive Director and
will be inscribed with the location of
the gravesite.
(c) Inscription or modification to a
private headstone or marker previously
placed or approved for placement is
conditional upon the primary next of
kin agreeing in writing to maintain it in
a manner acceptable to the Government.
Should the headstone or marker become
unserviceable at any time and the
primary next of kin fail to repair or
replace it, or if the marker is not
updated to reflect all persons buried in
that gravesite within 6 months of the
most recent burial, the Executive
Director reserves the right to remove
and dispose of the headstone or marker
and replace it with a standard,
Government-furnished headstone or
marker.
(d) The construction of a headstone or
marker to span two gravesites will be
permitted only in those sections in
which headstones and markers are
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presently spanning two gravesites and
only with the express understanding
that in the event both gravesites are not
utilized for burials, the headstone or
marker will be relocated to the center of
the occupied gravesite, if possible. Such
relocation must be accomplished at no
expense to the Government. The
Executive Director reserves the right to
remove and dispose of the headstone or
marker and to mark the gravesite with
a Government-furnished headstone or
marker if the personal representative or
primary next of kin fails to relocate the
headstone or marker as requested by the
Executive Director.
(e) Arrangements must be made with
an appropriate commercial firm to
ensure that additional inscriptions will
be promptly inscribed following each
succeeding interment in the gravesite.
Foot markers must be authorized by the
Executive Director and may only be
authorized when there is no available
space for an inscription on the front or
rear of a private headstone.
(f) Except as may be authorized for
marking group burials, ledger
monuments of freestanding cross
design, narrow shafts, and mausoleums
are prohibited.
§ 553.29 Permission to construct or amend
private headstones and markers.
(a) Headstone firms must receive
permission from the Executive Director
to construct a private headstone or
marker or to add an inscription to an
existing headstone or marker in an
Army National Military Cemetery.
(b) Requests for permission must be
submitted to the Executive Director and
must include:
(1) Written consent from the personal
representative or primary next of kin;
(2) Contact information for both the
personal representative or primary next
of kin and the headstone firm; and
(3) A scale drawing (no less than 1:12)
showing all dimensions, or a
reproduction showing detailed
specifications of design and proposed
construction material, finishing,
carving, lettering, exact inscription to
appear on the headstone or marker, and
a trademark or copyright designation.
(c) The Army does not endorse
headstone firms, but grants permission
for the construction of headstones or
markers in individual cases.
(d) When using sandblast equipment
to add an inscription to an existing
headstone or marker, headstone firms
shall restore the surrounding grounds in
a timely manner as determined by the
Executive Director to the condition of
the grounds before work began and at no
expense to the Government.
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§ 553.30 Inscriptions on private
headstones and markers.
An appropriate inscription for the
decedent will be placed on the
headstone or marker in accordance with
the dimensions of the stone and
arranged in such a manner as to
enhance the appearance of the stone.
Additional inscriptions may be
inscribed following each succeeding
interment in the gravesite. All
inscriptions will be in accordance with
policies established by the Executive
Director.
§ 553.31 Memorial and commemorative
monuments (other than private headstones
or markers).
The placement of memorials or
commemorative monuments in
Arlington National Cemetery will be
carried out in accordance with 38 U.S.C.
2409(b).
§ 553.32 Conduct of memorial services
and ceremonies.
(a) The Executive Director shall
ensure the sanctity of public and private
memorial and ceremonial events.
(b) All memorial services and
ceremonies within Army National
Military Cemeteries, other than official
ceremonies, shall be purely memorial in
purpose and may be dedicated only to:
(1) The memory of all those interred,
inurned, or memorialized in Army
National Military Cemeteries;
(2) The memory of all those who died
in the military service of the United
States while serving during a particular
conflict or while serving in a particular
military unit or units; or
(3) The memory of the individual or
individuals to be interred, inurned, or
memorialized at the particular site at
which the service or ceremony is held.
(c) Memorial services and ceremonies
at Army National Military Cemeteries
will not include partisan political
activities.
(d) Private memorial services may be
closed to the media and public as
determined by the decedent’s primary
next of kin.
(e) Public memorial services and
public wreath-laying ceremonies shall
be open to all members of the public to
observe.
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§ 553.33 Visitors rules for Army National
Military Cemeteries.
(a) Visiting hours. Visiting hours shall
be established by the Executive Director
and posted in conspicuous places. No
visitor is permitted to enter or remain in
an Army National Military Cemetery
outside the established visiting hours.
(b) Destruction or removal of property.
No person shall destroy, damage,
mutilate, alter, or remove any
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monument, gravestone, niche cover,
structure, tree, shrub, plant, or other
property located within an Army
National Military Cemetery, without the
prior approval of the Executive Director.
(c) Conduct within Army National
Military Cemeteries. Army National
Military Cemeteries are national shrines
to the honored dead of the U.S. Armed
Forces, and certain acts and activities,
which may be appropriate elsewhere,
are not appropriate in Army National
Military Cemeteries. All visitors,
including persons attending or taking
part in memorial services and
ceremonies, shall observe proper
standards of decorum and decency
while in an Army National Military
Cemetery. Specifically, no person shall:
(1) Conduct any memorial service or
ceremony within an Army National
Military Cemetery without the prior
approval of the Executive Director.
(2) Engage in demonstrations
prohibited by 38 U.S.C. 2413.
(3) Engage in any orations, speeches,
or similar conduct to assembled groups
of people, unless such actions are part
of a memorial service or ceremony
authorized by the Executive Director.
(4) Display any placards, banners,
flags, or similar devices within an Army
National Military Cemetery, unless first
approved by the Executive Director for
use in an authorized memorial service
or ceremony. This rule does not apply
to clothing worn by visitors.
(5) Distribute any handbill, pamphlet,
leaflet, or other written or printed
matter within an Army National
Military Cemetery, except a program
approved by the Executive Director to
be provided to attendees of an
authorized memorial service or
ceremony.
(6) Bring a dog, cat, or other animal
(other than a service animal or military
working dog) within an Army National
Military Cemetery. This prohibition
does not apply to persons living in
quarters located on the grounds of the
Army National Military Cemeteries.
(7) Use the cemetery grounds for
recreational activities (e.g., physical
exercise, running, jogging, sports, or
picnics).
(8) Ride a bicycle or similar vehicle or
conveyance in an Army National
Military Cemetery, except with a proper
pass issued by the Executive Director to
visit a gravesite or niche. An individual
visiting a relative’s gravesite or niche
may be issued a temporary pass by the
Executive Director to proceed directly to
and from the gravesite or niche on a
bicycle or similar vehicle or
conveyance.
(9) Operate a musical instrument, a
loudspeaker, or an audio device without
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a headset within an Army National
Military Cemetery.
(10) Drive any motor vehicle within
an Army National Military Cemetery in
excess of the posted speed limit.
(11) Park any motor vehicle in any
area of an Army National Military
Cemetery designated as a no-parking
area.
(12) Leave any vehicle in the
Arlington National Cemetery Visitors’
Center parking area or Soldiers’ and
Airmen’s Home National Cemetery
visitors’ parking area more than thirty
minutes outside of established visiting
hours or anywhere else in an Army
National Military Cemetery outside of
established visiting hours.
(13) Consume or serve alcoholic
beverages without prior written
permission from the Executive Director.
(14) Possess firearms without prior
written permission from the Executive
Director. This prohibition does not
apply to law enforcement and military
personnel in the performance of their
official duties. In accordance with
locally established policy, military and
law enforcement personnel may be
required to obtain advance permission
from the Executive Director prior to
possessing firearms on the property of
an Army National Military Cemetery.
(15) Deposit or throw litter or trash on
the grounds of an Army National
Military Cemetery.
(16) Engage in any disrespectful or
disorderly conduct within an Army
National Military Cemetery.
(d) Vehicular traffic. All visitors,
including persons attending or taking
part in memorial services and
ceremonies, will observe the following
rules concerning motor vehicle traffic
within Arlington National Cemetery:
(1) Visitors arriving by car and not
entitled to a vehicle pass pursuant to
paragraph (d)(2) of this section are
required to park their vehicles in the
Visitors’ Center parking area or at a
location outside of the cemetery.
(2) Only the following categories of
vehicles may be permitted access to
Arlington National Cemetery roadways
and issued a permanent or temporary
pass from the Executive Director:
(i) Official Government vehicles being
used on official Government business.
(ii) Vehicles carrying persons on
official Cemetery business.
(iii) Vehicles forming part of an
authorized funeral procession and
authorized to be part of that procession.
(iv) Vehicles carrying persons visiting
the Arlington National Cemetery
gravesites, niches, or memorial areas of
relatives or loved ones interred,
inurned, or memorialized within
Arlington National Cemetery.
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(v) Arlington National Cemetery and
National Park Service maintenance
vehicles.
(vi) Vehicles of contractors who are
authorized to perform work within
Arlington National Cemetery.
(vii) Concessionaire tour buses
authorized by the Executive Director to
operate in Arlington National Cemetery.
(viii) Vehicles of employees of the
Army National Military Cemeteries as
authorized by the Executive Director.
§ 553.34
Soliciting and vending.
The display or distribution of
commercial advertising to or solicitation
of business from the public is strictly
prohibited within an Army National
Military Cemetery, except as authorized
by the Executive Director.
§ 553.35
Media.
All officials and staff of the media are
subject to the Visitors Rules enumerated
in § 553.33 and shall comply with the
Department of the Army’s media policy.
Subpart B—Army Post Cemeteries
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§ 553.36
Definitions.
As used in this subpart, the following
terms have these meanings:
Active duty. Full-time duty in the
active military service of the United
States.
(1) This includes:
(i) Active Reserve component duty
performed pursuant to title 10, United
States Code.
(ii) Service as a cadet or midshipman
currently on the rolls at the U.S.
Military, U.S. Naval, U.S. Air Force, or
U.S. Coast Guard Academies.
(iii) Active duty for operational
support.
(2) This does not include:
(i) Full-time National Guard duty
performed under title 32, United States
Code.
(ii) Active duty for training, initial
entry training, annual training duty, or
inactive-duty training for members of
the Reserve components.
Active duty for operational support
(formerly active duty for special work).
A tour of active duty for Reserve
personnel authorized from military or
Reserve personnel appropriations for
work on Active component or Reserve
component programs. The purpose of
active duty for operational support is to
provide the necessary skilled manpower
assets to support existing or emerging
requirements and may include training.
Active duty for training. A category of
active duty used to provide structured
individual and/or unit training,
including on-the-job training, or
educational courses to Reserve
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component members. Included in the
active duty for training category are
annual training, initial active duty for
training, or any other training duty.
Annual training. The minimum
period of active duty for training that
Reserve members must perform each
year to satisfy the training requirements
associated with their Reserve
component assignment.
Armed Forces. The U.S. Army, Navy,
Marine Corps, Coast Guard, Air Force,
Space Force and their Reserve
components.
Army Post Cemeteries. Cemeteries
operated by the Department of the Army
on active Army installations, on Army
reserve complexes, and on former Army
installations or inactive posts whose
purpose is to inter or inurn eligible
members of the Armed Forces, Veterans,
and their eligible family members. Army
National Military Cemeteries are not
included in post cemeteries. The West
Point Cemetery is considered an Army
Post Cemetery, but has separate
eligibility standards due to its unique
stature. In addition to the Army Post
Cemeteries, there are four Native
American cemeteries on Fort Sill and
five World War II Enemy Prisoner of
War cemeteries on four Army
installations. Finally, there is the U.S.
Army Disciplinary Barracks Cemetery at
Fort Leavenworth used for interring the
unclaimed remains of those who die
while incarcerated by the United States
Military. Unlike the other Army
cemeteries which honor the Nation’s
veterans, this cemetery has unique
eligibility standards due to the
characterization of service of those
criminally incarcerated.
Cemetery Responsible Official. An
appointed official who serves as the
primary point of contact and
responsible official for all matters
relating to the operation maintenance
and administration of an Army
cemetery. The appointee must be a U.S.
Federal Government employee, DA
civilian, or military member and
appointed on orders by the appropriate
garrison commander or comparable
official.
Child, minor child, permanently
dependent child, unmarried adult
child—(1) Child. (i) Natural child of a
primarily eligible person, born in
wedlock;
(ii) Natural child of a female primarily
eligible person, born out of wedlock;
(iii) Natural child of a male primarily
eligible person, who was born out of
wedlock and:
(A) Has been acknowledged in writing
signed by the male primarily eligible
person;
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(B) Has been judicially determined to
be the male primarily eligible person’s
child;
(C) Whom the male primarily eligible
person has been judicially ordered to
support; or
(D) Has been otherwise proven, by
evidence satisfactory to the Executive
Director, to be the child of the male
primarily eligible person;
(iv) Adopted child of a primarily
eligible person; or
(v) Stepchild who was part of the
primarily eligible person’s household at
the time of death of the individual who
is to be interred or inurned.
(2) Minor child. A child of the
primarily eligible person who:
(i) Is unmarried;
(ii) Has no dependents; and
(iii) Is under the age of twenty-one
years, or is under the age of twentythree years and is taking a full-time
course of instruction at an educational
institution that the U.S. Department of
Education acknowledges as an
accredited educational institution.
(3) Permanently dependent child. A
child of the primarily eligible person
who:
(i) Is unmarried;
(ii) Has no dependents; and
(iii) Is permanently and fully
dependent on one or both of the child’s
parents because of a physical or mental
disability incurred before attaining the
age of twenty-one years or before the age
of twenty-three years while taking a fulltime course of instruction at an
educational institution that the U.S.
Department of Education acknowledges
as an accredited educational institution.
(4) Unmarried adult child. A child of
the primarily eligible person who:
(i) Is unmarried;
(ii) Has no dependents; and
(iii) Has attained the age of twentyone years.
Close relative. The spouse, parents,
adult brothers and sisters, adult natural
children, adult stepchildren, and adult
adopted children of a decedent.
Derivatively eligible person. Any
person who is entitled to interment or
inurnment solely based on his or her
relationship to a primarily eligible
person, as set forth in §§ 553.43 through
553.45.
Disinterment. The removal of interred
human remains from a particular
gravesite.
Disinurnment. The removal of
remains from a particular niche.
Executive Director. The person
statutorily charged with exercising
authority, direction, and control over all
aspects of Army National Military
Cemeteries, and the person charged by
the Secretary of the Army to serve as the
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functional proponent for policies and
procedures pertaining to the
administration, operation, and
maintenance of all military cemeteries
under the jurisdiction of the Army.
Former prisoner of war. A person who
is eligible for or has been awarded the
Prisoner of War Medal.
Former spouse. See spouse.
Government. The U.S. Government
and its agencies and instrumentalities.
Group burial. (1) Interment in one
gravesite of one or more service
members on active duty killed in the
same incident or location where:
(i) The remains cannot be
individually identified; or
(ii) The person authorized to direct
disposition of subsequently identified
remains has authorized their interment
with the other service members.
(2) Group remains may contain
incidental remains of civilians and
foreign nationals.
Inactive-duty training. (1) Duty
prescribed for members of the Reserve
components by the Secretary concerned
under 37 U.S.C. 206 or any other
provision of law.
(2) Special additional duties
authorized for members of the Reserve
components by an authority designated
by the Secretary concerned and
performed by them on a voluntary basis
in connection with the prescribed
training or maintenance activities of the
units to which they are assigned.
(3) In the case of a member of the
Army National Guard or Air National
Guard of any State, duty (other than
full-time duty) under 32 U.S.C. 316,
502, 503, 504, or 505 or the prior
corresponding provisions of law.
(4) This term does not include:
(i) Work or study performed in
connection with correspondence
courses;
(ii) Attendance at an educational
institution in an inactive status; or
(iii) Duty performed as a temporary
member of the Coast Guard Reserve.
Interment. The ground burial of
casketed or cremated human remains.
Inurnment. The placement of
cremated human remains in a niche.
Media. Individuals and agencies that
print, broadcast, or gather and transmit
news, and their reporters,
photographers, and employees.
Minor child. See child.
Murder. Pursuant to any Federal or
State law, the causing the death of
another human being when:
(1) It is committed purposely or
knowingly; or
(2) It is committed recklessly under
circumstances manifesting extreme
indifference to the value of human life.
Such recklessness and indifference are
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presumed if the actor is engaged or is an
accomplice in the commission of, or an
attempt to commit, or flight after
committing or attempting to commit
robbery, rape or deviate sexual
intercourse by force or threat of force,
arson, burglary, kidnapping, or
felonious escape.
Niche. An above ground space
constructed specifically for the
placement of cremated human remains.
Parent. A natural parent, a stepparent,
a parent by adoption, or a person who
for a period of not less than one year
stood in loco parentis, or was granted
legal custody by a court decree or
statutory provision.
Permanently dependent child. See
child.
Person authorized to direct
disposition. The person primarily
entitled to direct disposition of human
remains and who elects to exercise that
entitlement. Determination of such
entitlement shall be made in accordance
with applicable law and regulations.
Personal representative. A person
who has legal authority to act on behalf
of another through applicable law,
order, and regulation.
Primarily eligible person. Any person
who is entitled to interment or
inurnment based on his or her service
as specified in §§ 553.43 through
553.45.
Primary next of kin. (1) In the absence
of a valid written document from the
decedent identifying the primary next of
kin, the order of precedence for
designating a decedent’s primary next of
kin is as follows:
(i) Spouse, even if a minor;
(ii) Children, age 18 years and over (if
under 18 years of age, their surviving
parent or legal guardian shall exercise
the rights of the minor);
(iii) Parents;
(iv) Siblings, to include half-blood
and those acquired through adoption,
age 18 years and over;
(v) Grandparents; and
(vi) Other next of kin, in order of
relationship to the decedent as
determined by the laws of the
decedent’s state of domicile.
(2) Absent a court order or written
document from the deceased, the
precedence of next of kin with equal
relationships to the decedent is
governed by seniority (age), older
having higher priority than younger.
Equal relationship situations include
those involving divorced parents of the
decedent, children of the decedent, and
siblings of the decedent.
Private headstones or markers. A
headstone or individual memorial
marker provided at private expense, in
lieu of a headstone or individual
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memorial marker furnished by the
Government.
Private memorial service. A memorial
service or ceremony conducted at the
decedent’s gravesite, memorial
headstone, or niche.
Public memorial service. A ceremony
conducted by members of the public at
a historic site in an Army cemetery.
Reserve component. See definition in
10 U.S.C. 101.
Spouse, former spouse, subsequently
remarried spouse—(1) Spouse. A person
who is legally married to another
person.
(2) Former spouse. A person who was
legally married to another person at one
time but was not legally married to that
person at the time of one of their deaths.
(3) Subsequently remarried spouse. A
derivatively eligible spouse who was
married to the primarily eligible person
at the time of the primarily eligible
person’s death and who subsequently
remarried another person.
Subsequently recovered remains.
Additional remains belonging to the
decedent that are recovered or identified
after the decedent’s interment or
inurnment.
Subsequently remarried spouse. See
spouse.
Subversive activity. Actions
constituting subversive activity are
those defined in applicable provisions
of Federal law.
Unmarried adult child. See child.
Veteran. A person who served in the
U.S. Armed Forces and who was
discharged or released under honorable
conditions (general discharge under
honorable conditions is not sufficient to
meet this definition).
§ 553.37
Purpose.
This subpart specifies the eligibility
for interment and inurnment in the Post
Cemeteries and the U.S. Disciplinary
Barracks Cemetery at Fort Leavenworth.
§ 553.38
Statutory authorities.
The statutory authorities for this
subpart are Public Law 93–43 87 Stat.
75, 10 U.S.C. 985, 1481, 1482, 3013, and
38 U.S.C. 2411.
§ 553.39
Scope and applicability.
(a) Scope. The development,
maintenance, administration, and
operation of the Army Post Cemeteries
are governed by this subpart, Army
Regulation 290–5, and Department of
the Army Pamphlet 290–5. The
development, maintenance,
administration, and operation of Army
National Military Cemeteries are not
covered by this subpart.
(b) Applicability. This subpart is
applicable to all persons seeking
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§ 553.40
niches.
Assignment of gravesites or
(a) All eligible persons will be
assigned gravesites or niches without
discrimination as to race, color, sex,
religion, age, or national origin and
without preference to military grade or
rank.
(b) Army cemeteries will enforce a
one-gravesite-per-family policy. Once
the initial interment or inurnment is
made in a gravesite or niche, each
additional interment or inurnment of
eligible persons must be made in the
same gravesite or niche, except as noted
in paragraph (e) of this section. This
includes multiple primarily eligible
persons if they are married to each
other.
(c) A gravesite reservation will be
honored if the gravesite was properly
reserved before May 1, 1975.
(d) The commander or Cemetery
Responsible Official responsible for an
Army cemetery may cancel a gravesite
reservation:
(1) Upon determination that a
derivatively eligible spouse has
remarried;
(2) Upon determination that the
remains of the person having the
gravesite reservation have been buried
elsewhere or otherwise disposed of;
(3) Upon determination that the
person having the gravesite reservation
desires to or will be interred in the same
gravesite with the predeceased, and
doing so is feasible; or
(4) Upon determination that the
person having the gravesite reservation
would be 120 years of age and there is
no record of correspondence with the
person having the gravesite reservation
within the last two decades.
(e) In cases of reservations where
more than one gravesite was reserved
(on the basis of the veteran’s eligibility
at the time the reservation was made),
the gravesite reservations will be
honored only if the decedents continue
to meet the eligibility criteria for
interment in Army Post Cemeteries that
are in effect at the time of need, and the
reserved gravesite is available.
(f) Gravesites or niches shall not be
reserved or assigned prior to the time of
need.
(g) The selection of gravesites and
niches is the responsibility of the
Cemetery Responsible Official. The
selection of specific gravesites or niches
by the family or other representatives of
the deceased is prohibited.
§ 553.41
Proof of eligibility.
(a) The personal representative or
primary next of kin is responsible for
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providing appropriate documentation to
verify the decedent’s eligibility for
interment or inurnment.
(b) The personal representative or
primary next of kin must certify in
writing that the decedent is not
prohibited from interment, inurnment,
or memorialization under § 553.47
because he or she has not committed or
been convicted of a Federal or State
capital crime or is a convicted Tier III
sex offender as defined in 38 U.S.C.
2411.
(c) For service members who die on
active duty, a statement of honorable
service is required from the first General
Court-Martial Convening Authority in
the service member’s chain of
command. If the certificate of honorable
service cannot be granted, the service
member is ineligible for interment,
inurnment, and memorialization
pursuant to § 553.46(i).
(d) When applicable, the following
documents are required:
(1) Death certificate;
(2) Proof of eligibility as required by
paragraphs (e) through (g) of this
section;
(3) Any additional documentation to
establish the decedent’s eligibility (e.g.,
marriage certificate, birth certificate,
waivers, statements that the decedent
had no children);
(4) Burial agreement;
(5) Notarized statement that the
remains are unavailable for the reasons
set forth in § 553.16;
(6) A certificate of cremation or
notarized statement attesting to the
authenticity of the cremated human
remains and that 100% of the cremated
remains received from the crematorium
are present. The Cemetery Responsible
Official may, however, allow a portion
of the cremated remains to be removed
by the crematorium for the sole purpose
of producing commemorative items.
(e) The following documents may be
used to establish the eligibility of a
primarily eligible person:
(1) DD Form 214, Certificate of
Release or Discharge from Active Duty;
(2) WD AGO 53 or 53–55, Enlisted
Record and Report of Separation
Honorable Discharge;
(3) WD AGO 53–98, Military Record
and Report of Separation Certificate of
Service;
(4) NAVPERS–553, Notice of
Separation from U.S. Naval Service;
(5) NAVMC 70–PD, Honorable
Discharge, U.S. Marine Corps;
(6) DD Form 1300, Report of Casualty
(required in the case of death of an
active duty service member); or
(7) NGB Form 22, National Guard
Report of Separation and Record of
Service (must indicate a minimum of 20
years total service for pay).
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(f) In addition to the documents
otherwise required by this section, a
request for interment or inurnment of a
subsequently remarried spouse must be
accompanied by:
(1) A notarized statement from the
new spouse of the subsequently
remarried spouse agreeing to the
interment or inurnment and
relinquishing any claim for interment or
inurnment in the same gravesite or
niche.
(2) Notarized statement(s) from all of
the children, age 18 years and over,
from the prior marriage agreeing to the
interment or inurnment of their parents
in the same gravesite or niche.
(g) In addition to the documents
otherwise required by this section, a
request for interment or inurnment of a
permanently dependent child must be
accompanied by:
(1) A notarized statement as to the
marital status and degree of dependency
of the decedent from an individual with
direct knowledge; and
(2) A physician’s statement regarding
the nature and duration of the physical
or mental disability; and
(3) A statement from someone with
direct knowledge demonstrating the
following factors:
(i) The deceased lived most of his or
her adult life with one or both parents
who is otherwise eligible for interment;
and
(ii) The decedent’s children and
siblings age 18 years and over, or other
family members, other than the eligible
parent, waive any derivative claim to be
interred at the Army Post Cemetery in
question.
(h) Veterans or primary next of kin of
deceased veterans may obtain copies of
their military records by writing to the
National Personnel Records Center,
Attention: Military Personnel Records, 1
Archives Drive, St. Louis, Missouri
63138–1002 or using their website. All
others may request a record by
completing and submitting Standard
Form 180.
(i) The burden of proving eligibility
lies with the party who requests the
burial. Commanders of these cemeteries
or their Cemetery Responsible Officials
will determine whether the submitted
evidence is sufficient to support a
finding of eligibility.
§ 553.42 General rules governing eligibility
for interment or inurnment in Army Post
Cemeteries.
(a) Only those persons who meet the
criteria of § 553.43 of this subpart or are
granted an exception to policy pursuant
to § 553.49 of this subpart may be
interred in the Army Post Cemeteries.
Only those persons who meet the
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criteria of § 553.44 of this subpart or are
granted an exception to policy pursuant
to § 553.49 of this subpart may be
interred or inurned in the West Point
Post Cemetery. Only those persons who
meet the criteria of § 553.45 may be
interred in the U.S. Disciplinary
Barracks Cemetery.
(b) Derivative eligibility for interment
or inurnment may be established only
through a decedent’s connection to a
primarily eligible person and not to
another derivatively eligible person.
(c) No veteran is eligible for
interment, inurnment, or
memorialization in an Army Post
Cemetery (except for the U.S.
Disciplinary Barracks Cemetery) unless
the veteran’s last period of active duty
ended with an honorable discharge. A
general discharge under honorable
conditions is not sufficient for
interment, inurnment, or
memorialization in an Army Post
Cemetery.
(d) For purposes of determining
whether a service member has received
an honorable discharge, final
determinations regarding discharges
made in accordance with procedures
established by chapter 79 of title 10,
United States Code, will be considered
authoritative.
(e) The Executive Director has the
authority to act on requests for
exceptions to the provisions of the
interment, inurnment, and
memorialization eligibility policies
contained in this subpart. The Executive
Director may delegate this authority in
writing on such terms deemed
appropriate.
(f) Individuals who do not qualify as
a primarily eligible person or a
derivatively eligible person, but who are
granted an exception to policy to be
interred or inurned pursuant to § 553.49
of this subpart in a new gravesite or
niche, will be treated as a primarily
eligible person for purposes of this
subpart.
(g) Notwithstanding any other section
in this subpart, memorialization with an
individual memorial marker, interment,
or inurnment in an Army Post Cemetery
is prohibited if there is a gravesite,
niche, or individual memorial marker
for the decedent in any other
Government-operated cemetery or the
Government has provided an individual
grave marker, individual memorial
marker or niche cover for placement in
a private cemetery.
§ 553.43 Eligibility for interment and
inurnment in Army Post Cemeteries.
Only those who qualify as a primarily
eligible person or a derivatively eligible
person are eligible for interment and
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inurnment in Army Post Cemeteries
(except for the West Point Post
Cemetery), unless otherwise prohibited
as provided for in §§ 553.46 through
553.48 of this subpart, provided that the
last period of active duty of the service
member or veteran ended with an
honorable discharge.
(a) Primarily eligible persons. The
following are primarily eligible persons
for purposes of interment:
(1) Any service member who dies on
active duty in the U.S. Armed Forces
(except those service members serving
on active duty for training only), if the
General Courts-Martial Convening
Authority grants a certificate of
honorable service.
(2) Any veteran retired from a Reserve
component who served a period of
active duty (other than for training), is
carried on the official retired list, and is
entitled to receive military retired pay.
(3) Any veteran retired from active
military service and entitled to receive
military retired pay.
(b) Derivatively eligible persons. The
following individuals are derivatively
eligible persons for purposes of
interment who may be interred if space
is available in the gravesite of the
primarily eligible person:
(1) The spouse of a primarily eligible
person who is or will be interred in an
Army Post Cemetery in the same grave
as the spouse. A former spouse of a
primarily eligible person is not eligible
for interment in an Army Post Cemetery
under this section.
(2) A subsequently remarried spouse
if the remarriage is terminated by
divorce, annulment or the death of the
subsequently remarried spouse’s
subsequent spouse.
(3) The spouse of an active duty
service member or an eligible veteran,
who was:
(i) Lost or buried at sea, temporarily
interred overseas due to action by the
Government, or officially determined to
be missing in action;
(ii) Buried in a U.S. military cemetery
maintained by the American Battle
Monuments Commission; or
(iii) Interred in Arlington National
Cemetery as part of a group burial (the
derivatively eligible spouse may not be
buried in the group burial gravesite) and
the active duty service member does not
have a separate individual interment or
inurnment location.
(4) A minor child or permanently
dependent adult child of a primarily
eligible person who is or will be
interred in an Army Post Cemetery.
(5) The parents of a minor child or a
permanently dependent adult child,
whose remains were interred in an
Army Post Cemetery based on the
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eligibility of a parent at the time of the
child’s death, unless eligibility of the
non-service connected parent is lost
through divorce from the primarily
eligible parent.
§ 553.44 Eligibility for interment and
inurnment in the West Point Post Cemetery.
The following persons are eligible for
interment and inurnment in the West
Point Post Cemetery, unless otherwise
prohibited as provided for in §§ 553.46
through 553.48, provided that the last
period of active duty of the service
member or veteran ended with an
honorable discharge or characterization
of honorable service for active duty
deaths.
(a) Primarily eligible persons for
interment or inurnment. The following
are primarily eligible persons for
purposes of interment or inurnment:
(1) A graduate of the United States
Military Academy, provided the
individual was a U.S. citizen, both as a
cadet and at the time of death, and
whose military service fulfilled one of
the following criteria.
(i) The graduate’s service in the
Armed Forces of the United States, if
any, terminated honorably.
(ii) The graduate’s service in wartime
in the Armed Forces of a nation that was
allied with the United States during the
war, if the service terminated honorably.
(2) Members of the Armed Forces of
the United States, including United
States Military Academy cadets, who
were on active duty at the United States
Military Academy at time of death and
their derivatively eligible person
dependents who may have died while
the service member was on active duty
at the United States Military Academy.
(3) Members of the Armed Forces of
the United States whose last permanent
active duty station was the United
States Military Academy at time of
retirement.
(4) Members of the Armed Forces of
the United States whose last permanent
active duty station was the United
States Military Academy prior to
retirement for physical disability, in
accordance with 10 U.S.C. 1201.
However, personnel (not otherwise
eligible) who are transferred to the
Medical Holding Detachment, Keller
Army Hospital, for medical boarding or
medical disability retirement are not,
regardless of length of time, eligible for
interment or inurnment in the West
Point Post Cemetery or Columbarium.
(5) Officers appointed as Professors,
United States Military Academy.
(b) Derivatively eligible persons.
Derivatively eligible persons are those
connected to an individual described in
paragraph (a) of this section through a
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relationship described in § 553.43(b).
Such individuals may be interred or
inurned if space is available in the
primarily eligible person’s gravesite or
niche.
(c) Temporary restrictions. The
Secretary of the Army may, in special
circumstances, impose temporary
restrictions on the eligibility standards
for the West Point Post Cemetery. If
temporary restrictions are imposed, they
will be reviewed annually to ensure the
special circumstances remain valid for
retaining the temporary restrictions.
§ 553.45 Eligibility for interment in U.S.
Disciplinary Barracks Cemetery at Fort
Leavenworth.
(a) Military prisoners who die while
in Military custody and are not claimed
by the person authorized to direct
disposition of remains or other persons
legally authorized to dispose of remains
are permitted to be interred in the U.S.
Disciplinary Barracks Cemetery. The
Executive Director will make all
decisions for interment in the U.S.
Disciplinary Barracks Cemetery.
(b) Other persons approved by the
Executive Director.
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§ 553.46 Ineligibility for interment,
inurnment, or memorialization in an Army
Post Cemetery.
The following persons are not eligible
for interment, inurnment, or
memorialization in an Army Post
Cemetery:
(a) A father, mother, brother, sister, or
in-law solely because of his or her
relationship to a primarily eligible
person, even though the individual is:
(1) Dependent on the primarily
eligible person for support; or
(2) A member of the primarily eligible
person’s household.
(b) Except for the U.S. Disciplinary
Barracks Cemetery in § 553.45, a person
whose last period of service was not
characterized as an honorable discharge
(e.g., a separation or discharge under
general but honorable conditions, other
than honorable conditions, a bad
conduct discharge, a dishonorable
discharge, or a dismissal), regardless of
whether the person:
(1) Received any other veterans’
benefits; or
(2) Was treated at a Department of
Veterans Affairs hospital or died in such
a hospital.
(c) A person who has volunteered for
service with the U.S. Armed Forces, but
has not yet entered on active duty.
(d) A former spouse whose marriage
to the primarily eligible person ended in
divorce.
(e) A spouse who predeceases the
primarily eligible person and is interred
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or inurned in a location other than an
Army Cemetery and the primarily
eligible person remarries.
(f) A divorced spouse of a primarily
eligible person, or the service-connected
parent when the divorced spouse has a
child interred or inurned in an Army
cemetery under the child’s derivative
eligibility.
(g) Otherwise derivatively eligible
persons, such as a spouse or minor
child, if the primarily eligible person
was not or will not be interred or
inurned at an Army Cemetery.
(h) A person convicted in a Federal
court or by a court-martial of any
offense involving subversive activity or
an offense described in 18 U.S.C. 1751
(except for military prisoners at the U.S.
Disciplinary Barracks Cemetery).
(i) A service member who dies while
on active duty, if the first General
Courts-Martial Convening Authority in
the service member’s chain of command
determines that there is clear and
convincing evidence that the service
member engaged in conduct that would
have resulted in a separation or
discharge not characterized as an
honorable discharge (e.g., a separation
or discharge under general but
honorable conditions, other than
honorable conditions, a bad conduct
discharge, a dishonorable discharge, or
a dismissal) being imposed, but for the
death of the service member.
(j) If animal remains are
unintentionally commingled with
human remains due to a natural
disaster, unforeseen accident, act of war
or terrorism, violent explosion, or
similar incident, and such remains
cannot be separated from the remains of
an eligible person, then the remains may
be interred or inurned with the eligible
person, but the identity of the animal
remains shall not be inscribed or
identified on a niche, marker,
headstone, or otherwise.
§ 553.47 Prohibition of interment,
inurnment, or memorialization in an Army
Post Cemetery of persons who have
committed certain crimes.
(a) Prohibition. Notwithstanding
§§ 553.43 through 553.45, and pursuant
to 10 U.S.C. 985 and 38 U.S.C. 2411, the
interment, inurnment, or
memorialization in an Army cemetery of
any of the following persons is
prohibited:
(1) Any person identified in writing to
the Executive Director by the Attorney
General of the United States, prior to his
or her interment, inurnment, or
memorialization, as a person who has
been convicted of a Federal capital
crime and whose conviction is final
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57657
(other than a person whose sentence
was commuted by the President).
(2) Any person identified in writing to
the Executive Director by an appropriate
State official, prior to his or her
interment, inurnment, or
memorialization, as a person who has
been convicted of a State capital crime
and whose conviction is final (other
than a person whose sentence was
commuted by the Governor of the State).
(3) Any person identified in writing to
the Executive Director by the Attorney
General of the United States or by an
appropriate State official, prior to his or
her interment, inurnment, or
memorialization, as a person who has
been convicted of murder, as defined in
as defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411, and whose
conviction is final (other than a person
whose sentence was commuted by the
President or the Governor of a State, as
the case may be).
(4) Any person identified in writing to
the Executive Director by the Attorney
General of the United States, or by an
appropriate State official, prior to his or
her interment, inurnment, or
memorialization, as a person who has
been convicted of a Federal or State
capital crime, as defined in 38 U.S.C.
2411, or other crime causing the person
to be a Tier III sex offender for purposes
of the Sex Offender Registration and
Notification Act, who for such crime is
sentenced to a minimum of life
imprisonment and whose conviction is
final (other than a person whose
sentence was commuted by the
President or the Governor of a State, or
the appropriate commutation authority
as dictated by the law in the jurisdiction
where the conviction was finalized, as
the case may be).
(5) Any person found under
procedures specified in § 553.48 to have
committed any crime identified in
§ 553.47(a)(1) through (4), but who has
not been convicted of such crime by
reason of such person not being
available for trial due to death or flight
to avoid prosecution. Notice from
Federal or State officials is not required
for this prohibition to apply.
(b) Notice. The Executive Director is
designated as the Secretary of the
Army’s representative authorized to
receive from the appropriate Federal or
State officials notification of conviction
of capital crimes referred to in this
section.
(c) Confirmation of person’s
eligibility. (1) If notice has not been
received, but the Executive Director has
reason to believe that the person may
have been convicted of a Federal capital
crime or a State capital crime, the
Executive Director shall seek written
confirmation from:
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(i) The Attorney General of the United
States, with respect to a suspected
Federal capital crime; or
(ii) An appropriate State official, with
respect to a suspected State capital
crime.
(2) The Executive Director will defer
the decision on whether to inter, inurn,
or memorialize a decedent until a
written response is received.
(d) Due diligence. Army Commanders
who have cemeteries for which they are
responsible will make every effort to
determine if the decedent is ineligible in
accordance with 10 U.S.C. 985 and 38
U.S.C. 2411. For those determined
ineligible due to the provisions of these
sections, commanders will submit their
determinations in writing to the
Executive Director for validation.
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§ 553.48 Findings concerning the
commission of certain crimes where a
person has not been convicted due to death
or flight to avoid prosecution.
(a) Preliminary inquiry. If the
Executive Director has reason to believe
that a decedent may have committed a
Federal capital crime or a State capital
crime, as defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411, but
has not been convicted of such crime by
reason of such person not being
available for trial due to death or flight
to avoid prosecution, the Executive
Director shall submit the issue to the
General Counsel of the Department of
the Army. The General Counsel of the
Department of the Army shall initiate a
preliminary inquiry seeking information
from Federal, State, or local law
enforcement officials, or other sources
of potentially relevant information.
(b) Decision after preliminary inquiry.
If, after conducting the preliminary
inquiry described in paragraph (a) of
this section, the General Counsel of the
Department of the Army determines that
credible evidence exists suggesting the
decedent may have committed a Federal
capital crime or State capital crime, as
defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411, then further
proceedings under this section are
warranted to determine whether the
decedent committed such crime.
Consequently, the General Counsel of
the Department of the Army shall
present the personal representative with
a written notification of such
preliminary determination and a dated,
written notice of the personal
representative’s procedural options.
(c) Notice and procedural options.
The notice of procedural options shall
indicate that, within fifteen days, the
personal representative may:
(1) Request a hearing;
(2) Withdraw the request for
interment, inurnment, or
memorialization; or
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(3) Do nothing, in which case the
request for interment, inurnment, or
memorialization will be considered to
have been withdrawn.
(d) Time computation. The fifteen-day
time period begins on the calendar day
immediately following the earlier of the
day the notice of procedural options is
delivered in person to the personal
representative or is sent by U.S.
registered mail or, if available, by
electronic means to the personal
representative. It ends at midnight on
the fifteenth day. The period includes
weekends and holidays.
(e) Hearing. The purpose of the
hearing is to allow the personal
representative to present additional
information regarding whether the
decedent committed a Federal capital
crime or a State capital crime, as
defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411. In lieu of
making a personal appearance at the
hearing, the personal representative may
submit relevant documents for
consideration.
(1) If a hearing is requested, the
General Counsel of the Department of
the Army shall conduct the hearing.
(2) The hearing shall be conducted in
an informal manner.
(3) The rules of evidence shall not
apply.
(4) The personal representative and
witnesses may appear, at no expense to
the Government, and subject to the
discretion of the General Counsel of the
Department of the Army, they may
testify. All testimony shall be under
oath and a person who possesses the
legal authority to administer oaths shall
administer the oath.
(5) The General Counsel of the
Department of the Army shall consider
all relevant information obtained.
(6) The hearing shall be appropriately
recorded. Upon request, a copy of the
record shall be provided to the personal
representative.
(f) Final determination. After
considering the opinion of the General
Counsel of the Department of the Army,
and any additional information
submitted by the personal
representative, the Secretary of the
Army shall determine the decedent’s
eligibility for interment, inurnment, or
memorialization. This determination is
final and not appealable.
(1) The determination shall be based
on evidence that supports or
undermines a conclusion that the
decedent’s actions satisfied the elements
of the crime as established by the law
of the jurisdiction in which the
decedent would have been prosecuted.
(2) If an affirmative defense is offered
by the decedent’s personal
representative, a determination as to
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whether the defense was met shall be
made according to the law of the
jurisdiction in which the decedent
would have been prosecuted.
(3) Mitigating evidence shall not be
considered.
(4) The opinion of the local, State, or
Federal prosecutor as to whether he or
she would have brought charges against
the decedent had the decedent been
available is relevant but not binding and
shall be given no more weight than
other facts presented.
(g) Notice of decision. The Executive
Director shall provide written
notification of the Secretary’s decision
to the personal representative.
§ 553.49 Exceptions to policies for
interment or inurnment at Army Post
Cemeteries.
(a) Requests for exceptions to policy
for interment or inurnment at Army post
cemeteries, to include the West Point
Post Cemetery, will be made to the
Executive Director.
(b) Eligibility standards for interment
and inurnment are based on honorable
military service, except at the U.S.
Disciplinary Barracks Cemetery.
Exceptions to the eligibility standards
are rarely granted. When granted,
exceptions are for those persons who
have made significant contributions that
directly and substantially benefited the
U.S. military.
(c) Requests for an exception to the
interment or inurnment eligibility
policies shall be considered only after
the individual’s death.
(d) Procedures for submitting requests
for exceptions to policy for interment
and inurnment will be established by
the Executive Director.
(e) The decision by the Executive
Director is final and not appealable.
§ 553.50 Disinterment and disinurnment of
remains.
(a) Interments and inurnments in
Army post cemeteries are considered
permanent.
(b) Requests for the permanent (i.e.,
the remains will not be immediately
returned to the same gravesite or niche)
disinterment or disinurnment of
individually interred or inurned
remains are considered requests for
exceptions to this policy, and must be
addressed to the Executive Director for
decision. The request must include:
(1) A full statement of the reasons for
the disinterment or disinurnment of the
remains from the personal
representative or primary next of kin
who directed the original interment or
inurnment if still living, or if not, the
current personal representative or
primary next of kin;
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(2) A notarized statement from each
living close relative of the decedent that
he or she does not object to the
proposed disinterment or disinurnment;
(3) A notarized statement by a person
who has personal knowledge of the
decedent’s relatives stating that the
persons giving statements comprise all
of the decedent’s living close relatives;
and
(4) An appropriate funding source for
the disinterment or disinurnment, as
disinterments and disinurnments of
individually interred or inurned
remains must be accomplished without
expense to the Government, unless done
in accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section.
(c) Disinterments performed at the
direction of the Secretary of Defense for
the purpose of the identification of
remains shall be done in compliance
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with, and as directed by, Department of
Defense regulation and policy.
(d) The Executive Director shall carry
out disinterments and disinurnments
directed by a court of competent
jurisdiction upon presentation of a
lawful, original court order and after
consulting with the General Counsel of
the Department of the Army.
(e) Disinterment or disinurnment is
not permitted for the sole purpose of
splitting remains or keeping a portion of
the remains in a location other than in
the cemetery where the disinterment or
disinurnment occurred.
(f) Disinterment of previously
designated group remains for the sole
purpose of individually segregating the
group remains is not permitted unless
the requirements of paragraph (c) of this
section are met.
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§ 553.51
57659
Private headstones and markers.
Construction and installation of
private headstones and markers, in lieu
of Government-furnished headstones
and markers, are prohibited in Army
post cemeteries unless approved by the
Executive Director prior to October 1,
2020. Repair or replacement of private
headstones and markers that were
approved prior to October 1, 2020, must
be consistent with the requirements of
§§ 553.28(b) through (f), 553.29, and
553.30, and the repair or replacement
must be approved in advance by the
Executive Director.
Brenda S. Bowen,
Army Federal Register Liaison Officer.
[FR Doc. 2020–17801 Filed 9–11–20; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 5061–AP–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 179 (Tuesday, September 15, 2020)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 57640-57659]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-17801]
[[Page 57639]]
Vol. 85
Tuesday,
No. 179
September 15, 2020
Part VII
Department of Defense
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Department of the Army
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32 CFR Part 553
Army Cemeteries; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 85 , No. 179 / Tuesday, September 15, 2020 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 57640]]
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DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Department of the Army
32 CFR Part 553
[Docket No. USA-2019-HQ-0032]
RIN 0702-AB08
Army Cemeteries
AGENCY: Department of the Army, DoD.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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SUMMARY: The Department of the Army proposes to amend this regulation
in order to revise eligibility criteria for interment (in ground) and
inurnment (above ground) at Arlington National Cemetery. This rule does
not affect veterans' burial benefits or eligibility at Department of
Veterans Affairs' national cemeteries.
DATES: Consideration will be given to all comments received by November
16, 2020.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by 32 CFR part 553,
Docket No. USA-2019-HQ-0032 and/or by Regulatory Information Number
(RIN) 0702-AB08, or by any of the following methods:
* Federal Rulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
* Mail: DoD cannot receive written comments at this time due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. Comments should be sent electronically to the docket
listed above.
Instructions: All submissions received must include the agency name
and docket number or RIN for this Federal Register document. The
general policy for comments and other submissions from members of the
public is to make these submissions available for public viewing on the
internet at https://www.regulations.gov as they are received without
change, including any personal identifiers or contact information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Renea Yates, Arlington National
Cemetery, usarmy.pentagon.hqda-anc-osa[email protected] or 1-877-907-8585.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Arlington National Cemetery represents the American people for
past, present and future generations by laying to rest those few who
have served our nation with dignity and honor, while immersing guests
in the cemetery's living history. However, without this action,
Arlington National Cemetery would run out of space for new burials by
the year 2041 (or the year 2055 with construction of Southern Expansion
in the vicinity of the Air Force Memorial), even for those Killed in
Action (KIA) and Medal of Honor recipients. Changes to eligibility at
Arlington National Cemetery will preserve this national symbol and
shrine as an active burial ground for current and future generations of
military service members.
The Department of the Army amended 32 CFR part 553 and published
rules pertaining to the development, operation, maintenance, and
administration of Army National Military Cemeteries on September 26,
2016 (80 FR 65875), and August 29, 2019 (84 FR 45406). The rule
published on August 29, 2019, also incorporated Army post cemeteries
for the first time.
The Department of the Army is proposing these amendments in
response to Section 598 of the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019, Public Law 115-232 which
requires the Secretary of the Army to prescribe revised criteria for
internment at Arlington National Cemetery that preserve Arlington
National Cemetery as an active burial ground well into the future.
These amendments revise eligibility criteria for interment (in ground)
and inurnment (above ground) at Arlington National Cemetery.
The Army also considered additional physical expansion of Arlington
National Cemetery to include adjacent land in developing this
regulation. While costly, the Army determined additional land would not
extend the active life of the cemetery sufficiently given the intent of
Section 598 of Public Law 115-232.
Legal Authority for This Program
The legal basis for this rulemaking can be found in section 7722 of
Title 10, U.S. Code: ``The Secretary of the Army, with the approval of
the Secretary of Defense, shall determine eligibility for interment or
inurnment'' at Arlington National Cemetery and the U.S. Soldiers' and
Airmen's Home National Cemetery. Additional legal authority is also
found in section 7721 of Title 10, U.S. Code which directs the
Secretary of the Army to operate, manage, administer, oversee, and fund
the cemeteries covered by this regulation.
Finally, section 598 of Public Law 115-232 (John S. McCain National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019) states ``The Secretary
of the Army, in consultation with the Secretary of Defense, shall
prescribe revised criteria for interment at Arlington National Cemetery
that preserve Arlington National Cemetery as an active burial ground
`well into the future' [defined as 150 years] . . . the Secretary of
the Army shall establish the criteria . . . not later than September
30, 2019.''
Changes Proposed in This Rulemaking
Currently, one percent of the veteran population is laid to rest at
Arlington National Cemetery, utilizing 3,691 new graves in Fiscal Year
2019. Current eligibility is summarized at https://www.arlingtoncemetery.mil/Portals/0/Docs/Eligibilty-Fact-Sheet-20170701.pdf. Changes to eligibility at Arlington National Cemetery
will preserve this national symbol and shrine as an active burial
ground for current and future generations of military service members.
This rule does not affect veterans' burial benefits or eligibility at
Department of Veterans Affairs' national cemeteries.
With the proposed criteria, approximately 700 new interments (in
ground) of eligible service members, veterans, and family members will
be conducted annually at Arlington National Cemetery. Most veterans no
longer eligible for in-ground interment at Arlington National Cemetery
will remain eligible for above-ground inurnment. Without other
eligibility, the largest affected groups with this proposed revisions
are veterans retired from the U.S. Armed Forces and entitled to receive
military retired pay, and service members eligible to retire from the
U.S. Armed Forces and entitled to receive military retired pay on the
date of their death. Annually, approximately 1,900 of these personnel
entitled to receive retired pay will remain eligible for above-ground
inurnment.
Service members who die on active duty, but neither as the result
of armed conflict service nor from preparations or operations related
to combat, both defined in Sec. 553.1, are no longer eligible for in-
ground interment or above-ground inurnment at Arlington National
Cemetery. Based on recent trends, approximately 43 service members
annually fit this description and were interred or inurned at Arlington
National Cemetery.
With the proposed criteria, approximately 1,950 new inurnments
(above ground) of eligible service members, veterans, and family
members will be conducted annually at Arlington National Cemetery.
Without other eligibility, veterans and service members who served on
active duty (other than active duty for training) for no less than 24
months and performed armed conflict service, as defined in Sec. 553.1,
remain eligible for above-
[[Page 57641]]
ground inurnment at Arlington National Cemetery.
Veterans and service members no longer eligible for in-ground
interment or above-ground inurnment at Arlington National Cemetery have
multiple options.
(a) Nationwide. The Department of Veterans Affairs' National
Cemetery Administration operates, maintains, and funds veterans'
cemeteries across the country. Their strategic goal is to provide
reasonable access (within 75 miles of a veteran's residence) to a
burial option in a VA national cemetery or VA-funded state or tribal
veterans' cemetery to reach 95 percent of eligible veterans living in
the United States. This vast cemetery network continues to expand in
order to serve veterans and their families throughout the country.
(b) Washington, DC metropolitan area. Veterans and their families
who live in the Washington, DC metropolitan area have multiple options
for burial at their time of need, including nearby Quantico National
Cemetery, which provides ample burial opportunities for those veterans
that are no longer eligible at Arlington National Cemetery.
This rule amends multiple sections of 32 CFR 553, including the
following.
a. Section 553.1 is amended to add definitions for armed conflict
service, preparations or operations related to combat, positions of
significant governmental responsibility, and other important terms as
they relate to Army cemeteries. These definitions were added to assist
in revising eligibility criteria in Sec. Sec. 553.12 and 553.13.
b. Section 553.9 is amended to set aside 1,000 gravesites at
Arlington National Cemetery for current and future Medal of Honor
recipients, as directed by the Secretary of the Army.
c. Section 553.10 is amended to add the date of July 27, 1953, the
date the Armistice was signed ending combat activities in Korea, it
established a start date for the requirement for service members who
die on active duty to provide a statement of honorable service from the
first General Courts-Martial Convening Authority.
d. Section 553.12 is amended to revise eligibility criteria for
interment (in ground) at Arlington National Cemetery to meet the intent
of section 598 of Public Law 115-232. The major change to this section
is that military retirees without other eligibility are no longer
eligible for interment (in ground), but remain eligible for inurnment
(above ground).
e. Section 553.13 is amended to revise eligibility criteria for
inurnment (above ground) at Arlington National Cemetery to meet the
intent of section 598 of Public Law 115-232. The major change to this
section is that veterans and service members who neither served on
active duty (other than active duty for training) for 24 months nor
performed armed conflict service, as defined in Sec. 553.1, are no
longer for inurnment (above ground). Additionally, eligibility is
maintained for those veterans who served during any armed conflict
prior to July 27, 1953, and their service ended honorably.
f. Sections 553.20 and 553.47 are amended to strengthen
prohibitions related to capital crimes such as murder and Tier III sex
offenses.
g. Section 553.28 is amended to prohibit the construction and
installation of private markers in Army National Military Cemeteries
unless approved prior to December 1, 2017. Private markers have been
prohibited in new sections of the cemetery since 1947. Now that
previously authorized sections are full, this change provides
continuity and consistency with established policy for Army National
Military Cemeteries and Department of Veterans Affairs' national
cemeteries.
h. Section 553.50 is added to include procedures for requesting
disinterment or disinurnment of remains at Army post cemeteries.
i. Section 553.51 is added to prohibit the construction and
installation of private markers in Army post cemeteries unless approved
by the Executive Director prior to October 1, 2020. This addition
provides continuity and consistency with established policy for Army
National Military Cemeteries and Department of Veterans Affairs'
national cemeteries.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Army has determined that the Regulatory Flexibility Act does
not apply because the rule does not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities within the meaning of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601-612.
C. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
The Army has determined that the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act does
not apply because the rule does not include a mandate that may result
in estimated costs to State, local, or tribal governments in the
aggregate, or the private sector, of $100 million or more.
D. National Environmental Policy Act
Neither an environmental analysis nor an environmental impact
statement under the National Environmental Policy Act is required.
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Army has determined that this rule does not impose additional
reporting or recordkeeping requirements under the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995, as the Army does not require a form. The Army collects,
reviews, and maintains existing documents provided by families as
specified in Sec. Sec. 553.10, 553.22, and 553.25, which have not
changed. Department of Veterans Affairs Form 40-1330 (Claim for
Standard Government Headstone or Marker) already has an OMB control
number assigned OMB Control Number 2900-0222.
F. Executive Order 12630 (Government Actions and Interference With
Constitutionally Protected Property Rights)
The Army has determined that E.O. 12630 does not apply because the
rule does not impair private property rights.
G. Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review) and Executive
Order 13563 (Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review)
Executive Orders 13563 and 12866 direct agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, distribute impacts, and equity). Executive
Order 13563 emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and
benefits, of reducing costs, of harmonizing rules, and of promoting
flexibility. This rule has been designated a ``significant regulatory
action,'' although not economically significant, under section 3(f) of
Executive Order.
H. Executive Order 13045 (Protection of Children From Environmental
Health Risk and Safety Risks)
The Army has determined that according to the criteria defined in
Executive Order 13045, the requirements of that Order do not apply to
this rule.
I. Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
The Army has determined that, according to the criteria defined in
Executive Order 13132, the requirements of that Order do not apply to
this rule because the rule will not have a substantial effect on the
States, on the relationship between the Federal Government and the
States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government.
[[Page 57642]]
J. Executive Order 13771 (Reducing Regulation and Controlling
Regulatory Costs)
This proposed rule is not expected to be an E.O. 13771 action
because this rule is expected to be related to agency management,
personnel, or organization.
K. Congressional Review Act
This proposed rule is not a ``major rule'' as defined by 5 U.S.C.
804(2).
List of Subjects in 32 CFR part 553
Armed Forces, Eligibility, Military personnel, Monuments and
memorials, Reserve components, Service members, Veterans.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Department of the Army
proposes to revise 32 CFR part 553 to read as follows:
PART 553--ARMY CEMETERIES
Subpart A--Army National Military Cemeteries
Sec.
553.1 Definitions.
553.2 Purpose.
553.3 Statutory authorities.
553.4 Scope and applicability.
553.5 Maintaining order.
553.6 Standards for managing Army National Military Cemeteries.
553.7 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater.
553.8 Permission to install utilities.
553.9 Assignment of gravesites or niches.
553.10 Proof of eligibility.
553.11 General rules governing eligibility for interment, inurnment,
and memorialization at Arlington National Cemetery.
553.12 Eligibility for interment in Arlington National Cemetery.
553.13 Eligibility for inurnment in Arlington National Cemetery
Columbarium.
553.14 Eligibility for interment of cremated remains in the
Arlington National Cemetery Unmarked Area.
553.15 Eligibility for group burial in Arlington National Cemetery.
553.16 Eligibility for memorialization in an Arlington National
Cemetery memorial area.
553.17 Arlington National Cemetery interment/inurnment agreement.
553.18 Eligibility for burial in U.S. Soldiers' and Airmen's Home
National Cemetery.
553.19 Ineligibility for interment, inurnment, or memorialization in
an Army National Military Cemetery.
553.20 Prohibition of interment, inurnment, or memorialization in an
Army National Military Cemetery of persons who have committed
certain crimes.
553.21 Findings concerning the commission of certain crimes where a
person has not been convicted due to death or flight to avoid
prosecution.
553.22 Exceptions to policies for interment, inurnment, or
memorialization at Arlington National Cemetery.
553.23 Placement of cremated remains at Army National Military
Cemeteries.
553.24 Subsequently recovered remains.
553.25 Disinterment and disinurnment of remains.
553.26 Design of Government-furnished headstones, niche covers, and
memorial markers.
553.27 Inscriptions on Government-furnished headstones, niche
covers, and memorial markers.
553.28 Private headstones and markers.
553.29 Permission to construct or amend private headstones and
markers.
553.30 Inscriptions on private headstones and markers.
553.31 Memorial and commemorative monuments (other than private
headstones or markers).
553.32 Conduct of memorial services and ceremonies.
553.33 Visitors rules for Army National Military Cemeteries.
553.34 Soliciting and vending.
553.35 Media.
Subpart B--Army Post Cemeteries
553.36 Definitions.
553.37 Purpose.
553.38 Statutory authorities.
553.39 Scope and applicability.
553.40 Assignment of gravesites or niches.
553.41 Proof of eligibility.
553.42 General rules governing eligibility for interment or
inurnment in Army Post Cemeteries.
553.43 Eligibility for interment and inurnment in Army Post
Cemeteries.
553.44 Eligibility for interment and inurnment in the West Point
Post Cemetery.
553.45 Eligibility for interment in U.S. Disciplinary Barracks
Cemetery at Fort Leavenworth.
553.46 Ineligibility for interment, inurnment, or memorialization in
an Army Post Cemetery.
553.47 Prohibition of interment, inurnment, or memorialization in an
Army Post Cemetery of persons who have committed certain crimes.
553.48 Findings concerning the commission of certain crimes where a
person has not been convicted due to death or flight to avoid
prosecution.
553.49 Exceptions to policies for interment or inurnment at Army
Post Cemeteries.
553.50 Disinterment and disinurnment of remains.
553.51 Private headstones and markers.
Authority: 10 U.S.C. 985, 1128, 1481, 1482, 3013, 7721-7726; 24
U.S.C. 295a, 412; 38 U.S.C. 2402 note, 2409-2411, 2413; 40 U.S.C.
9102; Pub. L. 93-43, 87 Stat. 75; and Pub. L. 115-232, Sec. 598.
Subpart A--Army National Military Cemeteries
Sec. 553.1 Definitions.
As used in this subpart, the following terms have these meanings:
Active duty. Full-time duty in the active military service of the
United States.
(1) This includes:
(i) Active Reserve component duty performed pursuant to title 10,
United States Code.
(ii) Service as a cadet or midshipman currently on the rolls at the
U.S. Military, U.S. Naval, U.S. Air Force, or U.S. Coast Guard
Academies.
(iii) Active duty for operational support.
(iv) Persons whose service has been determined to be active duty
service pursuant to section 401 of the GI Bill Improvement Act of 1977
(Pub. L. 95-202; 38 U.S.C. 106 note) as of May 20, 2016 and whose
remains were not already formally interred or inurned as of May 20,
2016 or who died on or after May 20, 2016.
(2) This does not include:
(i) Full-time National Guard duty performed under title 32, United
States Code.
(ii) Active duty for training, initial entry training, annual
training duty, or inactive-duty training for members of the Reserve
components.
Active duty designee. A person whose service has been determined to
be active duty service pursuant to section 401 of the GI Bill
Improvement Act of 1977, as amended by Public Law 114-158 of May 20,
2016.
Active duty for operational support (formerly active duty for
special work). A tour of active duty for Reserve personnel authorized
from military or Reserve personnel appropriations for work on Active
component or Reserve component programs. The purpose of active duty for
operational support is to provide the necessary skilled manpower assets
to support existing or emerging requirements and may include training.
Active duty for training. A category of active duty used to provide
structured individual and/or unit training, including on-the-job
training, or educational courses to Reserve component members. Included
in the active duty for training category are annual training, initial
active duty for training, or any other training duty.
Annual training. The minimum period of active duty for training
that Reserve members must perform each year to satisfy the training
requirements associated with their Reserve component assignment.
Armed conflict service. Service in a hostile fire area during a
period of armed conflict. Such service must be evidenced by receipt of:
Combat pay, imminent danger or hostile fire pay, or the receipt of a
qualifying medal. Examples of qualifying medals include,
[[Page 57643]]
but are not limited to, the Korean Service Medal, Vietnam Service
Medal, Southwest Asia Service Medal, Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal,
Navy and Marine Expeditionary Medal, Kosovo Campaign Medal, Afghanistan
Campaign Medal, Iraq Campaign Medal, Global War on Terrorism
Expeditionary Medal, and Inherent Resolve Campaign Medal.
Armed Forces. The U.S. Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, Air
Force, Space Force and their Reserve components.
Army National Military Cemeteries. Arlington National Cemetery and
the U.S. Soldiers' and Airmen's Home National Cemetery.
Child, minor child, permanently dependent child, unmarried adult
child--(1) Child. (i) Natural child of a primarily eligible person,
born in wedlock;
(ii) Natural child of a female primarily eligible person, born out
of wedlock;
(iii) Natural child of a male primarily eligible person, who was
born out of wedlock and:
(A) Has been acknowledged in a writing signed by the male primarily
eligible person;
(B) Has been judicially determined to be the male primarily
eligible person's child;
(C) Whom the male primarily eligible person has been judicially
ordered to support; or
(D) Has been otherwise proved, by evidence satisfactory to the
Executive Director, to be the child of the male primarily eligible
person;
(iv) Adopted child of a primarily eligible person; or
(v) Stepchild who was part of the primarily eligible person's
household at the time of death of the individual who is to be interred
or inurned.
(2) Minor child. A child of the primarily eligible person who:
(i) Is unmarried;
(ii) Has no dependents; and
(iii) Is under the age of twenty-one years, or is under the age of
twenty-three years and is taking a full-time course of instruction at
an educational institution that the U.S. Department of Education
acknowledges as an accredited educational institution.
(3) Permanently dependent child. A child of the primarily eligible
person who:
(i) Is unmarried;
(ii) Has no dependents; and
(iii) Is permanently and fully dependent on one or both of the
child's parents because of a physical or mental disability incurred
before attaining the age of twenty-one years or before the age of
twenty-three years while taking a full-time course of instruction at an
educational institution that the U.S. Department of Education
acknowledges as an accredited educational institution.
(4) Unmarried adult child. A child of the primarily eligible person
who:
(i) Is unmarried;
(ii) Has no dependents; and
(iii) Has attained the age of twenty-one years.
Close relative. The spouse, parents, adult brothers and sisters,
adult natural children, adult stepchildren, and adult adopted children
of a decedent.
Commemorative monuments. Monuments or other structures or landscape
features that serve to honor events in history, units of the Armed
Forces, individuals, or groups of individuals that served in the Armed
Forces, and that do not contain human remains or mark the location of
remains in close proximity. The term does not include memorial markers
erected pursuant to Sec. 553.16.
Derivatively eligible person. Any person who is entitled to
interment or inurnment solely based on his or her relationship to a
primarily eligible person, as set forth in Sec. Sec. 553.12(b) and
553.13(b), respectively.
Disinterment. The permanent removal of interred human remains from
a particular gravesite.
Disinurnment. The permanent removal of remains from a particular
niche.
Executive Director. The person statutorily charged with exercising
authority, direction, and control over all aspects of Army National
Military Cemeteries, and the person charged by the Secretary of the
Army to serve as the functional proponent for policies and procedures
pertaining to the administration, operation, and maintenance of all
military cemeteries under the jurisdiction of the Army.
Formal interment or inurnment. Interment or inurnment of identified
human remains in a cemetery, crypt mausoleum, columbarium or similar
formal location. Formal interment or inurnment includes interment or
inurnment in private cemeteries or private burial locations at the
direction of the person authorized to direct disposition or the primary
next of kin. Formal interment or inurnment does not include temporary
battlefield interments or inurnments, or interment or inurnment while
the person was detained by or in the custody of a government other than
the United States.
Former prisoner of war. A person who is eligible for or has been
awarded the Prisoner of War Medal.
Former spouse. See spouse.
Government. The U.S. government and its agencies and
instrumentalities.
Group burial. (1) Interment in one gravesite of one or more service
members on active duty killed in the same incident or location where:
(i) The remains cannot be individually identified; or
(ii) The person authorized to direct disposition of subsequently
identified remains has authorized their interment with the other
service members.
(2) Group remains may contain incidental remains of civilians and
foreign nationals.
Human remains. The deceased human body or portions of the body,
including but not limited to: Amputated limbs and individual bones.
Human remains do not include portions of the human body that are
naturally and/or intentionally shed or expelled by the body during the
lifetime of a human. Examples of those items excluded from this
definition include, but are not limited to, the following when removed,
cut, or expelled prior to death: Hair, teeth, skin cells, sperm, eggs,
blood, and stem cells.
Inactive-duty training. (1) Duty prescribed for members of the
Reserve components by the Secretary concerned under 37 U.S.C. 206 or
any other provision of law.
(2) Special additional duties authorized for members of the Reserve
components by an authority designated by the Secretary concerned and
performed by them on a voluntary basis in connection with the
prescribed training or maintenance activities of the units to which
they are assigned.
(3) In the case of a member of the Army National Guard or Air
National Guard of any State, duty (other than full-time duty) under 32
U.S.C. 316, 502, 503, 504, or 505 or the prior corresponding provisions
of law.
(4) This term does not include:
(i) Work or study performed in connection with correspondence
courses,
(ii) Attendance at an educational institution in an inactive
status, or
(iii) Duty performed as a temporary member of the Coast Guard
Reserve.
Interment. The ground burial of casketed or cremated human remains.
Inurnment. The placement of cremated human remains in a niche.
Killed in Action. A service member, as defined in this section,
whose death occurred as a direct result of action against a force
hostile to the United States.
Media. Individuals and agencies that print, broadcast, or gather
and transmit news, and their reporters, photographers, and employees.
[[Page 57644]]
Memorial marker. A headstone used to memorialize a service member
or veteran whose remains are unavailable for reasons listed in Sec.
553.16.
Memorial service or ceremony. Any activity intended to honor the
memory of a person or persons interred, inurned, or memorialized in the
Army National Military Cemeteries. This term includes private memorial
services, public memorial services, public wreath laying ceremonies,
and official ceremonies.
Minor child. See child.
Murder. Pursuant to any Federal or State law, the causing the death
of another human being when:
(1) It is committed purposely or knowingly; or
(2) It is committed recklessly under circumstances manifesting
extreme indifference to the value of human life. Such recklessness and
indifference are presumed if the actor is engaged or is an accomplice
in the commission of, or an attempt to commit, or flight after
committing or attempting to commit robbery, rape or deviant sexual
intercourse by force or threat of force, arson, burglary, kidnapping or
felonious escape.
Niche. An aboveground space constructed specifically for the
placement of cremated human remains.
Official ceremony. A memorial service or ceremony approved by the
Executive Director in which the primary participants are
representatives of the Government, a State government, a foreign
government, or an international organization authorized by the U.S.
Department of State to participate in an official capacity.
Parent. A natural parent, a stepparent, a parent by adoption, or a
person who for a period of not less than one year stood in loco
parentis, or was granted legal custody by a court decree or statutory
provision.
Permanently dependent child. See child.
Person authorized to direct disposition. The person primarily
entitled to direct disposition of human remains and who elects to
exercise that entitlement. Determination of such entitlement shall be
made in accordance with applicable law and regulations.
Personal representative. A person who has legal authority to act on
behalf of another through applicable law, order, and regulation.
Positions of significant governmental responsibility. Persons
permanently (i.e., not acting in the position, or performing the duties
of that position) holding or who formerly permanently (i.e., not acting
in the position, or performing the duties of that position) held the
following positions in the government of the United States of America:
Elected Members of Congress, Chief Justice and Associate Justices of
the Supreme Court, Secretary of State, Secretary of Treasury, Secretary
of Defense, Attorney General, Secretary of the Interior, Secretary of
Agriculture, Secretary of Commerce, Secretary of Labor, Secretary of
Health and Human Services, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development,
Secretary of Transportation, Secretary of Energy, Secretary of
Education, Secretary of Veterans Affairs, Secretary of Homeland
Security, Director of Office of Management and Budget, Director of
National Intelligence, Director of the Central Intelligence Agency,
Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, Administrator
of the Environmental Protection Agency, Secretary of the Army,
Secretary of the Navy, Secretary of the Air Force, Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff and Senior Enlisted Advisor, Chief of Staff of
the Army and Senior Enlisted Advisor, Chief of Naval Operations and
Senior Enlisted Advisor, Commandant of the Marine Corps and Senior
Enlisted Advisor, Chief of Staff of the Air Force and Senior Enlisted
Advisor, Chief of Space Operations and Senior Enlisted Advisor, Chief
of the National Guard Bureau and Senior Enlisted Advisor, Commandant of
the Coast Guard and Senior Enlisted Advisor, and Combatant Commanders
and their Senior Enlisted Advisors.
Preparations or operations related to combat. Military operations,
individual or collective training for battle-related tasks, or
transportation to or from such operations or training in a vehicle,
vessel or aircraft whose primary purpose is combat or direct support of
combat. Examples include, but are not limited to, military parachuting,
convoy operations, live-fire operations, at-sea operations or flight
operations. Activities excluded from this category include, but are not
limited to, personally conducted physical training (i.e., not organized
unit physical training), disease or illness, or operator or passenger
in a private or commercially owned vehicle not under contract to the
United States Government, and suicide on or off duty.
Primarily eligible person. Any person who is entitled to interment
or inurnment based on his or her service as specified in Sec. Sec.
553.12(a) and 553.13(a), respectively.
Primary next of kin. (1) In the absence of a valid written document
from the decedent identifying the primary next of kin, the order of
precedence for designating a decedent's primary next of kin is as
follows:
(i) Spouse, even if a minor;
(ii) Children, age 18 years and over (if under 18 years of age,
their surviving parent or legal guardian shall exercise the rights of
the minor);
(iii) Parents;
(iv) Siblings, to include half-blood and those acquired through
adoption, age 18 years and over;
(v) Grandparents; and
(vi) Other next of kin, in order of relationship to the decedent as
determined by the laws of the decedent's state of domicile.
(2) Absent a court order or written document from the deceased, the
precedence of next of kin with equal relationships to the decedent is
governed by seniority (age), older having higher priority than younger.
Equal relationship situations include those involving divorced parents
of the decedent, children of the decedent, and siblings of the
decedent.
Private headstones or markers. A headstone or individual memorial
marker provided at private expense, in lieu of a headstone or
individual memorial marker furnished by the Government.
Private memorial service. A memorial service or ceremony conducted
at the decedent's gravesite, memorial headstone, or niche.
Public memorial service. A ceremony conducted by members of the
public at a historic site in an Army National Military Cemetery.
Public wreath-laying ceremony. A ceremony in which members of the
public, assisted by the Tomb Guards, present a wreath or similar
memento at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.
Reserve component. See definition in 10 U.S.C. 101.
Senior Enlisted Advisor. A service member in the grade of E-9 who
is nominatively selected and permanently appointed (i.e., is not
holding the position in an acting or temporary status) to serve as the
senior advisor to an officer in the Armed Forces in the grade of O-10.
Spouse, former spouse, subsequently remarried spouse--(1) Spouse. A
person who is legally married to another person.
(2) Former spouse. A person who was legally married to another
person at one time, but was not legally married to that person at the
time of one of their deaths.
(3) Subsequently remarried spouse. A derivatively eligible spouse
who was married to the primarily eligible person at the time of the
primarily eligible person's death and who subsequently remarried
another person.
Subsequently recovered remains. Additional remains belonging to the
[[Page 57645]]
decedent that are recovered or identified after the decedent's
interment or inurnment.
Subsequently remarried spouse. See spouse.
Unmarried adult child. See child.
Veteran. A person who served in the U.S. Armed Forces and who was
discharged or released under honorable conditions (general discharge
under honorable conditions is not sufficient to meet this definition).
Sec. 553.2 Purpose.
This subpart specifies the authorities and assigns the
responsibilities for the development, operation, maintenance, and
administration of the Army National Military Cemeteries.
Sec. 553.3 Statutory authorities.
(a) Historical. Act of July 17, 1862, Sec. 18, 12 Stat. 594, 596;
Act of February 22, 1867, Ch. 61, 14 Stat. 399; and the National
Cemeteries Act of 1973, Public Law 93-43, 87 Stat. 75 (1973). The
National Cemeteries Act established the National Cemetery System, which
primarily consists of national cemeteries transferred from the
management authority of the Department of the Army to the (now)
Department of Veterans Affairs. Section 6(a) of the Act exempted
Arlington National Cemetery and the Soldiers' and Airmen's Home
National Cemetery from transfer to the National Cemetery System,
leaving them under the management authority of the Secretary of the
Army.
(b) Current. Pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 7721(a), the Secretary of the
Army shall develop, operate, manage, oversee, and fund the Army
National Military Cemeteries. Section 10 U.S.C. 7721(c) provides that
the Army National Military Cemeteries are under the jurisdiction of
Headquarters, Department of the Army, and 10 U.S.C. 7721(d) provides
that the Secretary of the Army shall prescribe such regulations and
policies as may be necessary to administer the Army National Military
Cemeteries. The responsibilities of Headquarters, Department of the
Army with regard to the Army National Military Cemeteries are
enumerated in 10 U.S.C. 7721-7726 and Army General Orders 2014-74,
2014-75, 2020-01, and 2020-02.
Sec. 553.4 Scope and applicability.
(a) Scope. The development, maintenance, administration, and
operation of the Army National Military Cemeteries are governed by this
subpart, Army Regulation 290-5, and Department of the Army Pamphlet
290-5. The development, maintenance, administration, and operation of
Army post cemeteries are not covered by this subpart.
(b) Applicability. This subpart is applicable to all persons on,
engaging in business with, or seeking access to or benefits from the
Army National Military Cemeteries, unless otherwise specified.
Sec. 553.5 Maintaining order.
The Executive Director may order the removal from, and bar the re-
entry onto, Army National Military Cemeteries of any person who acts in
violation of any law or regulation, including but not limited to
demonstrations and disturbances as outlined in 38 U.S.C. 2413, and in
this subpart. This authority may not be re-delegated.
Sec. 553.6 Standards for managing Army National Military Cemeteries.
(a) The Executive Director is responsible for establishing and
maintaining cemetery layout plans, including plans setting forth
sections with gravesites, memorial areas with markers, columbaria with
niches, and landscape planting plans.
(b) New sections or areas may be opened and prepared for interments
or for installing memorial markers only with the approval of the
Executive Director.
Sec. 553.7 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater.
(a) In accordance with 24 U.S.C. 295a:
(1) No memorial may be erected and no remains may be entombed in
the Arlington Memorial Amphitheater unless specifically authorized by
Congress; and
(2) The character, design, or location of any memorial authorized
by Congress for placement in the Amphitheater is subject to the
approval of the Secretary of Defense.
(b) The Secretary of Defense will seek the advice of the Commission
of Fine Arts in such matters, in accordance with 40 U.S.C. 9102.
(c) Tributes offered for those interred in the Tomb of the Unknown
Soldier for placement in the Arlington Memorial Amphitheater display
room are not memorials for purposes of this section.
Sec. 553.8 Permission to install utilities.
(a) The installation of utilities in Army National Military
Cemeteries, including but not limited to, telephone and fiber optic
lines, electric lines, natural gas lines, water pipes, storm drains,
and sanitary sewers, must be authorized by the Executive Director.
(b) Requests for licenses, permits, or easements to install water,
gas, or sewer lines, or other utilities or equipment on or across an
Army National Military Cemetery or an approach road in which the
Government has a right-of-way, fee simple title, or other interest,
must be sent to the Executive Director, who will process the request in
accordance with Army policy. Requests must include a complete
description of the type of license, permit, or easement desired and a
map showing the location of the project.
Sec. 553.9 Assignment of gravesites or niches.
(a) All eligible persons will be assigned gravesites or niches
without discrimination as to race, color, sex, religion, age, or
national origin and without preference to military grade or rank.
(b) The Army National Military Cemeteries will enforce a one-
gravesite-per-family policy. Once the initial interment or inurnment is
made in a gravesite or niche, each additional interment or inurnment of
eligible persons must be made in the same gravesite or niche, except as
noted in paragraph (f) of this section. This includes multiple
primarily eligible persons if they are married to each other.
(c) In accordance with 38 U.S.C. 2410A(a)(2) the Secretary of the
Army may waive the prohibition in paragraph (b) of this section as the
Secretary of the Army deems appropriate.
(d) A gravesite reservation will be honored if it meets the
following requirements, unless cancelled by the Executive Director:
(1) The gravesite was properly reserved by law before January 1,
1962; and
(2) An eligible person was interred in the reserved gravesite prior
to January 1, 2017.
(e) The Executive Director may cancel a gravesite reservation:
(1) Upon determination that a derivatively eligible spouse has
remarried;
(2) Upon determination that the reservee's remains have been buried
elsewhere or otherwise disposed of;
(3) Upon determination that the reservee desires to or will be
interred in the same gravesite with the predeceased, and doing so is
feasible; or
(4) Upon determination that the reservee would be 120 years of age
and there is no record of correspondence with the reservee within the
last two decades.
(f) In cases of reservations meeting the requirements of 38 U.S.C.
2410A note, where more than one gravesite was reserved (on the basis of
the veteran's eligibility at the time the reservation was made) and no
interment has yet
[[Page 57646]]
been made in any of the sites, the one-gravesite-per-family policy will
be enforced, unless waived by the Executive Director. Gravesite
reservations will be honored only if the decedents meet the eligibility
criteria for interment in Arlington National Cemetery that are in
effect at the time of need, and the reserved gravesite is available.
(g) Where a primarily eligible person has been or will be interred
as part of a group burial or has been or will be memorialized in a
memorial area at Arlington National Cemetery, the Executive Director
will assign a gravesite or niche for interment or inurnment of a
derivatively eligible person.
(h) Gravesites or niches shall not be reserved or assigned prior to
the time of need.
(i) The selection of gravesites and niches is the responsibility of
the Executive Director. The selection of specific gravesites or niches
by the family or other representatives of the deceased is prohibited.
(j) The Executive Director shall set aside 1,000 gravesites at
Arlington National Cemetery to be used for the interment of Medal of
Honor recipients who meet the criteria of Sec. 553.12 or are granted
an exception to policy pursuant to Sec. 553.22. Derivatively eligible
persons, as defined in Sec. 553.1, of the Medal of Honor recipient may
be interred in the same grave as the recipient. These gravesites shall
not be located in a singular defined area within the cemetery. These
gravesites shall be disbursed throughout the cemetery at the direction
of the Executive Director.
Sec. 553.10 Proof of eligibility.
(a) The personal representative or primary next of kin is
responsible for providing appropriate documentation to verify the
decedent's eligibility for interment or inurnment.
(b) The personal representative or primary next of kin must certify
in writing that the decedent is not prohibited from interment,
inurnment, or memorialization under Sec. 553.20 because he or she has
committed or been convicted of a Federal or State capital crime or is a
convicted Tier III sex offender as defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411.
(c) For service members who die on active duty after July 27, 1953,
a statement of honorable service is required from the first General
Courts-Martial Convening Authority in the service member's chain of
command. If the certificate of honorable service cannot be granted, the
service member is ineligible for interment, inurnment, and
memorialization pursuant to Sec. 553.19(h).
(d) When applicable, the following documents are required:
(1) Death certificate;
(2) Proof of eligibility as required by paragraphs (e) through (g)
of this section;
(3) Any additional documentation to establish the decedent's
eligibility (e.g., marriage certificate, birth certificate, waivers,
statements that the decedent had no children);
(4) Burial agreement;
(5) Notarized statement that the remains are unavailable for the
reasons set forth in Sec. 553.16; and
(6) A certificate of cremation or notarized statement attesting to
the authenticity of the cremated human remains and that 100% of the
cremated remains received from the crematorium are present. The
Executive Director may, however, allow a portion of the cremated
remains to be removed by the crematorium for the sole purpose of
producing commemorative items.
(7) Any other document as required by the Executive Director.
(e) The following documents may be used to establish the
eligibility of a primarily eligible person:
(1) DD Form 214, Certificate of Release or Discharge from Active
Duty;
(2) WD AGO 53 or 53-55, Enlisted Record and Report of Separation
Honorable Discharge;
(3) WD AGO 53-98, Military Record and Report of Separation
Certificate of Service;
(4) NAVPERS-553, Notice of Separation from U.S. Naval Service;
(5) NAVMC 70-PD, Honorable Discharge, U.S. Marine Corps;
(6) DD Form 1300, Report of Casualty (required in the case of death
of an active duty service member); or
(7) NGB Form 22, National Guard Report of Separation and Record of
Service (must indicate a minimum of 20 years total service for pay).
(f) In addition to the documents otherwise required by this
section, a request for interment or inurnment of a subsequently
remarried spouse must be accompanied by:
(1) A notarized statement from the new spouse of the subsequently
remarried spouse agreeing to the interment or inurnment and
relinquishing any claim for interment or inurnment in the same
gravesite or niche.
(2) Notarized statement(s) from all of the children, age 18 years
and over, from the prior marriage agreeing to the interment or
inurnment of their parents in the same gravesite or niche.
(g) In addition to the documents otherwise required by this
section, a request for interment or inurnment of a permanently
dependent child must be accompanied by:
(1) A notarized statement as to the marital status and degree of
dependency of the decedent from an individual with direct knowledge;
and
(2) A physician's statement regarding the nature and duration of
the physical or mental disability; and
(3) A statement from someone with direct knowledge demonstrating
the following factors:
(i) The deceased lived most of his or her adult life with one or
both parents, who are otherwise eligible for interment;
(ii) The decedent's children and siblings age 18 years and over, or
other family members, other than the eligible parent, waive any
derivative claim to be interred at Arlington National Cemetery, in
accordance with the Arlington National Cemetery Burial Agreement.
(h) Veterans or primary next of kin of deceased veterans may obtain
copies of their military records by writing to the National Personnel
Records Center, Attention: Military Personnel Records, 1 Archives
Drive, St. Louis, Missouri 63132-1002 or using their website. All
others may request a record by completing and submitting Standard Form
180.
(i) The burden of proving eligibility lies with the party who
requests the burial. The Executive Director will determine whether the
submitted evidence is sufficient to support a finding of eligibility.
Sec. 553.11 General rules governing eligibility for interment,
inurnment, and memorialization at Arlington National Cemetery.
(a) Only those persons who are not formally interred or inurned as
of the date of publication of this rule and who meet the criteria of
Sec. 553.12 or are granted an exception to policy pursuant to Sec.
553.22 may be interred in Arlington National Cemetery. Only those
persons who are not formally interred or inurned as of the date of
publication of this rule and who meet the criteria of Sec. 553.13 or
are granted an exception to policy pursuant to Sec. 553.22 may be
inurned in Arlington National Cemetery. Only those persons who meet the
criteria of Sec. 553.14 may be interred in the Arlington National
Cemetery Unmarked Area. Only those persons who meet the criteria of
Sec. 553.15 may be interred in an Arlington National Cemetery group
burial. Only those persons who meet the criteria of Sec. 553.16 may be
memorialized in Arlington National Cemetery.
(b) Derivative eligibility for interment or inurnment may be
established only
[[Page 57647]]
through a decedent's connection to a primarily eligible person and not
to another derivatively eligible person.
(c) No veteran is eligible for interment, inurnment, or
memorialization in Arlington National Cemetery unless the veteran's
last period of active duty ended with an honorable discharge. A general
discharge under honorable conditions is not sufficient for interment,
inurnment or memorialization in Arlington National Cemetery.
(d) For purposes of determining whether a service member has
received an honorable discharge, final determinations regarding
discharges made in accordance with procedures established by chapter 79
of title 10, United States Code, will be considered authoritative.
(e) The Secretary of the Army has the authority to act on requests
for exceptions to the provisions of the interment, inurnment, and
memorialization eligibility policies contained in this subpart. The
Secretary of the Army may delegate this authority in writing to the
Executive Director on such terms deemed appropriate.
(f) Individuals who do not qualify as a primarily eligible person
or a derivatively eligible person, but who are granted an exception to
policy to be interred or inurned pursuant to Sec. 553.22 in a new
gravesite or niche, will be treated as a primarily eligible person for
purposes of this subpart.
(g) Notwithstanding any other section in this subpart,
memorialization with an individual memorial marker, interment, or
inurnment in Army National Military Cemeteries is prohibited if there
is a gravesite, niche, or individual memorial marker for the decedent
in any other Government-operated cemetery or the Government has
provided an individual grave marker, individual memorial marker or
niche cover for placement in a private cemetery.
Sec. 553.12 Eligibility for interment in Arlington National
Cemetery.
Only those who qualify as a primarily eligible person or a
derivatively eligible person are eligible for interment in Arlington
National Cemetery, unless otherwise prohibited as provided for in
Sec. Sec. 553.19 and 553.20, provided that the last period of active
duty of the service member or veteran ended with an honorable
discharge.
(a) Primarily eligible persons. The following are primarily
eligible persons for purposes of interment:
(1) Any service member who is killed in action, as defined in Sec.
553.1, while serving in the U.S. Armed Forces, if the General Courts-
Martial Convening Authority grants a certificate of honorable service.
(2) Any service member whose death results from preparations or
operations related to combat, as defined in Sec. 553.1, if the General
Courts-Martial Convening Authority grants a certificate of honorable
service and confirms the circumstances of death.
(3) Any service member or veteran who has performed armed conflict
service, as defined in Sec. 553.1, whose last period of active duty
ended with an honorable discharge or the General Courts-Martial
Convening Authority grants a certificate of honorable service, and is
awarded one of the following decorations:
(i) Medal of Honor;
(ii) Distinguished Service Cross, Navy Cross, Air Force Cross,
Coast Guard Cross;
(iii) Department of Defense Distinguished Service Medal, Army
Distinguished Service Medal, Navy Distinguished Service Medal, Air
Force Distinguished Service Medal, Coast Guard Distinguished Service
Medal;
(iv) Silver Star; or
(v) Purple Heart.
(4) Any person who served in the position of President or Vice
President of the United States.
(5) Any service member or veteran who served on active duty,
performed armed conflict service, as defined in Sec. 553.1, and served
in a position of significant governmental responsibility, as defined in
Sec. 553.1.
(6) Any former prisoner of war who, while a prisoner of war, served
honorably in the active military service and who died on or after
November 30, 1993.
(b) Derivatively eligible persons. The following individuals are
derivatively eligible persons for purposes of interment who may be
interred if space is available in the gravesite of the primarily
eligible person:
(1) The spouse of a primarily eligible person who is or will be
interred in Arlington National Cemetery. A former spouse of a primarily
eligible person is not eligible for interment in Arlington National
Cemetery under this section.
(2) The spouse of an active duty service member or an eligible
veteran, who was:
(i) Lost or buried at sea, temporarily interred overseas due to
action by the Government, or officially determined to be missing in
action;
(ii) Buried in a U.S. military cemetery maintained by the American
Battle Monuments Commission; or
(iii) Interred in Arlington National Cemetery as part of a group
burial (the derivatively eligible spouse may not be buried in the group
burial gravesite).
(3) A subsequently remarried spouse if the remarriage is terminated
by divorce, annulment or the death of the subsequently remarried
spouse's subsequent spouse.
(4) The parents of a minor child or a permanently dependent adult
child, whose remains were interred in Arlington National Cemetery based
on the eligibility of a parent at the time of the child's death, unless
eligibility of the non-service connected parent is lost through divorce
from the primarily eligible parent.
(5) A minor child or permanently dependent child of a primarily
eligible person who is or will be interred in Arlington National
Cemetery.
(6) An honorably discharged veteran who does not qualify as a
primarily eligible person, if the veteran will be buried in the same
gravesite as an already interred primarily eligible person who is a
close relative, where the interment meets the following conditions:
(i) The veteran is without minor or unmarried adult dependent
children;
(ii) The veteran will not occupy space reserved for the spouse, a
minor child, or a permanently dependent adult child;
(iii) All other close relatives of the primarily eligible person
concur with the interment of the veteran with the primarily eligible
person by signing a notarized statement;
(iv) The veteran's spouse waives any entitlement to interment in
Arlington National Cemetery, where such entitlement might be based on
the veteran's interment in Arlington National Cemetery. The Executive
Director may set aside the spouse's waiver, provided space is available
in the same gravesite, and all close relatives of the primarily
eligible person concur; and
(v) Any cost of moving, re-casketing, or re-vaulting the remains
will be paid from private funds.
Sec. 553.13 Eligibility for inurnment in Arlington National Cemetery
Columbarium.
The following persons are eligible for inurnment in the Arlington
National Cemetery Columbarium, unless otherwise prohibited as provided
for in Sec. Sec. 553.19 and 553.20, provided that the last period of
active duty of the service member or veteran ended with an honorable
discharge.
(a) Primarily eligible persons. The following are primarily
eligible persons for purposes of inurnment:
(1) Any person eligible for interment in Arlington National
Cemetery, as provided for in Sec. 553.12(a).
(2) Any veteran retired from the U.S. Armed Forces, and entitled to
receive
[[Page 57648]]
military retired pay on the date of their death.
(3) Any service member eligible to retire from the U.S. Armed
Forces, and entitled to receive military retired pay on the date of
their death.
(4) Any service member or veteran who served on active duty (other
than active duty for training) for no less than 24 months and performed
armed conflict service.
(5) Any veteran who:
(i) Received an honorable discharge from the Armed Forces prior to
October 1, 1949, and
(ii) Who was discharged for a permanent physical disability, and
(iii) Who served on active duty (other than active duty for
training), and
(iv) Who would have been eligible for military medical retirement
(as authorized under 10 U.S.C. 1201) had this statute been in effect on
the date of separation.
(6) Any service member or veteran who served on active duty (other
than active duty for training) and served in a position of significant
governmental responsibility, as defined in Sec. 553.1.
(7) Any citizen of the United States who, during any armed conflict
prior to July 27, 1953, in which the United States has been or may
hereafter be engaged, served in the armed forces of any government
allied with the United States during that armed conflict, whose last
service ended honorably, as determined by the Executive Director, by
death or otherwise, and who was a citizen of the United States at the
time of entry into that service and at the time of death.
(8) Any commissioned officer of the United States Coast and
Geodetic Survey who died during or subsequent to the service specified
in the following categories and whose last service terminated
honorably:
(i) Assignment to areas of immediate military hazard prior to
September 3, 1945; or
(ii) Served in the Philippine Islands on December 7, 1941.
(9) Any commissioned officer of the United States Public Health
Service:
(i) Who performed active service prior to July 29, 1945;
(ii) Such active service was in time of war; and
(iii) The officer was detailed for duty with the U.S. Armed Forces.
(10) Any Active Duty Designee as defined in Sec. 553.1.
(b) Derivatively eligible persons. Those connected to an individual
described in paragraph (a) of this section through a relationship
described in Sec. 553.12(b). Such individuals may be inurned if space
is available in the primarily eligible person's niche.
Sec. 553.14 Eligibility for interment of cremated remains in the
Arlington National Cemetery Unmarked Area.
(a) The cremated remains of any person eligible for interment in
Arlington National Cemetery as described in Sec. 553.12 may be
interred in the designated Arlington National Cemetery Unmarked Area.
(b) Cremated remains must be interred in a biodegradable container
or placed directly into the ground without a container. Cremated
remains are not authorized to be scattered at this site or at any
location within Arlington National Cemetery.
(c) There will be no headstone or marker for any person choosing
this method of interment. The Executive Director will maintain a
permanent register.
(d) Consistent with the one-gravesite-per-family policy, once a
person is interred in the Unmarked Area, any derivatively eligible
persons and spouses must be interred in this manner. This includes
spouses who are also primarily eligible persons. No additional
gravesite, niche, or memorial marker in a memorial area will be
authorized.
Sec. 553.15 Eligibility for group burial in Arlington National
Cemetery.
(a) The Executive Director may authorize a group burial in
Arlington National Cemetery whenever several people, at least one of
whom is an active duty service member, die during a military-related
activity and not all remains can be individually identified.
(b) Before authorizing a group burial that includes both United
States and foreign decedents, the Executive Director will notify the
Department of State and request that the Department of State notify the
appropriate foreign embassy.
Sec. 553.16 Eligibility for memorialization in an Arlington National
Cemetery memorial area.
(a) With the authority granted by 38 U.S.C. 2409, a memorial marker
may be placed in an Arlington National Cemetery memorial area to honor
the memory of service members or veterans, who are eligible for
interment under Sec. 553.12(a) and:
(1) Who are missing in action;
(2) Whose remains have not been recovered or identified;
(3) Whose remains were buried at sea, whether by the member's or
veteran's own choice or otherwise;
(4) Whose remains were donated to science; or
(5) Whose remains were cremated and the cremated remains were
scattered without interment or inurnment of any portion of those
remains.
(b) When the remains of a primarily eligible person are unavailable
for one of the reasons listed in paragraph (a) of this section, and a
derivatively eligible person who predeceased the primarily eligible
person is already interred or inurned in Arlington National Cemetery,
the primarily eligible person may be memorialized only on the existing
headstone or niche cover, or on a replacement headstone or niche cover
ordered with a new inscription. Consistent with the one-gravesite-per-
family policy, a separate marker in a memorial area is not authorized.
(c) When a memorial marker for a primarily eligible person is
already in place in a memorial area, and a derivatively eligible person
is subsequently interred or inurned in Arlington National Cemetery, an
inscription memorializing the primarily eligible person will be placed
on the new headstone or niche cover. Consistent with the one-gravesite-
per-family policy, the memorial marker will then be removed from the
memorial area.
Sec. 553.17 Arlington National Cemetery interment/inurnment
agreement.
(a) A derivatively eligible person who predeceases the primarily
eligible person may be interred or inurned in Arlington National
Cemetery only if the primarily eligible person agrees in writing to be
interred in the same gravesite or inurned in the same niche at his or
her time of need and that his or her estate shall pay for all expenses
related to disinterment or disinurnment of the predeceased person from
Arlington National Cemetery if the primarily eligible person is not
interred or inurned as agreed.
(b) If the primarily eligible person becomes ineligible for
interment or inurnment in Arlington National Cemetery or the personal
representative or primary next of kin decides that the primarily
eligible person will be interred or inurned elsewhere, the remains of
any predeceased person may be removed from Arlington National Cemetery
at no cost to the Government.
Sec. 553.18 Eligibility for burial in U.S. Soldiers' and Airmen's
Home National Cemetery.
Only the residents of the Armed Forces Retirement Home are eligible
for interment in the U.S. Soldiers' and Airmen's Home National
Cemetery. Resident eligibility criteria for the Armed Forces Retirement
Home is provided for at 24 U.S.C. 412.
[[Page 57649]]
Sec. 553.19 Ineligibility for interment, inurnment, or
memorialization in an Army National Military Cemetery.
The following persons are not eligible for interment, inurnment, or
memorialization in an Army National Military Cemetery:
(a) A father, mother, brother, sister, or in-law solely on the
basis of his or her relationship to a primarily eligible person, even
though the individual is:
(1) Dependent on the primarily eligible person for support; or
(2) A member of the primarily eligible person's household.
(b) A person whose last period of service was not characterized
with an honorable discharge (e.g., they received a separation or
discharge under general but honorable conditions, other than honorable
conditions, a bad conduct discharge, a dishonorable discharge, or a
dismissal), regardless of whether the person:
(1) Received any other veterans' benefits; or
(2) Was treated at a Department of Veterans Affairs hospital or
died in such a hospital.
(c) A person who has volunteered for service with the U.S. Armed
Forces, but has not yet entered on active duty.
(d) A former spouse whose marriage to the primarily eligible person
ended in divorce.
(e) A spouse who predeceases the primarily eligible person and is
interred or inurned in a location other than Arlington National
Cemetery, and the primarily eligible person remarries.
(f) A divorced spouse of a primarily eligible person.
(g) Otherwise derivatively eligible persons, such as a spouse or
minor child, if the primarily eligible person was not or will not be
interred or inurned at Arlington National Cemetery.
(h) A service member who dies while on active duty, if the first
General Courts-Martial Convening Authority in the service member's
chain of command determines that there is clear and convincing evidence
that the service member engaged in conduct that would have resulted in
a separation or discharge not characterized as an honorable discharge
(e.g., a separation or discharge under general but honorable
conditions, other than honorable conditions, a bad conduct discharge, a
dishonorable discharge, or a dismissal) being imposed, but for the
death of the service member.
(i) Animal remains that are unintentionally commingled with human
remains due to a natural disaster, unforeseen accident, act of war or
terrorism, violent explosion, or similar incident, and such remains
cannot be separated from the remains of an eligible person, then the
remains may be interred or inurned with the eligible person, but the
identity of the animal remains shall not be inscribed or identified on
a niche, marker, headstone, or otherwise.
Sec. 553.20 Prohibition of interment, inurnment, or memorialization
in an Army National Military Cemetery of persons who have committed
certain crimes.
(a) Prohibition. Notwithstanding Sec. Sec. 553.12 through 553.16,
553.18, and 553.22, the interment, inurnment, or memorialization in an
Army National Military Cemetery of any of the following persons is
prohibited:
(1) Any person identified in writing to the Executive Director by
the Attorney General of the United States, prior to his or her
interment, inurnment, or memorialization, as a person who has been
convicted of a Federal capital crime, as defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411, and
whose conviction is final (other than a person whose sentence was
commuted by the President).
(2) Any person identified in writing to the Executive Director by
an appropriate State official, prior to his or her interment,
inurnment, or memorialization, as a person who has been convicted of a
State capital crime, as defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411, and whose conviction
is final (other than a person whose sentence was commuted by the
Governor of the State).
(3) Any person identified in writing to the Executive Director by
the Attorney General of the United States or by an appropriate State
official, prior to his or her interment, inurnment, or memorialization,
as a person who has been convicted of murder, as defined in Sec.
553.1, and whose conviction is final (other than a person whose
sentence was commuted by the President or the Governor of a State, as
the case may be).
(4) Any person identified in writing to the Executive Director by
the Attorney General of the United States or by an appropriate State
official, prior to his or her interment, inurnment, or memorialization,
as a person who has been convicted of a Federal capital crime or a
State capital crime, as defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411, or other criminal
offense causing the person to be a Tier III sex offender for purposes
of the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act, who for such
crime is sentenced to a minimum of life imprisonment and whose
conviction is final (other than a person whose sentence was commuted by
the President or the Governor of a State, or the appropriate
commutation authority as dictated by the law in the jurisdiction where
the conviction was finalized, as the case may be).
(5) Any person found under procedures specified in Sec. 553.21 to
have committed any crime identified in Sec. 553.20(a)(1) through (4),
but who has not been convicted of such crime by reason of such person
not being available for trial due to death or flight to avoid
prosecution. Notice from officials is not required for this prohibition
to apply.
(b) Notice. The Executive Director is designated as the Secretary
of the Army's representative authorized to receive from the appropriate
Federal or State officials notification of conviction of capital crimes
referred to in this section.
(c) Confirmation of person's eligibility. (1) If notice has not
been received, but the Executive Director has reason to believe that
the person may have been convicted of a Federal capital crime or a
State capital crime, as defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411, the Executive
Director shall seek written confirmation from:
(i) The Attorney General of the United States, with respect to a
suspected Federal capital crime; or
(ii) An appropriate State official, with respect to a suspected
State capital crime.
(2) The Executive Director will defer the decision on whether to
inter, inurn, or memorialize a decedent until a written response is
received.
Sec. 553.21 Findings concerning the commission of certain crimes
where a person has not been convicted due to death or flight to avoid
prosecution.
(a) Preliminary inquiry. If the Executive Director has reason to
believe that a decedent may have committed a Federal capital crime or a
State capital crime, as defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411, but has not been
convicted of such crime by reason of such person not being available
for trial due to death or flight to avoid prosecution, the Executive
Director shall submit the issue to the General Counsel of the
Department of the Army. The General Counsel of the Department of the
Army shall initiate a preliminary inquiry seeking information from
Federal, State, or local law enforcement officials, or other sources of
potentially relevant information.
(b) Decision after preliminary inquiry. If, after conducting the
preliminary inquiry described in paragraph (a) of this section, the
General Counsel of the Department of the Army determines that credible
evidence exists suggesting the decedent may have committed a Federal
capital crime or State capital crime, as defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411,
then further
[[Page 57650]]
proceedings under this section are warranted to determine whether the
decedent committed such crime. Consequently the General Counsel of the
Department of the Army shall present the personal representative with a
written notification of such preliminary determination and a dated,
written notice of the personal representative's procedural options.
(c) Notice and procedural options. The notice of procedural options
shall indicate that, within fifteen days, the personal representative
may:
(1) Request a hearing;
(2) Withdraw the request for interment, inurnment, or
memorialization; or
(3) Do nothing, in which case the request for interment, inurnment,
or memorialization will be considered to have been withdrawn.
(d) Time computation. The fifteen-day time period begins on the
calendar day immediately following the earlier of the day the notice of
procedural options is delivered in person to the personal
representative or is sent by U.S. registered mail or, if available, by
electronic means to the personal representative. It ends at midnight on
the fifteenth day. The period includes weekends and holidays.
(e) Hearing. The purpose of the hearing is to allow the personal
representative to present additional information regarding whether the
decedent committed a Federal capital crime or a State capital crime, as
defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411. In lieu of making a personal appearance at
the hearing, the personal representative may submit relevant documents
for consideration.
(1) If a hearing is requested, the General Counsel of the
Department of the Army shall conduct the hearing.
(2) The hearing shall be conducted in an informal manner.
(3) The rules of evidence shall not apply.
(4) The personal representative and witnesses may appear, at no
expense to the Government, and subject to the discretion of the General
Counsel of the Department of the Army, they may testify. All testimony
shall be under oath and a person who possesses the legal authority to
administer oaths shall administer the oath.
(5) The General Counsel of the Department of the Army shall
consider all relevant information obtained.
(6) The hearing shall be appropriately recorded. Upon request, a
copy of the record shall be provided to the personal representative.
(f) Final determination. After considering the opinion of the
General Counsel of the Department of the Army, and any additional
information submitted by the personal representative, the Secretary of
the Army shall determine the decedent's eligibility for interment,
inurnment, or memorialization. This determination is final and not
appealable.
(1) The determination shall be based on evidence that supports or
undermines a conclusion that the decedent's actions satisfied the
elements of the crime as established by the law of the jurisdiction in
which the decedent would have been prosecuted.
(2) If an affirmative defense is offered by the decedent's personal
representative, a determination as to whether the defense was met shall
be made according to the law of the jurisdiction in which the decedent
would have been prosecuted.
(3) Mitigating evidence shall not be considered.
(4) The opinion of the local, State, or Federal prosecutor as to
whether he or she would have brought charges against the decedent had
the decedent been available is relevant but not binding and shall be
given no more weight than other facts presented.
(g) Notice of decision. The Executive Director shall provide
written notification of the Secretary's decision to the personal
representative.
Sec. 553.22 Exceptions to policies for interment, inurnment, or
memorialization at Arlington National Cemetery.
(a) As a national military cemetery, eligibility standards for
interment, inurnment, or memorialization are based on honorable
military service. Exceptions to the eligibility standards for new
graves are rarely granted. When granted, exceptions are for those
persons who have made significant contributions that directly and
substantially benefited the U.S. military. Exceptions to the interment
or inurnment eligibility policies shall be decided by the Secretary of
the Army.
(b) Requests for an exception to the interment or inurnment
eligibility policies shall be considered only after the individual's
death.
(c) Requests for an exception to the interment or inurnment
eligibility policies shall be submitted to the Executive Director and
shall include any documents required by the Executive Director.
(d) The primary next of kin is responsible for providing and
certifying the authenticity of all documents and swearing to the
accuracy of the accounting provided to support the request for
exception to the interment or inurnment eligibility policies.
(e) Disapproved requests will be reconsidered only when the
personal representative or next of kin submits new and substantive
information not previously considered by the Secretary of the Army.
Requests for reconsideration shall be submitted directly to the
Executive Director. The Executive Director will deny requests for
reconsideration not supported by new and substantive information after
review and advice from the General Counsel of the Department of the
Army. The Executive Director shall notify the personal representative
or next of kin of the decision of the reconsideration.
(f) The decision by the Secretary of the Army or the Executive
Director, as the case may be, is final and not appealable.
(g) Under no circumstances, will exceptions to policies be
considered or granted for those individuals prohibited from interment
or inurnment by virtue of Sec. 553.20 or Sec. 553.21.
Sec. 553.23 Placement of cremated remains at Army National Military
Cemeteries.
All cremated remains shall be interred or inurned. The scattering
of cremated remains and the burial of symbolic containers are
prohibited in Army National Military Cemeteries.
Sec. 553.24 Subsequently recovered remains.
Subsequently recovered identified remains of a decedent shall be
reunited in one gravesite or urn, or as part of a group burial, in
either an Army National Military Cemetery or other cemetery.
Subsequently recovered identified remains may also be interred in the
Arlington National Cemetery Tomb of Remembrance. Unidentified remains
(which may or may not be commingled) may also be interred in the
Arlington National Cemetery Tomb of Remembrance.
Sec. 553.25 Disinterment and disinurnment of remains.
(a) Interments and inurnments in Army National Military Cemeteries
are considered permanent.
(b) Requests for the permanent (i.e., the remains will not be
immediately returned to the same gravesite or niche) disinterment or
disinurnment of individually interred or inurned remains are considered
requests for exceptions to this policy, and must be addressed to the
Executive Director for decision. The request must include:
(1) A full statement of the reasons for the disinterment or
disinurnment of the remains from the personal representative or primary
next of kin who directed the original interment or inurnment if still
living, or if not, the
[[Page 57651]]
current personal representative or primary next of kin;
(2) A notarized statement from each living close relative of the
decedent that he or she does not object to the proposed disinterment or
disinurnment;
(3) A notarized statement by a person who has personal knowledge of
the decedent's relatives stating that the persons giving statements
comprise all of the decedent's living close relatives; and
(4) An appropriate funding source for the disinterment or
disinurnment, as disinterments and disinurnments of individually
interred or inurned remains must be accomplished without expense to the
Government, unless done in accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section.
(c) Disinterments performed at the direction of the Secretary of
Defense for the purpose of the identification of remains shall be done
in compliance with, and as directed by, Department of Defense
regulation and policy.
(d) The Executive Director shall carry out disinterments and
disinurnments directed by a court of competent jurisdiction upon
presentation of a lawful, original court order and after consulting
with the General Counsel of the Department of the Army.
(e) Disinterment or disinurnment is not permitted for the sole
purpose of splitting remains or keeping a portion of the remains in a
location other than Arlington National Cemetery.
(f) Disinterment of previously designated group remains for the
sole purpose of individually segregating the group remains is not
permitted unless the requirements of paragraph (d) of this section are
met.
Sec. 553.26 Design of Government-furnished headstones, niche covers,
and memorial markers.
(a) Headstones and memorial markers shall be white marble in an
upright slab design. Flat-type granite markers may be used, at the
Executive Director's discretion, when the terrain or other obstruction
precludes use of an upright marble headstone or memorial marker.
(b) Niche covers shall be white marble.
(c) The Executive Director shall approve the design of headstones
and memorial markers erected for group burials, consistent with the
policies of the Secretary of Veterans Affairs.
Sec. 553.27 Inscriptions on Government-furnished headstones, niche
covers, and memorial markers.
(a) Inscriptions on Government-furnished headstones, niche covers,
and memorial markers will be made according to the policies and
specifications of the Secretary of the Army, consistent with the
policies of the Secretary of Veterans Affairs.
(b) No grades, titles, or ranks other than military grades granted
pursuant to title 10, United States Code, will be engraved on
Government-furnished headstones, niche covers, and memorial markers.
Honorary grades, titles, or ranks granted by States, governors, and
others shall not be inscribed on headstones, niche covers, or memorial
markers.
(c) Memorial markers must include the words ``In Memory of''
preceding the inscription.
(d) The words ``In Memory of'' shall not precede the inscription of
a decedent whose remains are interred or inurned.
Sec. 553.28 Private headstones and markers.
(a) Construction and installation of private headstones and
markers, in lieu of Government-furnished headstones, are prohibited in
Army National Military Cemeteries unless approved prior to December 1,
2017. Repair or replacement of private headstones and markers that were
approved prior to December 1, 2017, and are in sections of Army
National Military Cemeteries in which private memorials and markers
were authorized as of January 1, 1947, must be of simple design,
dignified, and appropriate for a military cemetery as determined by the
Executive Director.
(b) The design and inscription of a private headstone or marker
must be approved by the Executive Director prior to its construction
and placement. All private headstones and markers will conform to the
dimensions and profiles specified by the Executive Director and will be
inscribed with the location of the gravesite.
(c) Inscription or modification to a private headstone or marker
previously placed or approved for placement is conditional upon the
primary next of kin agreeing in writing to maintain it in a manner
acceptable to the Government. Should the headstone or marker become
unserviceable at any time and the primary next of kin fail to repair or
replace it, or if the marker is not updated to reflect all persons
buried in that gravesite within 6 months of the most recent burial, the
Executive Director reserves the right to remove and dispose of the
headstone or marker and replace it with a standard, Government-
furnished headstone or marker.
(d) The construction of a headstone or marker to span two
gravesites will be permitted only in those sections in which headstones
and markers are presently spanning two gravesites and only with the
express understanding that in the event both gravesites are not
utilized for burials, the headstone or marker will be relocated to the
center of the occupied gravesite, if possible. Such relocation must be
accomplished at no expense to the Government. The Executive Director
reserves the right to remove and dispose of the headstone or marker and
to mark the gravesite with a Government-furnished headstone or marker
if the personal representative or primary next of kin fails to relocate
the headstone or marker as requested by the Executive Director.
(e) Arrangements must be made with an appropriate commercial firm
to ensure that additional inscriptions will be promptly inscribed
following each succeeding interment in the gravesite. Foot markers must
be authorized by the Executive Director and may only be authorized when
there is no available space for an inscription on the front or rear of
a private headstone.
(f) Except as may be authorized for marking group burials, ledger
monuments of freestanding cross design, narrow shafts, and mausoleums
are prohibited.
Sec. 553.29 Permission to construct or amend private headstones and
markers.
(a) Headstone firms must receive permission from the Executive
Director to construct a private headstone or marker or to add an
inscription to an existing headstone or marker in an Army National
Military Cemetery.
(b) Requests for permission must be submitted to the Executive
Director and must include:
(1) Written consent from the personal representative or primary
next of kin;
(2) Contact information for both the personal representative or
primary next of kin and the headstone firm; and
(3) A scale drawing (no less than 1:12) showing all dimensions, or
a reproduction showing detailed specifications of design and proposed
construction material, finishing, carving, lettering, exact inscription
to appear on the headstone or marker, and a trademark or copyright
designation.
(c) The Army does not endorse headstone firms, but grants
permission for the construction of headstones or markers in individual
cases.
(d) When using sandblast equipment to add an inscription to an
existing headstone or marker, headstone firms shall restore the
surrounding grounds in a timely manner as determined by the Executive
Director to the condition of the grounds before work began and at no
expense to the Government.
[[Page 57652]]
Sec. 553.30 Inscriptions on private headstones and markers.
An appropriate inscription for the decedent will be placed on the
headstone or marker in accordance with the dimensions of the stone and
arranged in such a manner as to enhance the appearance of the stone.
Additional inscriptions may be inscribed following each succeeding
interment in the gravesite. All inscriptions will be in accordance with
policies established by the Executive Director.
Sec. 553.31 Memorial and commemorative monuments (other than private
headstones or markers).
The placement of memorials or commemorative monuments in Arlington
National Cemetery will be carried out in accordance with 38 U.S.C.
2409(b).
Sec. 553.32 Conduct of memorial services and ceremonies.
(a) The Executive Director shall ensure the sanctity of public and
private memorial and ceremonial events.
(b) All memorial services and ceremonies within Army National
Military Cemeteries, other than official ceremonies, shall be purely
memorial in purpose and may be dedicated only to:
(1) The memory of all those interred, inurned, or memorialized in
Army National Military Cemeteries;
(2) The memory of all those who died in the military service of the
United States while serving during a particular conflict or while
serving in a particular military unit or units; or
(3) The memory of the individual or individuals to be interred,
inurned, or memorialized at the particular site at which the service or
ceremony is held.
(c) Memorial services and ceremonies at Army National Military
Cemeteries will not include partisan political activities.
(d) Private memorial services may be closed to the media and public
as determined by the decedent's primary next of kin.
(e) Public memorial services and public wreath-laying ceremonies
shall be open to all members of the public to observe.
Sec. 553.33 Visitors rules for Army National Military Cemeteries.
(a) Visiting hours. Visiting hours shall be established by the
Executive Director and posted in conspicuous places. No visitor is
permitted to enter or remain in an Army National Military Cemetery
outside the established visiting hours.
(b) Destruction or removal of property. No person shall destroy,
damage, mutilate, alter, or remove any monument, gravestone, niche
cover, structure, tree, shrub, plant, or other property located within
an Army National Military Cemetery, without the prior approval of the
Executive Director.
(c) Conduct within Army National Military Cemeteries. Army National
Military Cemeteries are national shrines to the honored dead of the
U.S. Armed Forces, and certain acts and activities, which may be
appropriate elsewhere, are not appropriate in Army National Military
Cemeteries. All visitors, including persons attending or taking part in
memorial services and ceremonies, shall observe proper standards of
decorum and decency while in an Army National Military Cemetery.
Specifically, no person shall:
(1) Conduct any memorial service or ceremony within an Army
National Military Cemetery without the prior approval of the Executive
Director.
(2) Engage in demonstrations prohibited by 38 U.S.C. 2413.
(3) Engage in any orations, speeches, or similar conduct to
assembled groups of people, unless such actions are part of a memorial
service or ceremony authorized by the Executive Director.
(4) Display any placards, banners, flags, or similar devices within
an Army National Military Cemetery, unless first approved by the
Executive Director for use in an authorized memorial service or
ceremony. This rule does not apply to clothing worn by visitors.
(5) Distribute any handbill, pamphlet, leaflet, or other written or
printed matter within an Army National Military Cemetery, except a
program approved by the Executive Director to be provided to attendees
of an authorized memorial service or ceremony.
(6) Bring a dog, cat, or other animal (other than a service animal
or military working dog) within an Army National Military Cemetery.
This prohibition does not apply to persons living in quarters located
on the grounds of the Army National Military Cemeteries.
(7) Use the cemetery grounds for recreational activities (e.g.,
physical exercise, running, jogging, sports, or picnics).
(8) Ride a bicycle or similar vehicle or conveyance in an Army
National Military Cemetery, except with a proper pass issued by the
Executive Director to visit a gravesite or niche. An individual
visiting a relative's gravesite or niche may be issued a temporary pass
by the Executive Director to proceed directly to and from the gravesite
or niche on a bicycle or similar vehicle or conveyance.
(9) Operate a musical instrument, a loudspeaker, or an audio device
without a headset within an Army National Military Cemetery.
(10) Drive any motor vehicle within an Army National Military
Cemetery in excess of the posted speed limit.
(11) Park any motor vehicle in any area of an Army National
Military Cemetery designated as a no-parking area.
(12) Leave any vehicle in the Arlington National Cemetery Visitors'
Center parking area or Soldiers' and Airmen's Home National Cemetery
visitors' parking area more than thirty minutes outside of established
visiting hours or anywhere else in an Army National Military Cemetery
outside of established visiting hours.
(13) Consume or serve alcoholic beverages without prior written
permission from the Executive Director.
(14) Possess firearms without prior written permission from the
Executive Director. This prohibition does not apply to law enforcement
and military personnel in the performance of their official duties. In
accordance with locally established policy, military and law
enforcement personnel may be required to obtain advance permission from
the Executive Director prior to possessing firearms on the property of
an Army National Military Cemetery.
(15) Deposit or throw litter or trash on the grounds of an Army
National Military Cemetery.
(16) Engage in any disrespectful or disorderly conduct within an
Army National Military Cemetery.
(d) Vehicular traffic. All visitors, including persons attending or
taking part in memorial services and ceremonies, will observe the
following rules concerning motor vehicle traffic within Arlington
National Cemetery:
(1) Visitors arriving by car and not entitled to a vehicle pass
pursuant to paragraph (d)(2) of this section are required to park their
vehicles in the Visitors' Center parking area or at a location outside
of the cemetery.
(2) Only the following categories of vehicles may be permitted
access to Arlington National Cemetery roadways and issued a permanent
or temporary pass from the Executive Director:
(i) Official Government vehicles being used on official Government
business.
(ii) Vehicles carrying persons on official Cemetery business.
(iii) Vehicles forming part of an authorized funeral procession and
authorized to be part of that procession.
(iv) Vehicles carrying persons visiting the Arlington National
Cemetery gravesites, niches, or memorial areas of relatives or loved
ones interred, inurned, or memorialized within Arlington National
Cemetery.
[[Page 57653]]
(v) Arlington National Cemetery and National Park Service
maintenance vehicles.
(vi) Vehicles of contractors who are authorized to perform work
within Arlington National Cemetery.
(vii) Concessionaire tour buses authorized by the Executive
Director to operate in Arlington National Cemetery.
(viii) Vehicles of employees of the Army National Military
Cemeteries as authorized by the Executive Director.
Sec. 553.34 Soliciting and vending.
The display or distribution of commercial advertising to or
solicitation of business from the public is strictly prohibited within
an Army National Military Cemetery, except as authorized by the
Executive Director.
Sec. 553.35 Media.
All officials and staff of the media are subject to the Visitors
Rules enumerated in Sec. 553.33 and shall comply with the Department
of the Army's media policy.
Subpart B--Army Post Cemeteries
Sec. 553.36 Definitions.
As used in this subpart, the following terms have these meanings:
Active duty. Full-time duty in the active military service of the
United States.
(1) This includes:
(i) Active Reserve component duty performed pursuant to title 10,
United States Code.
(ii) Service as a cadet or midshipman currently on the rolls at the
U.S. Military, U.S. Naval, U.S. Air Force, or U.S. Coast Guard
Academies.
(iii) Active duty for operational support.
(2) This does not include:
(i) Full-time National Guard duty performed under title 32, United
States Code.
(ii) Active duty for training, initial entry training, annual
training duty, or inactive-duty training for members of the Reserve
components.
Active duty for operational support (formerly active duty for
special work). A tour of active duty for Reserve personnel authorized
from military or Reserve personnel appropriations for work on Active
component or Reserve component programs. The purpose of active duty for
operational support is to provide the necessary skilled manpower assets
to support existing or emerging requirements and may include training.
Active duty for training. A category of active duty used to provide
structured individual and/or unit training, including on-the-job
training, or educational courses to Reserve component members. Included
in the active duty for training category are annual training, initial
active duty for training, or any other training duty.
Annual training. The minimum period of active duty for training
that Reserve members must perform each year to satisfy the training
requirements associated with their Reserve component assignment.
Armed Forces. The U.S. Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, Air
Force, Space Force and their Reserve components.
Army Post Cemeteries. Cemeteries operated by the Department of the
Army on active Army installations, on Army reserve complexes, and on
former Army installations or inactive posts whose purpose is to inter
or inurn eligible members of the Armed Forces, Veterans, and their
eligible family members. Army National Military Cemeteries are not
included in post cemeteries. The West Point Cemetery is considered an
Army Post Cemetery, but has separate eligibility standards due to its
unique stature. In addition to the Army Post Cemeteries, there are four
Native American cemeteries on Fort Sill and five World War II Enemy
Prisoner of War cemeteries on four Army installations. Finally, there
is the U.S. Army Disciplinary Barracks Cemetery at Fort Leavenworth
used for interring the unclaimed remains of those who die while
incarcerated by the United States Military. Unlike the other Army
cemeteries which honor the Nation's veterans, this cemetery has unique
eligibility standards due to the characterization of service of those
criminally incarcerated.
Cemetery Responsible Official. An appointed official who serves as
the primary point of contact and responsible official for all matters
relating to the operation maintenance and administration of an Army
cemetery. The appointee must be a U.S. Federal Government employee, DA
civilian, or military member and appointed on orders by the appropriate
garrison commander or comparable official.
Child, minor child, permanently dependent child, unmarried adult
child--(1) Child. (i) Natural child of a primarily eligible person,
born in wedlock;
(ii) Natural child of a female primarily eligible person, born out
of wedlock;
(iii) Natural child of a male primarily eligible person, who was
born out of wedlock and:
(A) Has been acknowledged in writing signed by the male primarily
eligible person;
(B) Has been judicially determined to be the male primarily
eligible person's child;
(C) Whom the male primarily eligible person has been judicially
ordered to support; or
(D) Has been otherwise proven, by evidence satisfactory to the
Executive Director, to be the child of the male primarily eligible
person;
(iv) Adopted child of a primarily eligible person; or
(v) Stepchild who was part of the primarily eligible person's
household at the time of death of the individual who is to be interred
or inurned.
(2) Minor child. A child of the primarily eligible person who:
(i) Is unmarried;
(ii) Has no dependents; and
(iii) Is under the age of twenty-one years, or is under the age of
twenty-three years and is taking a full-time course of instruction at
an educational institution that the U.S. Department of Education
acknowledges as an accredited educational institution.
(3) Permanently dependent child. A child of the primarily eligible
person who:
(i) Is unmarried;
(ii) Has no dependents; and
(iii) Is permanently and fully dependent on one or both of the
child's parents because of a physical or mental disability incurred
before attaining the age of twenty-one years or before the age of
twenty-three years while taking a full-time course of instruction at an
educational institution that the U.S. Department of Education
acknowledges as an accredited educational institution.
(4) Unmarried adult child. A child of the primarily eligible person
who:
(i) Is unmarried;
(ii) Has no dependents; and
(iii) Has attained the age of twenty-one years.
Close relative. The spouse, parents, adult brothers and sisters,
adult natural children, adult stepchildren, and adult adopted children
of a decedent.
Derivatively eligible person. Any person who is entitled to
interment or inurnment solely based on his or her relationship to a
primarily eligible person, as set forth in Sec. Sec. 553.43 through
553.45.
Disinterment. The removal of interred human remains from a
particular gravesite.
Disinurnment. The removal of remains from a particular niche.
Executive Director. The person statutorily charged with exercising
authority, direction, and control over all aspects of Army National
Military Cemeteries, and the person charged by the Secretary of the
Army to serve as the
[[Page 57654]]
functional proponent for policies and procedures pertaining to the
administration, operation, and maintenance of all military cemeteries
under the jurisdiction of the Army.
Former prisoner of war. A person who is eligible for or has been
awarded the Prisoner of War Medal.
Former spouse. See spouse.
Government. The U.S. Government and its agencies and
instrumentalities.
Group burial. (1) Interment in one gravesite of one or more service
members on active duty killed in the same incident or location where:
(i) The remains cannot be individually identified; or
(ii) The person authorized to direct disposition of subsequently
identified remains has authorized their interment with the other
service members.
(2) Group remains may contain incidental remains of civilians and
foreign nationals.
Inactive-duty training. (1) Duty prescribed for members of the
Reserve components by the Secretary concerned under 37 U.S.C. 206 or
any other provision of law.
(2) Special additional duties authorized for members of the Reserve
components by an authority designated by the Secretary concerned and
performed by them on a voluntary basis in connection with the
prescribed training or maintenance activities of the units to which
they are assigned.
(3) In the case of a member of the Army National Guard or Air
National Guard of any State, duty (other than full-time duty) under 32
U.S.C. 316, 502, 503, 504, or 505 or the prior corresponding provisions
of law.
(4) This term does not include:
(i) Work or study performed in connection with correspondence
courses;
(ii) Attendance at an educational institution in an inactive
status; or
(iii) Duty performed as a temporary member of the Coast Guard
Reserve.
Interment. The ground burial of casketed or cremated human remains.
Inurnment. The placement of cremated human remains in a niche.
Media. Individuals and agencies that print, broadcast, or gather
and transmit news, and their reporters, photographers, and employees.
Minor child. See child.
Murder. Pursuant to any Federal or State law, the causing the death
of another human being when:
(1) It is committed purposely or knowingly; or
(2) It is committed recklessly under circumstances manifesting
extreme indifference to the value of human life. Such recklessness and
indifference are presumed if the actor is engaged or is an accomplice
in the commission of, or an attempt to commit, or flight after
committing or attempting to commit robbery, rape or deviate sexual
intercourse by force or threat of force, arson, burglary, kidnapping,
or felonious escape.
Niche. An above ground space constructed specifically for the
placement of cremated human remains.
Parent. A natural parent, a stepparent, a parent by adoption, or a
person who for a period of not less than one year stood in loco
parentis, or was granted legal custody by a court decree or statutory
provision.
Permanently dependent child. See child.
Person authorized to direct disposition. The person primarily
entitled to direct disposition of human remains and who elects to
exercise that entitlement. Determination of such entitlement shall be
made in accordance with applicable law and regulations.
Personal representative. A person who has legal authority to act on
behalf of another through applicable law, order, and regulation.
Primarily eligible person. Any person who is entitled to interment
or inurnment based on his or her service as specified in Sec. Sec.
553.43 through 553.45.
Primary next of kin. (1) In the absence of a valid written document
from the decedent identifying the primary next of kin, the order of
precedence for designating a decedent's primary next of kin is as
follows:
(i) Spouse, even if a minor;
(ii) Children, age 18 years and over (if under 18 years of age,
their surviving parent or legal guardian shall exercise the rights of
the minor);
(iii) Parents;
(iv) Siblings, to include half-blood and those acquired through
adoption, age 18 years and over;
(v) Grandparents; and
(vi) Other next of kin, in order of relationship to the decedent as
determined by the laws of the decedent's state of domicile.
(2) Absent a court order or written document from the deceased, the
precedence of next of kin with equal relationships to the decedent is
governed by seniority (age), older having higher priority than younger.
Equal relationship situations include those involving divorced parents
of the decedent, children of the decedent, and siblings of the
decedent.
Private headstones or markers. A headstone or individual memorial
marker provided at private expense, in lieu of a headstone or
individual memorial marker furnished by the Government.
Private memorial service. A memorial service or ceremony conducted
at the decedent's gravesite, memorial headstone, or niche.
Public memorial service. A ceremony conducted by members of the
public at a historic site in an Army cemetery.
Reserve component. See definition in 10 U.S.C. 101.
Spouse, former spouse, subsequently remarried spouse--(1) Spouse. A
person who is legally married to another person.
(2) Former spouse. A person who was legally married to another
person at one time but was not legally married to that person at the
time of one of their deaths.
(3) Subsequently remarried spouse. A derivatively eligible spouse
who was married to the primarily eligible person at the time of the
primarily eligible person's death and who subsequently remarried
another person.
Subsequently recovered remains. Additional remains belonging to the
decedent that are recovered or identified after the decedent's
interment or inurnment.
Subsequently remarried spouse. See spouse.
Subversive activity. Actions constituting subversive activity are
those defined in applicable provisions of Federal law.
Unmarried adult child. See child.
Veteran. A person who served in the U.S. Armed Forces and who was
discharged or released under honorable conditions (general discharge
under honorable conditions is not sufficient to meet this definition).
Sec. 553.37 Purpose.
This subpart specifies the eligibility for interment and inurnment
in the Post Cemeteries and the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks Cemetery at
Fort Leavenworth.
Sec. 553.38 Statutory authorities.
The statutory authorities for this subpart are Public Law 93-43 87
Stat. 75, 10 U.S.C. 985, 1481, 1482, 3013, and 38 U.S.C. 2411.
Sec. 553.39 Scope and applicability.
(a) Scope. The development, maintenance, administration, and
operation of the Army Post Cemeteries are governed by this subpart,
Army Regulation 290-5, and Department of the Army Pamphlet 290-5. The
development, maintenance, administration, and operation of Army
National Military Cemeteries are not covered by this subpart.
(b) Applicability. This subpart is applicable to all persons
seeking
[[Page 57655]]
interment or inurnment in Army Post Cemeteries.
Sec. 553.40 Assignment of gravesites or niches.
(a) All eligible persons will be assigned gravesites or niches
without discrimination as to race, color, sex, religion, age, or
national origin and without preference to military grade or rank.
(b) Army cemeteries will enforce a one-gravesite-per-family policy.
Once the initial interment or inurnment is made in a gravesite or
niche, each additional interment or inurnment of eligible persons must
be made in the same gravesite or niche, except as noted in paragraph
(e) of this section. This includes multiple primarily eligible persons
if they are married to each other.
(c) A gravesite reservation will be honored if the gravesite was
properly reserved before May 1, 1975.
(d) The commander or Cemetery Responsible Official responsible for
an Army cemetery may cancel a gravesite reservation:
(1) Upon determination that a derivatively eligible spouse has
remarried;
(2) Upon determination that the remains of the person having the
gravesite reservation have been buried elsewhere or otherwise disposed
of;
(3) Upon determination that the person having the gravesite
reservation desires to or will be interred in the same gravesite with
the predeceased, and doing so is feasible; or
(4) Upon determination that the person having the gravesite
reservation would be 120 years of age and there is no record of
correspondence with the person having the gravesite reservation within
the last two decades.
(e) In cases of reservations where more than one gravesite was
reserved (on the basis of the veteran's eligibility at the time the
reservation was made), the gravesite reservations will be honored only
if the decedents continue to meet the eligibility criteria for
interment in Army Post Cemeteries that are in effect at the time of
need, and the reserved gravesite is available.
(f) Gravesites or niches shall not be reserved or assigned prior to
the time of need.
(g) The selection of gravesites and niches is the responsibility of
the Cemetery Responsible Official. The selection of specific gravesites
or niches by the family or other representatives of the deceased is
prohibited.
Sec. 553.41 Proof of eligibility.
(a) The personal representative or primary next of kin is
responsible for providing appropriate documentation to verify the
decedent's eligibility for interment or inurnment.
(b) The personal representative or primary next of kin must certify
in writing that the decedent is not prohibited from interment,
inurnment, or memorialization under Sec. 553.47 because he or she has
not committed or been convicted of a Federal or State capital crime or
is a convicted Tier III sex offender as defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411.
(c) For service members who die on active duty, a statement of
honorable service is required from the first General Court-Martial
Convening Authority in the service member's chain of command. If the
certificate of honorable service cannot be granted, the service member
is ineligible for interment, inurnment, and memorialization pursuant to
Sec. 553.46(i).
(d) When applicable, the following documents are required:
(1) Death certificate;
(2) Proof of eligibility as required by paragraphs (e) through (g)
of this section;
(3) Any additional documentation to establish the decedent's
eligibility (e.g., marriage certificate, birth certificate, waivers,
statements that the decedent had no children);
(4) Burial agreement;
(5) Notarized statement that the remains are unavailable for the
reasons set forth in Sec. 553.16;
(6) A certificate of cremation or notarized statement attesting to
the authenticity of the cremated human remains and that 100% of the
cremated remains received from the crematorium are present. The
Cemetery Responsible Official may, however, allow a portion of the
cremated remains to be removed by the crematorium for the sole purpose
of producing commemorative items.
(e) The following documents may be used to establish the
eligibility of a primarily eligible person:
(1) DD Form 214, Certificate of Release or Discharge from Active
Duty;
(2) WD AGO 53 or 53-55, Enlisted Record and Report of Separation
Honorable Discharge;
(3) WD AGO 53-98, Military Record and Report of Separation
Certificate of Service;
(4) NAVPERS-553, Notice of Separation from U.S. Naval Service;
(5) NAVMC 70-PD, Honorable Discharge, U.S. Marine Corps;
(6) DD Form 1300, Report of Casualty (required in the case of death
of an active duty service member); or
(7) NGB Form 22, National Guard Report of Separation and Record of
Service (must indicate a minimum of 20 years total service for pay).
(f) In addition to the documents otherwise required by this
section, a request for interment or inurnment of a subsequently
remarried spouse must be accompanied by:
(1) A notarized statement from the new spouse of the subsequently
remarried spouse agreeing to the interment or inurnment and
relinquishing any claim for interment or inurnment in the same
gravesite or niche.
(2) Notarized statement(s) from all of the children, age 18 years
and over, from the prior marriage agreeing to the interment or
inurnment of their parents in the same gravesite or niche.
(g) In addition to the documents otherwise required by this
section, a request for interment or inurnment of a permanently
dependent child must be accompanied by:
(1) A notarized statement as to the marital status and degree of
dependency of the decedent from an individual with direct knowledge;
and
(2) A physician's statement regarding the nature and duration of
the physical or mental disability; and
(3) A statement from someone with direct knowledge demonstrating
the following factors:
(i) The deceased lived most of his or her adult life with one or
both parents who is otherwise eligible for interment; and
(ii) The decedent's children and siblings age 18 years and over, or
other family members, other than the eligible parent, waive any
derivative claim to be interred at the Army Post Cemetery in question.
(h) Veterans or primary next of kin of deceased veterans may obtain
copies of their military records by writing to the National Personnel
Records Center, Attention: Military Personnel Records, 1 Archives
Drive, St. Louis, Missouri 63138-1002 or using their website. All
others may request a record by completing and submitting Standard Form
180.
(i) The burden of proving eligibility lies with the party who
requests the burial. Commanders of these cemeteries or their Cemetery
Responsible Officials will determine whether the submitted evidence is
sufficient to support a finding of eligibility.
Sec. 553.42 General rules governing eligibility for interment or
inurnment in Army Post Cemeteries.
(a) Only those persons who meet the criteria of Sec. 553.43 of
this subpart or are granted an exception to policy pursuant to Sec.
553.49 of this subpart may be interred in the Army Post Cemeteries.
Only those persons who meet the
[[Page 57656]]
criteria of Sec. 553.44 of this subpart or are granted an exception to
policy pursuant to Sec. 553.49 of this subpart may be interred or
inurned in the West Point Post Cemetery. Only those persons who meet
the criteria of Sec. 553.45 may be interred in the U.S. Disciplinary
Barracks Cemetery.
(b) Derivative eligibility for interment or inurnment may be
established only through a decedent's connection to a primarily
eligible person and not to another derivatively eligible person.
(c) No veteran is eligible for interment, inurnment, or
memorialization in an Army Post Cemetery (except for the U.S.
Disciplinary Barracks Cemetery) unless the veteran's last period of
active duty ended with an honorable discharge. A general discharge
under honorable conditions is not sufficient for interment, inurnment,
or memorialization in an Army Post Cemetery.
(d) For purposes of determining whether a service member has
received an honorable discharge, final determinations regarding
discharges made in accordance with procedures established by chapter 79
of title 10, United States Code, will be considered authoritative.
(e) The Executive Director has the authority to act on requests for
exceptions to the provisions of the interment, inurnment, and
memorialization eligibility policies contained in this subpart. The
Executive Director may delegate this authority in writing on such terms
deemed appropriate.
(f) Individuals who do not qualify as a primarily eligible person
or a derivatively eligible person, but who are granted an exception to
policy to be interred or inurned pursuant to Sec. 553.49 of this
subpart in a new gravesite or niche, will be treated as a primarily
eligible person for purposes of this subpart.
(g) Notwithstanding any other section in this subpart,
memorialization with an individual memorial marker, interment, or
inurnment in an Army Post Cemetery is prohibited if there is a
gravesite, niche, or individual memorial marker for the decedent in any
other Government-operated cemetery or the Government has provided an
individual grave marker, individual memorial marker or niche cover for
placement in a private cemetery.
Sec. 553.43 Eligibility for interment and inurnment in Army Post
Cemeteries.
Only those who qualify as a primarily eligible person or a
derivatively eligible person are eligible for interment and inurnment
in Army Post Cemeteries (except for the West Point Post Cemetery),
unless otherwise prohibited as provided for in Sec. Sec. 553.46
through 553.48 of this subpart, provided that the last period of active
duty of the service member or veteran ended with an honorable
discharge.
(a) Primarily eligible persons. The following are primarily
eligible persons for purposes of interment:
(1) Any service member who dies on active duty in the U.S. Armed
Forces (except those service members serving on active duty for
training only), if the General Courts-Martial Convening Authority
grants a certificate of honorable service.
(2) Any veteran retired from a Reserve component who served a
period of active duty (other than for training), is carried on the
official retired list, and is entitled to receive military retired pay.
(3) Any veteran retired from active military service and entitled
to receive military retired pay.
(b) Derivatively eligible persons. The following individuals are
derivatively eligible persons for purposes of interment who may be
interred if space is available in the gravesite of the primarily
eligible person:
(1) The spouse of a primarily eligible person who is or will be
interred in an Army Post Cemetery in the same grave as the spouse. A
former spouse of a primarily eligible person is not eligible for
interment in an Army Post Cemetery under this section.
(2) A subsequently remarried spouse if the remarriage is terminated
by divorce, annulment or the death of the subsequently remarried
spouse's subsequent spouse.
(3) The spouse of an active duty service member or an eligible
veteran, who was:
(i) Lost or buried at sea, temporarily interred overseas due to
action by the Government, or officially determined to be missing in
action;
(ii) Buried in a U.S. military cemetery maintained by the American
Battle Monuments Commission; or
(iii) Interred in Arlington National Cemetery as part of a group
burial (the derivatively eligible spouse may not be buried in the group
burial gravesite) and the active duty service member does not have a
separate individual interment or inurnment location.
(4) A minor child or permanently dependent adult child of a
primarily eligible person who is or will be interred in an Army Post
Cemetery.
(5) The parents of a minor child or a permanently dependent adult
child, whose remains were interred in an Army Post Cemetery based on
the eligibility of a parent at the time of the child's death, unless
eligibility of the non-service connected parent is lost through divorce
from the primarily eligible parent.
Sec. 553.44 Eligibility for interment and inurnment in the West
Point Post Cemetery.
The following persons are eligible for interment and inurnment in
the West Point Post Cemetery, unless otherwise prohibited as provided
for in Sec. Sec. 553.46 through 553.48, provided that the last period
of active duty of the service member or veteran ended with an honorable
discharge or characterization of honorable service for active duty
deaths.
(a) Primarily eligible persons for interment or inurnment. The
following are primarily eligible persons for purposes of interment or
inurnment:
(1) A graduate of the United States Military Academy, provided the
individual was a U.S. citizen, both as a cadet and at the time of
death, and whose military service fulfilled one of the following
criteria.
(i) The graduate's service in the Armed Forces of the United
States, if any, terminated honorably.
(ii) The graduate's service in wartime in the Armed Forces of a
nation that was allied with the United States during the war, if the
service terminated honorably.
(2) Members of the Armed Forces of the United States, including
United States Military Academy cadets, who were on active duty at the
United States Military Academy at time of death and their derivatively
eligible person dependents who may have died while the service member
was on active duty at the United States Military Academy.
(3) Members of the Armed Forces of the United States whose last
permanent active duty station was the United States Military Academy at
time of retirement.
(4) Members of the Armed Forces of the United States whose last
permanent active duty station was the United States Military Academy
prior to retirement for physical disability, in accordance with 10
U.S.C. 1201. However, personnel (not otherwise eligible) who are
transferred to the Medical Holding Detachment, Keller Army Hospital,
for medical boarding or medical disability retirement are not,
regardless of length of time, eligible for interment or inurnment in
the West Point Post Cemetery or Columbarium.
(5) Officers appointed as Professors, United States Military
Academy.
(b) Derivatively eligible persons. Derivatively eligible persons
are those connected to an individual described in paragraph (a) of this
section through a
[[Page 57657]]
relationship described in Sec. 553.43(b). Such individuals may be
interred or inurned if space is available in the primarily eligible
person's gravesite or niche.
(c) Temporary restrictions. The Secretary of the Army may, in
special circumstances, impose temporary restrictions on the eligibility
standards for the West Point Post Cemetery. If temporary restrictions
are imposed, they will be reviewed annually to ensure the special
circumstances remain valid for retaining the temporary restrictions.
Sec. 553.45 Eligibility for interment in U.S. Disciplinary Barracks
Cemetery at Fort Leavenworth.
(a) Military prisoners who die while in Military custody and are
not claimed by the person authorized to direct disposition of remains
or other persons legally authorized to dispose of remains are permitted
to be interred in the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks Cemetery. The
Executive Director will make all decisions for interment in the U.S.
Disciplinary Barracks Cemetery.
(b) Other persons approved by the Executive Director.
Sec. 553.46 Ineligibility for interment, inurnment, or
memorialization in an Army Post Cemetery.
The following persons are not eligible for interment, inurnment, or
memorialization in an Army Post Cemetery:
(a) A father, mother, brother, sister, or in-law solely because of
his or her relationship to a primarily eligible person, even though the
individual is:
(1) Dependent on the primarily eligible person for support; or
(2) A member of the primarily eligible person's household.
(b) Except for the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks Cemetery in Sec.
553.45, a person whose last period of service was not characterized as
an honorable discharge (e.g., a separation or discharge under general
but honorable conditions, other than honorable conditions, a bad
conduct discharge, a dishonorable discharge, or a dismissal),
regardless of whether the person:
(1) Received any other veterans' benefits; or
(2) Was treated at a Department of Veterans Affairs hospital or
died in such a hospital.
(c) A person who has volunteered for service with the U.S. Armed
Forces, but has not yet entered on active duty.
(d) A former spouse whose marriage to the primarily eligible person
ended in divorce.
(e) A spouse who predeceases the primarily eligible person and is
interred or inurned in a location other than an Army Cemetery and the
primarily eligible person remarries.
(f) A divorced spouse of a primarily eligible person, or the
service-connected parent when the divorced spouse has a child interred
or inurned in an Army cemetery under the child's derivative
eligibility.
(g) Otherwise derivatively eligible persons, such as a spouse or
minor child, if the primarily eligible person was not or will not be
interred or inurned at an Army Cemetery.
(h) A person convicted in a Federal court or by a court-martial of
any offense involving subversive activity or an offense described in 18
U.S.C. 1751 (except for military prisoners at the U.S. Disciplinary
Barracks Cemetery).
(i) A service member who dies while on active duty, if the first
General Courts-Martial Convening Authority in the service member's
chain of command determines that there is clear and convincing evidence
that the service member engaged in conduct that would have resulted in
a separation or discharge not characterized as an honorable discharge
(e.g., a separation or discharge under general but honorable
conditions, other than honorable conditions, a bad conduct discharge, a
dishonorable discharge, or a dismissal) being imposed, but for the
death of the service member.
(j) If animal remains are unintentionally commingled with human
remains due to a natural disaster, unforeseen accident, act of war or
terrorism, violent explosion, or similar incident, and such remains
cannot be separated from the remains of an eligible person, then the
remains may be interred or inurned with the eligible person, but the
identity of the animal remains shall not be inscribed or identified on
a niche, marker, headstone, or otherwise.
Sec. 553.47 Prohibition of interment, inurnment, or memorialization
in an Army Post Cemetery of persons who have committed certain crimes.
(a) Prohibition. Notwithstanding Sec. Sec. 553.43 through 553.45,
and pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 985 and 38 U.S.C. 2411, the interment,
inurnment, or memorialization in an Army cemetery of any of the
following persons is prohibited:
(1) Any person identified in writing to the Executive Director by
the Attorney General of the United States, prior to his or her
interment, inurnment, or memorialization, as a person who has been
convicted of a Federal capital crime and whose conviction is final
(other than a person whose sentence was commuted by the President).
(2) Any person identified in writing to the Executive Director by
an appropriate State official, prior to his or her interment,
inurnment, or memorialization, as a person who has been convicted of a
State capital crime and whose conviction is final (other than a person
whose sentence was commuted by the Governor of the State).
(3) Any person identified in writing to the Executive Director by
the Attorney General of the United States or by an appropriate State
official, prior to his or her interment, inurnment, or memorialization,
as a person who has been convicted of murder, as defined in as defined
in 38 U.S.C. 2411, and whose conviction is final (other than a person
whose sentence was commuted by the President or the Governor of a
State, as the case may be).
(4) Any person identified in writing to the Executive Director by
the Attorney General of the United States, or by an appropriate State
official, prior to his or her interment, inurnment, or memorialization,
as a person who has been convicted of a Federal or State capital crime,
as defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411, or other crime causing the person to be a
Tier III sex offender for purposes of the Sex Offender Registration and
Notification Act, who for such crime is sentenced to a minimum of life
imprisonment and whose conviction is final (other than a person whose
sentence was commuted by the President or the Governor of a State, or
the appropriate commutation authority as dictated by the law in the
jurisdiction where the conviction was finalized, as the case may be).
(5) Any person found under procedures specified in Sec. 553.48 to
have committed any crime identified in Sec. 553.47(a)(1) through (4),
but who has not been convicted of such crime by reason of such person
not being available for trial due to death or flight to avoid
prosecution. Notice from Federal or State officials is not required for
this prohibition to apply.
(b) Notice. The Executive Director is designated as the Secretary
of the Army's representative authorized to receive from the appropriate
Federal or State officials notification of conviction of capital crimes
referred to in this section.
(c) Confirmation of person's eligibility. (1) If notice has not
been received, but the Executive Director has reason to believe that
the person may have been convicted of a Federal capital crime or a
State capital crime, the Executive Director shall seek written
confirmation from:
[[Page 57658]]
(i) The Attorney General of the United States, with respect to a
suspected Federal capital crime; or
(ii) An appropriate State official, with respect to a suspected
State capital crime.
(2) The Executive Director will defer the decision on whether to
inter, inurn, or memorialize a decedent until a written response is
received.
(d) Due diligence. Army Commanders who have cemeteries for which
they are responsible will make every effort to determine if the
decedent is ineligible in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 985 and 38 U.S.C.
2411. For those determined ineligible due to the provisions of these
sections, commanders will submit their determinations in writing to the
Executive Director for validation.
Sec. 553.48 Findings concerning the commission of certain crimes
where a person has not been convicted due to death or flight to avoid
prosecution.
(a) Preliminary inquiry. If the Executive Director has reason to
believe that a decedent may have committed a Federal capital crime or a
State capital crime, as defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411, but has not been
convicted of such crime by reason of such person not being available
for trial due to death or flight to avoid prosecution, the Executive
Director shall submit the issue to the General Counsel of the
Department of the Army. The General Counsel of the Department of the
Army shall initiate a preliminary inquiry seeking information from
Federal, State, or local law enforcement officials, or other sources of
potentially relevant information.
(b) Decision after preliminary inquiry. If, after conducting the
preliminary inquiry described in paragraph (a) of this section, the
General Counsel of the Department of the Army determines that credible
evidence exists suggesting the decedent may have committed a Federal
capital crime or State capital crime, as defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411,
then further proceedings under this section are warranted to determine
whether the decedent committed such crime. Consequently, the General
Counsel of the Department of the Army shall present the personal
representative with a written notification of such preliminary
determination and a dated, written notice of the personal
representative's procedural options.
(c) Notice and procedural options. The notice of procedural options
shall indicate that, within fifteen days, the personal representative
may:
(1) Request a hearing;
(2) Withdraw the request for interment, inurnment, or
memorialization; or
(3) Do nothing, in which case the request for interment, inurnment,
or memorialization will be considered to have been withdrawn.
(d) Time computation. The fifteen-day time period begins on the
calendar day immediately following the earlier of the day the notice of
procedural options is delivered in person to the personal
representative or is sent by U.S. registered mail or, if available, by
electronic means to the personal representative. It ends at midnight on
the fifteenth day. The period includes weekends and holidays.
(e) Hearing. The purpose of the hearing is to allow the personal
representative to present additional information regarding whether the
decedent committed a Federal capital crime or a State capital crime, as
defined in 38 U.S.C. 2411. In lieu of making a personal appearance at
the hearing, the personal representative may submit relevant documents
for consideration.
(1) If a hearing is requested, the General Counsel of the
Department of the Army shall conduct the hearing.
(2) The hearing shall be conducted in an informal manner.
(3) The rules of evidence shall not apply.
(4) The personal representative and witnesses may appear, at no
expense to the Government, and subject to the discretion of the General
Counsel of the Department of the Army, they may testify. All testimony
shall be under oath and a person who possesses the legal authority to
administer oaths shall administer the oath.
(5) The General Counsel of the Department of the Army shall
consider all relevant information obtained.
(6) The hearing shall be appropriately recorded. Upon request, a
copy of the record shall be provided to the personal representative.
(f) Final determination. After considering the opinion of the
General Counsel of the Department of the Army, and any additional
information submitted by the personal representative, the Secretary of
the Army shall determine the decedent's eligibility for interment,
inurnment, or memorialization. This determination is final and not
appealable.
(1) The determination shall be based on evidence that supports or
undermines a conclusion that the decedent's actions satisfied the
elements of the crime as established by the law of the jurisdiction in
which the decedent would have been prosecuted.
(2) If an affirmative defense is offered by the decedent's personal
representative, a determination as to whether the defense was met shall
be made according to the law of the jurisdiction in which the decedent
would have been prosecuted.
(3) Mitigating evidence shall not be considered.
(4) The opinion of the local, State, or Federal prosecutor as to
whether he or she would have brought charges against the decedent had
the decedent been available is relevant but not binding and shall be
given no more weight than other facts presented.
(g) Notice of decision. The Executive Director shall provide
written notification of the Secretary's decision to the personal
representative.
Sec. 553.49 Exceptions to policies for interment or inurnment at
Army Post Cemeteries.
(a) Requests for exceptions to policy for interment or inurnment at
Army post cemeteries, to include the West Point Post Cemetery, will be
made to the Executive Director.
(b) Eligibility standards for interment and inurnment are based on
honorable military service, except at the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks
Cemetery. Exceptions to the eligibility standards are rarely granted.
When granted, exceptions are for those persons who have made
significant contributions that directly and substantially benefited the
U.S. military.
(c) Requests for an exception to the interment or inurnment
eligibility policies shall be considered only after the individual's
death.
(d) Procedures for submitting requests for exceptions to policy for
interment and inurnment will be established by the Executive Director.
(e) The decision by the Executive Director is final and not
appealable.
Sec. 553.50 Disinterment and disinurnment of remains.
(a) Interments and inurnments in Army post cemeteries are
considered permanent.
(b) Requests for the permanent (i.e., the remains will not be
immediately returned to the same gravesite or niche) disinterment or
disinurnment of individually interred or inurned remains are considered
requests for exceptions to this policy, and must be addressed to the
Executive Director for decision. The request must include:
(1) A full statement of the reasons for the disinterment or
disinurnment of the remains from the personal representative or primary
next of kin who directed the original interment or inurnment if still
living, or if not, the current personal representative or primary next
of kin;
[[Page 57659]]
(2) A notarized statement from each living close relative of the
decedent that he or she does not object to the proposed disinterment or
disinurnment;
(3) A notarized statement by a person who has personal knowledge of
the decedent's relatives stating that the persons giving statements
comprise all of the decedent's living close relatives; and
(4) An appropriate funding source for the disinterment or
disinurnment, as disinterments and disinurnments of individually
interred or inurned remains must be accomplished without expense to the
Government, unless done in accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section.
(c) Disinterments performed at the direction of the Secretary of
Defense for the purpose of the identification of remains shall be done
in compliance with, and as directed by, Department of Defense
regulation and policy.
(d) The Executive Director shall carry out disinterments and
disinurnments directed by a court of competent jurisdiction upon
presentation of a lawful, original court order and after consulting
with the General Counsel of the Department of the Army.
(e) Disinterment or disinurnment is not permitted for the sole
purpose of splitting remains or keeping a portion of the remains in a
location other than in the cemetery where the disinterment or
disinurnment occurred.
(f) Disinterment of previously designated group remains for the
sole purpose of individually segregating the group remains is not
permitted unless the requirements of paragraph (c) of this section are
met.
Sec. 553.51 Private headstones and markers.
Construction and installation of private headstones and markers, in
lieu of Government-furnished headstones and markers, are prohibited in
Army post cemeteries unless approved by the Executive Director prior to
October 1, 2020. Repair or replacement of private headstones and
markers that were approved prior to October 1, 2020, must be consistent
with the requirements of Sec. Sec. 553.28(b) through (f), 553.29, and
553.30, and the repair or replacement must be approved in advance by
the Executive Director.
Brenda S. Bowen,
Army Federal Register Liaison Officer.
[FR Doc. 2020-17801 Filed 9-11-20; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 5061-AP-P