Goto Section: 10.350 | 10.410 | Table of Contents

FCC 10.400
Revised as of October 5, 2017
Goto Year:2016 | 2018
  § 10.400   Classification.

   Link to an amendment published at  81 FR 75726 , Nov. 1, 2016.

   A Participating CMS Provider is required to receive and transmit three
   classes of Alert Messages: Presidential Alert; Imminent Threat Alert;
   and Child Abduction Emergency/AMBER Alert.

   (a) Presidential Alert. A Presidential Alert is an alert issued by the
   President of the United States or the President's authorized designee.

   (b) Imminent Threat Alert. An Imminent Threat Alert is an alert that
   meets a minimum value for each of three CAP elements: Urgency,
   Severity, and Certainty.

   (1) Urgency. The CAP Urgency element must be either Immediate (i.e.,
   responsive action should be taken immediately) or Expected (i.e.,
   responsive action should be taken soon, within the next hour).

   (2) Severity. The CAP Severity element must be either Extreme (i.e., an
   extraordinary threat to life or property) or Severe (i.e., a
   significant threat to life or property).

   (3) Certainty. The CAP Certainty element must be either Observed (i.e.,
   determined to have occurred or to be ongoing) or Likely (i.e., has a
   probability of greater than 50 percent).

   (c) Child Abduction Emergency/AMBER Alert. (1) An AMBER Alert is an
   alert initiated by a local government official based on the U.S.
   Department of Justice's five criteria that should be met before an
   alert is activated:

   (i) Law enforcement confirms a child has been abducted;

   (ii) The child is 17 years or younger;

   (iii) Law enforcement believes the child is in imminent danger of
   serious bodily harm or death;

   (iv) There is enough descriptive information about the victim and the
   abduction to believe an immediate broadcast alert will help; and

   (v) The child's name and other data have been entered into the National
   Crime Information Center.

   (2) There are four types of AMBER Alerts: Family Abduction; Non-family
   Abduction; Lost, Injured or Otherwise Missing; and Endangered Runaway.

   (i) Family Abduction. A Family Abduction (FA) alert involves an
   abductor who is a family member of the abducted child such as a parent,
   aunt, grandfather, or stepfather.

   (ii) Nonfamily Abduction. A Nonfamily Abduction (NFA) alert involves an
   abductor unrelated to the abducted child, either someone unknown to the
   child and/or the child's family or an acquaintance/friend of the child
   and/or the child's family.

   (iii) Lost, Injured, or Otherwise Missing. A Lost, Injured, or
   Otherwise Missing (LIM) alert involves a case where the circumstances
   of the child's disappearance are unknown.

   (iv) Endangered Runaway. An Endangered Runaway (ERU) alert involves a
   missing child who is believed to have run away and in imminent danger.

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Goto Section: 10.350 | 10.410

Goto Year: 2016 | 2018
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