Domestic Terrorism Prevention Act of 2025
The Domestic Terrorism Prevention Act of 2025 would create dedicated offices and a formal structure across three federal agencies—Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Department of Justice (DOJ), and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)—to monitor, analyze, investigate, and prosecute domestic terrorism. It emphasizes White supremacist and neo-Nazi threats and explicitly seeks to track and report on the infiltration of law enforcement and uniformed services by such extremist groups. The bill also establishes a joint reporting requirement, a DOJ-centered Domestic Terrorism Executive Committee, enhanced training for law enforcement, and an interagency task force to examine extremist infiltration. A sunset provision would terminate these offices 10 years after enactment unless extended, and the bill includes protections for First Amendment rights and a framework for civil rights considerations. In short, the bill aims to formalize federal capacity to study and counter domestic terrorism, increase transparency through biannual public reporting, strengthen interagency coordination and community engagement, and push for targeted training and oversight to address specific threats from White supremacist and neo-Nazi groups. It also expands federal efforts to address hate crimes linked to domestic terrorism and calls for oversight on potential extremist infiltration of security institutions.