This legislation, known as the "Evan Anzoo Memorial Act," requires the Comptroller General of the United States to produce a comprehensive report on the impacts of a United States Agency for International Development (USAID) stop work order , the discontinuation of its services, and its complete shuttering. The report must provide an estimate of the number of deaths in 2025 and anticipated future deaths over five years, directly attributable to the lack of access to services previously provided by USAID. This includes critical health interventions and other aid. Furthermore, the report specifically mandates a determination of whether several named individuals , such as Evan Anzoo, Pe Kau Lau, and Jibia Tusifu, died as a direct consequence of losing access to USAID-provided treatments like HIV/AIDS medication, oxygen supply, and malaria treatments. The Comptroller General must also list any other known individuals determined to have died due to these USAID actions. A final report is due to congressional committees and must be made publicly available within one year, with an interim update provided within 180 days of the Act's enactment.
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Timeline
Introduced in House
Referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
Introduced in House
Referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
International Affairs
Evan Anzoo Memorial Act
USA119th CongressHR-7271| House
| Updated: 1/27/2026
This legislation, known as the "Evan Anzoo Memorial Act," requires the Comptroller General of the United States to produce a comprehensive report on the impacts of a United States Agency for International Development (USAID) stop work order , the discontinuation of its services, and its complete shuttering. The report must provide an estimate of the number of deaths in 2025 and anticipated future deaths over five years, directly attributable to the lack of access to services previously provided by USAID. This includes critical health interventions and other aid. Furthermore, the report specifically mandates a determination of whether several named individuals , such as Evan Anzoo, Pe Kau Lau, and Jibia Tusifu, died as a direct consequence of losing access to USAID-provided treatments like HIV/AIDS medication, oxygen supply, and malaria treatments. The Comptroller General must also list any other known individuals determined to have died due to these USAID actions. A final report is due to congressional committees and must be made publicly available within one year, with an interim update provided within 180 days of the Act's enactment.