Reviewers should be able to move from audit to section to claim in three clicks or fewer, then branch outward into the supporting evidence graph.
See linked section and source confidence records.
The opening section preserves lane separation instead of collapsing obligations, outlays, cumulative military lines, and domestic program examples into one number.
Sources: S-038, S-039, S-040, S-073
See linked section and source confidence records.
Qualified status categories, waiting-period rules, appropriations, obligations, outlays, and transfer values are treated as distinct analytical objects.
Sources: S-002, S-003, S-004, S-005, S-006
See linked section and source confidence records.
Section 3 preserves separate accounting states while carrying the unresolved beneficiary-capture share as an open question.
Sources: S-001, S-038, S-039, S-040, S-042, S-043
See linked section and source confidence records.
Section 4 exists to show stage differences and beneficiary chains without adding its examples back into the running totals.
Sources: S-043, S-044, S-045, S-046, S-049
See linked section and source confidence records.
Appropriations, drawdowns, disbursements, and delivered-value estimates sit at different stages and remain analytically separate.
Sources: S-044, S-046, S-047, S-048
See linked section and source confidence records.
Section 5 excludes allied-funded sales and already-counted assistance while preserving drawdown value versus replacement-cost separation.
Sources: S-043, S-050, S-051, S-052, S-053, S-054, S-055, S-056, S-057, S-058, S-059
See linked section and source confidence records.
Refugee and entrant assistance stays in one canonical domestic section so it is not double-counted against foreign-assistance accounts.
Sources: S-060, S-062, S-070
See linked section and source confidence records.
The public record identifies the ORR lane but does not yet publish a defensible entrant-versus-provider split.
Sources: S-060, S-061, S-063, S-071
See linked section and source confidence records.
Section 7 preserves the measurable lane while carrying the missing federal-only share as an explicit open question.
Sources: S-003, S-064, S-065, S-078, S-079
See linked section and source confidence records.
Section 8 documents the eligibility framework and refuses unsupported benefit attribution by population share.
Sources: S-003, S-074
See linked section and source confidence records.
The current edition relies on SSA-published noncitizen recipient and payment inputs while preserving the point-in-time limitation.
Sources: S-072, S-073, S-075
See linked section and source confidence records.
Section 10 is strongest on program mechanics, not on a missing published eligible-noncitizen outlay total.
Sources: S-067, S-068, S-077
See linked section and source confidence records.
Section 11 treats missing education spending ledgers as a real transparency limit rather than something to impute.
Sources: S-069
See linked section and source confidence records.
Section 12 is a routing and reconciliation lens that guards against double counting once federal money passes through state systems.
Sources: S-062, S-065
See linked section and source confidence records.
Section 13 names programs where the record does not support a defensible citizenship breakout and refuses to fabricate missing values.
Sources: S-076
See linked section and source confidence records.
Section 14 is locked to a blueprint that preserves incompatible bases instead of flattening them into a false grand total.
Sources: S-038, S-055, S-058, S-064, S-073
See linked section and source confidence records.
Section 15 preserves missing-record constraints as governance rules for what the audit may claim.
Sources: S-038, S-072, S-078
See linked section and source confidence records.
Section 16 does not create a new theory of the numbers; it restates bounded findings from the locked sections.
Sources: S-064, S-073, S-074