Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle C— - Navy and Marine Corps › Part PART III— - EDUCATION AND TRAINING › Chapter CHAPTER 853— - UNITED STATES NAVAL ACADEMY › § 8480
Require the Naval Academy to have a clear policy on sexual harassment and sexual violence for midshipmen and staff, written under guidance from the Secretary of Defense and ordered by the Secretary of the Navy. The policy must include awareness programs about rape, acquaintance rape, and other criminal sexual offenses; steps a midshipman should take after an incident, including who to report to, confidential-reporting options, and how to preserve evidence; rules for discipline and other penalties when allegations are proven; and required training for all midshipmen and for staff who handle complaints. Each Academy program year the Academy must be assessed by the Department of Defense to see how well the rules, training, and procedures work. For program years that start in odd-numbered calendar years, a survey must measure how many incidents were reported and not reported, and people’s views about policies, enforcement, and related issues. The Secretary of Defense may delay an assessment during a declared war or national emergency but must tell Congress within 30 days and run the assessment as soon as practical after the emergency ends. The Superintendent must send an annual report with numbers of reported and substantiated offenses, actions taken, and a plan for the next year; odd-year reports must include survey results. Reports go to the Secretary of the Navy, the Board of Visitors, and to the congressional Armed Services Committees. Allow a midshipman who is a victim of an alleged sexual assault or an offense under sections 920, 920c, or 930 (articles 120, 120c, 130 of the UCMJ) to ask to transfer to another service academy or to enroll in an ROTC program at another school. The Superintendent must tell victims about this right and move any formal request quickly through the chain of command. The receiving academy or ROTC sponsor must act on a request within 72 hours, and transfers should be approved unless there are rare, exceptional reasons to deny them. If the Superintendent denies a transfer, the midshipman can ask the Secretary of the Navy for review, who must decide within 72 hours. Records of requests and actions must be kept confidential. A transferring midshipman may keep the original appointment or be appointed to the new academy without regard to the limits in sections 7442, 8454, and 9442.
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Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Reference
Citation
10 U.S.C. § 8480
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73