Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 53— - WALL STREET REFORM AND CONSUMER PROTECTION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - ORDERLY LIQUIDATION AUTHORITY › § 5391
The Inspector General for the Corporation must audit and investigate every liquidation the Corporation runs. The IG must collect and summarize what the Corporation did, any major transactions (like sales, transfers, mergers, purchases, or obligations), how well the Corporation’s policies and its orderly liquidation plan worked, how the private sector was used (including conflict‑of‑interest checks), and the overall performance (costs, speed, and effects on the financial system). The IG must do this within 6 months after the Corporation becomes receiver and every 6 months after that. The IG must put the results into the semiannual reports required by law and may testify to Congress if asked. The IG’s expenses are paid as receivership administrative costs, and if the receivership funds are not enough, the Corporation must cover extra costs from assessments under section 5390. These duties end 1 year after the receivership ends. The Treasury Inspector General must do similar audits of the Secretary’s actions. That IG must describe the Secretary’s actions, review approval of the Corporation’s policies and plan, and assess the terms of any purchase of the Corporation’s obligations. These reviews must start within 6 months and repeat every 6 months, be included in semiannual reports, and may be presented to Congress if requested. The Treasury IG’s duties end 1 year after the purchased obligations are fully redeemed. When a covered firm was supervised by a federal regulator or the Board, that agency’s Inspector General must write a report within 1 year reviewing the agency’s supervision. The report must evaluate how the agency did, identify actions or failures that helped cause the firm’s trouble, say what could have prevented the problem, and recommend administrative or legislative fixes. The agency or Board must go to Congress with the report if asked and must tell Congress, within 90 days of getting the report, what it did about the recommendations or why it did nothing.
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Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
12 U.S.C. § 5391
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73