Title 14 › Subtitle SUBTITLE II— - PERSONNEL › Chapter CHAPTER 25— - PERSONNEL; GENERAL PROVISIONS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - COVERED MISCONDUCT › § 2533
Require the Commandant of the Coast Guard to send a written report by March 1 each year to the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation and the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The report must give yearly numbers and facts about covered misconduct and any claims of retaliation tied to reporting it. It must count incidents against Coast Guard members and those by Coast Guard members, show which reports were entered into the Catch a Serial Offender system and how many matches were found, and show how many reports were substantiated. The Commandant must give a short summary of each substantiated case (what happened, if the accused had a past sexual assault conviction, and any alcohol or drugs involved) and say how each case was resolved (for example, court-martial conviction, acquittal, nonjudicial or administrative action, dismissal, or separation and the service characterization). The report must not mix together different types of offenses; each offense type must be shown separately. Starting with reports after the Coast Guard Authorization Act of 2025 is enacted, the Commandant must also include trend analysis going back to the 2012 law. Each annual report must describe policies, actions, and studies done about incidents, give a plan for the coming year to prevent and respond to them, evaluate how well prevention and response worked, analyze factors that may have caused incidents, and recommend ways to reduce those factors. For recruits at Training Center Cape May and officer candidates at Officer Candidate School, the Commandant must include similar details in a separate appendix each year. For five years beginning March 1, 2025, reports must also show how the Commandant is carrying out the November 27, 2023 “Commandant’s Directed Actions—Accountability and Transparency” memorandum, including actions taken, status, plans and timelines for anything not done, policy changes needed, measures used to judge progress, other steps being taken, any needed legislative proposals, and funding and personnel needs. Any information made public must protect victims’ privacy under federal law. The term “substantiated” means what is defined in section 1631(c) of the Ike Skelton National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011 (10 U.S.C. 1561 note).
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Coast Guard — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
14 U.S.C. § 2533
Title 14 — Coast Guard
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73