Title 2 › Chapter CHAPTER 5— - LIBRARY OF CONGRESS › § 142l
From and after October 1, 1996, the Disbursing Officer of the Library of Congress may pay out money that was set aside for the Office of Compliance. The Library must also give financial management help to that Office when the Librarian of Congress and the Executive Director of the Office of Compliance agree. The Library can figure and pay basic pay for the Office of Compliance staff under section 5504 of title 5. Any payment papers signed by Library certifying officers must include a written certification from an Office of Compliance officer who is authorized by the Office’s Executive Director. Office of Compliance certifying officers must confirm the facts, the legality of the payment, and the math. They must repay the government for illegal or incorrect payments caused by false or wrong certificates. The Comptroller General can excuse a certifying officer if the officer relied on official records and could not have found the true facts with reasonable care, or if the payment was made in good faith, was not clearly barred by law, and the United States received value. The Comptroller General must also excuse overpayments to common carriers covered by section 3726 of title 31 when the overpayment happened only because prepayment checks did not verify rates, classifications, or land grant deductions. The Disbursing Officer is not responsible for wrong payments that result from a false certificate by an Office of Compliance certifying officer.
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The Congress — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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2 U.S.C. § 142l
Title 2 — The Congress
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73