Title 2 › Chapter CHAPTER 5— - LIBRARY OF CONGRESS › § 185
Creates an independent Office of Inspector General inside the Library of Congress. The office must do and oversee audits and investigations about the Library, but not matters that involve violence or personal property, and it cannot audit or investigate the United States Capitol Police. The office must lead efforts to make Library operations more efficient and cost‑effective. It must keep the Librarian of Congress and Congress informed about problems and weaknesses. The Librarian appoints the Inspector General based only on integrity and skill in fields like accounting, auditing, law, management, or investigations. The Inspector General reports to the Librarian but the Librarian may not stop the Inspector General from starting or finishing audits or investigations, issuing subpoenas, or issuing reports. The Librarian may remove or transfer the Inspector General, but must give written reasons at least 30 days before to four Congressional committees (House: Committee on House Administration and Committee on Appropriations; Senate: Committee on Rules and Administration and Committee on Appropriations). The Inspector General’s job is paid above GS‑15 and must pay at least the average of other above GS‑15 Library employees, with pay changes matching that average. The Inspector General may not get cash awards or bonuses. The Inspector General can hire staff and must have a counsel who reports directly to the office. Certain special agents may make arrests, get and execute warrants, and carry firearms while on duty if certified as U.S. citizens, trained, and not barred from possessing firearms (including under 18 U.S.C. 922(g)(9)). The Inspector General must set and enforce firearms and use‑of‑force training rules that follow Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency and Justice Department guidance, certify agents, report to Congress before the first grant of law enforcement authority and semiannually, and take part in outside reviews. The Librarian must include the Inspector General’s budget request unchanged. All functions, staff, and funds of the Library’s Office of Investigations move to the new Office of Inspector General. The person serving as Inspector General on August 2, 2005 continues in that role. The rules take effect on August 2, 2005.
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The Congress — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
2 U.S.C. § 185
Title 2 — The Congress
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73