Title 34 › Subtitle Subtitle I— - Comprehensive Acts › Chapter CHAPTER 101— - JUSTICE SYSTEM IMPROVEMENT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - BUREAU OF JUSTICE ASSISTANCE GRANT PROGRAMS › Part Part A— - Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant Program › § 10159
The Attorney General must give grants to States to pay for approved law enforcement training. A “certified training program” is one that uses the approved curricula or an equivalent. The training can be run by the Attorney General’s office or by other public or private groups that the Attorney General certifies. Within 90 days after the Attorney General finishes developing and certifying the training, the grants must pay for costs to run the training, law enforcement and covered mental health staff to attend, buying certified courses, and, for small local agencies (under 50 full-time equivalent employees), overtime caused by attendance. Up to 5 percent of a grant may be used to build systems to meet reporting rules, and up to 5 percent may be used to join the FBI’s voluntary National Use-of-Force Data Collection if the agency is not already reporting. States must help build ties between officers and local mental health services. Rules limit when grant money can be used for continuing education on certain covered topics: officers who have worked at least 2 years must get the basic training first, and grant funds generally cannot pay for continuing education on those topics until 2 years after December 27, 2022 (unless other funds were used sooner). States get money based on how many officers they have. States keep a limited share and must pass the rest to local governments, with rules to spread funds widely. Local governments that get funds must report for the first year and the next two years on who was trained, topics, total officers, testing results before and after training, follow-up evaluations, barriers, and training plans. States must send those reports to the Attorney General. The Attorney General must build an online portal for data within 180 days after December 27, 2022, set reporting rules about when and what to report about interactions using de-escalation, review those rules every 2 years, and report to Congress starting 2 years after December 27, 2022. Failure to file required reports can make an entity ineligible for funds for 2 fiscal years. The National Institute of Justice must study training in at least 6 places within 2 years after the first grants, and the Comptroller General must review the program within 3 years after the first grants. Up to $40,000,000 is authorized for fiscal year 2025 and $50,000,000 for fiscal year 2026.
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Citation
34 U.S.C. § 10159
Title 34 — Navy
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73