Title 34 › Subtitle Subtitle I— - Comprehensive Acts › Chapter CHAPTER 101— - JUSTICE SYSTEM IMPROVEMENT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XXXIII— - ADULT AND JUVENILE COLLABORATION PROGRAM GRANTS › § 10652
The Attorney General can give grants to a national nonprofit to create and run a National Criminal Justice and Mental Health Training and Technical Assistance Center. Eligible groups must be national nonprofits with wide experience in mental health, crisis intervention, criminal justice and law enforcement, training, research, and helping people with mental illness and their families. The Center must train law enforcement on de‑escalation and working with people in crisis, offer training and help to states, tribes, local governments and service providers, teach best practices for diversion, jails, reentry, dispatch and learning sites, build suicide prevention and crisis‑intervention training, pilot a single point‑of‑entry receiving center for crises, collect data and best practices, make tools to measure outcomes, share research and policies, and provide education and support to people with mental illness and their families. Grants must follow strict accountability rules. Starting the first fiscal year after December 13, 2016, the DOJ Inspector General must audit grantees. If a grantee has an audit finding about improper use of funds that is not fixed within 1 year, that grantee cannot get another grant for the next 2 fiscal years. The Attorney General must favor applicants without unresolved audit findings in the prior 3 fiscal years. If a grant is wrongly given during a prohibited period, the Attorney General must return the amount to the Treasury and try to recover it from the grantee. Grant recipients must be 501(c)(3) tax‑exempt nonprofits and may not hold offshore accounts to avoid tax under section 511(a). Nonprofits using special pay‑reasonableness procedures must disclose how they set officer compensation. DOJ funds cannot pay for conferences costing over $20,000 without written prior approval that includes full cost estimates. The Deputy Attorney General and the Attorney General must send yearly reports and certifications to Congress about audits, exclusions, reimbursements, conference spending, and duplicate grants.
Full Legal Text
Navy — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
34 U.S.C. § 10652
Title 34 — Navy
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73