Title 34 › Subtitle Subtitle I— - Comprehensive Acts › Chapter CHAPTER 111— - JUVENILE JUSTICE AND DELINQUENCY PREVENTION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - PROGRAMS AND OFFICES › Part Part A— - Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Office › § 11117
Within 180 days after a fiscal year ends, the Administrator must send a report to the President, the Speaker of the House, and the President pro tempore of the Senate. The report must give a detailed analysis of the latest data on juveniles taken into custody, showing numbers, rates, and trends. It must separate juvenile nonoffenders, status offenders, and other offenders. For each group it must cover types of charges; race, gender, and ethnicity (as defined by the Census); ages; kinds of holding facilities (for example secure detention, correctional facilities, jails, and lockups, and juveniles treated as adults); deaths in custody and how they happened; education status (including learning or other disabilities, failing grades, grade retention, and dropouts); one month’s data on restraints and isolation in state or local secure facilities; status-offense court petitions and secure detention counts, reasons given, and average detention time; numbers released and their living arrangements; cases that started on school grounds or from school referrals (as reported by the Department of Education or a similar State agency); and how many juveniles in secure custody report being pregnant. The report must also describe how funds under this part were used, including goals, priorities, achievements, and Council recommendations; say how each State complied with section 11133 and its plan for the year; evaluate how well funded programs reduce juvenile delinquency, especially violent crime; explain the criteria for calling programs “evidence-based” or “promising” under this subchapter and subchapter V and list those programs for rural and urban areas; describe funding to Indian Tribes under this chapter or under the Tribal Law and Order Act of 2010 (Public Law 111–211; 124 Stat. 2261), including direct federal grants and funds passed through States or local governments; review OJJDP’s internal controls to see if grantees followed rules and what was done to recover misspent funds (including missing cost reports, unauthorized spending, or noncompliant subrecipients); and report recouped payments with each grantee’s name and location, the violation found, the amount sought, and the amount actually recovered.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
34 U.S.C. § 11117
Title 34 — Navy
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73