Title 34NavyRelease 119-73

§12222 Use of funds

Title 34 › Subtitle Subtitle I— - Comprehensive Acts › Chapter CHAPTER 121— - VIOLENT CRIME CONTROL AND LAW ENFORCEMENT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - CRIME PREVENTION › Part Part F— - Community-Based Justice Grants for Prosecutors › § 12222

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

Attorney General grants must be used to fight youth violence and protect victims. They pay for programs where prosecutors, schools, police, probation officers, youth and social workers, and community members work together to find and speed the prosecution of violent young offenders. Grants must back prosecutors who focus on the individual offender with tailored punishments that get tougher if the youth keeps offending. They also fund prevention programs that link justice, schools, and social services, support child-abuse work in rural States, and let States, local governments, or Indian tribes create or expand witness and victim protection.

Full Legal Text

Title 34, §12222

Navy — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

Grants made by the Attorney General under this section shall be used—
(1)to fund programs that require the cooperation and coordination of prosecutors, school officials, police, probation officers, youth and social service professionals, and community members in the effort to reduce the incidence of, and increase the successful identification and speed of prosecution of, young violent offenders;
(2)to fund programs in which prosecutors focus on the offender, not simply the specific offense, and impose individualized sanctions, designed to deter that offender from further antisocial conduct, and impose increasingly serious sanctions on a young offender who continues to commit offenses;
(3)to fund programs that coordinate criminal justice resources with educational, social service, and community resources to develop and deliver violence prevention programs, including mediation and other conflict resolution methods, treatment, counseling, educational, and recreational programs that create alternatives to criminal activity;
(4)in rural States (as defined in section 10351(b) of this title), to fund cooperative efforts between State and local prosecutors, victim advocacy and assistance groups, social and community service providers, and law enforcement agencies to investigate and prosecute child abuse cases, treat youthful victims of child abuse, and work in cooperation with the community to develop education and prevention strategies directed toward the issues with which such entities are concerned; and
(5)by a State, unit of local government, or Indian tribe to create and expand witness and victim protection programs to prevent threats, intimidation, and retaliation against victims of, and witnesses to, violent crimes.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Editorial Notes

Codification Section was formerly classified to section 13862 of Title 42, The Public Health and Welfare, prior to editorial reclassification and renumbering as this section.

Amendments

2008—Par. (5). Pub. L. 110–177 added par. (5).

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

34 U.S.C. § 12222

Title 34Navy

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73