Title 34 › Subtitle Subtitle I— - Comprehensive Acts › Chapter CHAPTER 121— - VIOLENT CRIME CONTROL AND LAW ENFORCEMENT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN › Part Part J— - Services, Education, Protection and Justice for Young Victims of Violence › § 12451
The Attorney General must work with the Secretary of Health and Human Services and the Secretary of Education to give grants that make children and youth safer from domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, stalking, and sex trafficking and to help prevent more violence. Grant money can pay for four main kinds of work: services that focus on youth victims (like counseling, advocacy, mentoring, school help, transportation, and legal help in family, housing, child welfare, campus, and protection order cases, plus community reviews, new policies, training for professionals, and culturally specific responses); school and college programs (staff training, prevention and response policies, confidential help for students, age-appropriate lessons, and ways to find and help high-risk or underserved students); programs for kids exposed to violence and support for the non‑abusing parent, plus training for after-school and childcare staff to spot and refer families; and prevention work that teaches healthy relationships, changes attitudes, trains adults who influence youth, and builds school and community prevention policies. Groups that can apply include victim service organizations, tribal or Native Hawaiian or urban Indian groups, population‑specific or community groups with a proven record helping youth victims, victim service providers partnered with such groups, and public, charter, tribal, or accredited private middle/high schools, school districts, Department of Defense schools, or colleges. School grants must include a school partner. Applicants should use referral systems, protect youth privacy while keeping safety first, and ensure staff get training on these issues and on working with underserved youth. The law funds $30,000,000 each year for fiscal years 2023–2027. At least 50% of each year’s money must go to youth victim services (the first category). At least 10% must go to grants under section 10452, which are not subject to these rules. The Attorney General must give priority to applications that coordinate with community prevention programs.
Full Legal Text
Navy — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
34 U.S.C. § 12451
Title 34 — Navy
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73