Title 34NavyRelease 119-73

§20307 Accountability

Title 34 › Subtitle Subtitle II— - Protection of Children and Other Persons › Chapter CHAPTER 203— - VICTIMS OF CHILD ABUSE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - IMPROVING INVESTIGATION AND PROSECUTION OF CHILD ABUSE CASES › § 20307

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

Grants made under this program must follow rules that keep funds safe and hold recipients accountable. An "unresolved audit finding" means a final DOJ Inspector General audit that says a grantee used funds for unauthorized or unallowable costs and the problem is not fixed within 12 months after the final report and any appeal. A "nonprofit organization" means an organization described in 26 U.S.C. 501(c)(3) and exempt under 501(a). The Inspector General will audit grantees and decide how many audits to do each year. Any grantee with an unresolved audit finding cannot get program grants for the next 2 fiscal years, and the Administrator must favor applicants that had no unresolved finding in the prior 3 fiscal years. If a barred group is accidentally paid, the Administrator must put the same amount into the Treasury’s General Fund and try to get the money back from the recipient. No program money may pay for any conference that uses more than $20,000 of Department funds without prior written approval from the Deputy Attorney General or designated officials. That approval must include a full cost estimate (food, AV, honoraria, entertainment, etc.), and the Deputy Attorney General must report approved conference spending each year to the Senate and House Judiciary Committees. By March 1 every year, the Attorney General must report to those Committees on how the regional children’s advocacy program is monitored, how funds are allocated (including steps to avoid overlap), and how well rural and urban areas are served.

Full Legal Text

Title 34, §20307

Navy — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)All grants awarded by the Administrator under this subchapter shall be subject to the following accountability provisions:
(1)(A)In this paragraph, the term “unresolved audit finding” means a finding in the final audit report of the Inspector General of the Department of Justice that the audited grantee has utilized grant funds for an unauthorized expenditure or otherwise unallowable cost that is not closed or resolved within 12 months from the date when the final audit report is issued and any appeal has been completed.
(B)The Inspector General of the Department of Justice shall conduct audits of recipients of grants under this subchapter to prevent waste, fraud, and abuse of funds by grantees. The Inspector General shall determine the appropriate number of grantees to be audited each year.
(C)A recipient of grant funds under this subchapter that is found to have an unresolved audit finding shall not be eligible to receive grant funds under this subchapter during the following 2 fiscal years.
(D)In awarding grants under this subchapter, the Administrator shall give priority to eligible entities that did not have an unresolved audit finding during the 3 fiscal years prior to submitting an application for a grant under this subchapter.
(E)If an entity is awarded grant funds under this subchapter during the 2-fiscal-year period in which the entity is barred from receiving grants under paragraph (2), the Administrator shall—
(i)deposit an amount equal to the grant funds that were improperly awarded to the grantee into the General Fund of the Treasury; and
(ii)seek to recoup the costs of the repayment to the fund from the grant recipient that was erroneously awarded grant funds.
(2)(A)For purposes of this paragraph, the term “nonprofit organization” means an organization that is described in section 501(c)(3) of title 26 and is exempt from taxation under section 501(a) of such title.
(B)The Administrator may not award a grant under any grant program described in this subchapter to a nonprofit organization that holds money in offshore accounts for the purpose of avoiding paying the tax described in section 511(a) of title 26.
(C)Each nonprofit organization that is awarded a grant under this subchapter and uses the procedures prescribed in regulations to create a rebuttable presumption of reasonableness for the compensation of its officers, directors, trustees and key employees, shall disclose to the Administrator, in the application for the grant, the process for determining such compensation, including the independent persons involved in reviewing and approving such compensation, the comparability data used, and contemporaneous substantiation of the deliberation and decision. Upon request, the Administrator shall make the information disclosed under this subparagraph available for public inspection.
(3)(A)No amounts authorized to be appropriated to the Department of Justice under this subchapter may be used by the Administrator, or by any individual or organization awarded discretionary funds through a cooperative agreement under this Act, to host or support any expenditure for conferences that uses more than $20,000 in Department funds, unless the Deputy Attorney General or such Assistant Attorney Generals, Directors, or principal deputies as the Deputy Attorney General may designate, including the Administrator, provides prior written authorization through an award process or subsequent application that the funds may be expended to host a conference.
(B)Written approval under subparagraph (A) shall include a written estimate of all costs associated with the conference, including the cost of all food and beverages, audiovisual equipment, honoraria for speakers, and any entertainment.
(C)The Deputy Attorney General shall submit an annual report to the Committee on the Judiciary of the Senate and the Committee on the Judiciary of the House of Representatives on all approved conference expenditures referenced in this paragraph.
(b)Not later than March 1 of each year, the Attorney General shall submit to the Committee on the Judiciary of the Senate and the Committee on the Judiciary of the House of Representatives a report that—
(1)summarizes the efforts of the Administrator to monitor and evaluate the regional children’s advocacy program activities under section 20303(d) of this title;
(2)describes—
(A)the method by which amounts are allocated to grantees and subgrantees under this subchapter, including to local children’s advocacy centers, State chapters, and regional children’s advocacy program centers; and
(B)steps the Attorney General has taken to minimize duplication and overlap in the awarding of amounts under this subchapter; and
(3)analyzes the extent to which both rural and urban populations are served under the regional children’s advocacy program.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Editorial Notes

References in Text

This Act, referred to in subsec. (a)(3)(A), probably means the Victims of Child Abuse Act of 1990, title II of Pub. L. 101–647, Nov. 29, 1990, 104 Stat. 4792, which is classified principally to this chapter. For complete classification of title II to the Code, see

Short Title

of 1990 Act note set out under section 10101 of this title and Tables. Codification Section was formerly classified to section 13005 of Title 42, The Public Health and Welfare, prior to editorial reclassification and renumbering as this section.

Amendments

2019—Pub. L. 115–424 designated existing provisions as subsec. (a), inserted heading, and added subsec. (b).

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

34 U.S.C. § 20307

Title 34Navy

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73