Title 34 › Subtitle Subtitle II— - Protection of Children and Other Persons › Chapter CHAPTER 207— - COMBATING DOMESTIC TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS › § 20702
Creates a program that gives four big block grants to state or local governments to fight sex trafficking of children. The grants must go to places with serious child sex-trafficking problems that show law enforcement, prosecutors, and social services work together and have a multi-part plan. The plan must include building or using safe housing, rehab and counseling, special training, prevention and prosecution efforts, links with groups that help runaway or homeless youth, and police screening of people arrested for prostitution. The program also says a child victim cannot be forced to talk to police to get shelter or services. The Assistant Attorney General at the Justice Department, working with the Assistant Secretary for Children and Families at HHS, awards the grants (one grant must go to a state with under 5,000,000 people). Each grant must be between $1,500,000 and $2,000,000 for one year and can be renewed up to three more one-year periods. At least 67% of each grant must pay for residential care and related services through qualified non-governmental groups. Grants can pay for housing, 24-hour emergency responses, clothing and basic needs, case management, mental health and substance treatment, legal help, training, outreach, screening and certain treatment programs for buyers (with limits). Community-based pilot projects, especially in rural areas, can get funding to build repeatable housing and care models for teens and young people with needs like foster care history, substance use, pregnancy/parenting, or homelessness; priority goes to programs with crisis stabilization, shelter, and addiction treatment that show good results. A nonprofit that wants money must show experience with trafficking victims and a plan to keep services after the grant ends. Misuse of funds makes an awardee ineligible for grants for 2 fiscal years, and any entity found to have misused federal grant money in the prior 5 fiscal years cannot get a grant. Admin costs are capped at 3% of the money. The DOJ Inspector General must audit the four grantees for fiscal years 2016–2017. Grant recipients must match the federal money: 15% in the first year, then 25%, 40%, and 50% in each renewal year. Congress authorized $8,000,000 a year for fiscal years 2018 through 2021. The Comptroller General must report to Congress within 30 months after March 7, 2013 on how well the program helped child victims and give any recommendations.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
34 U.S.C. § 20702
Title 34 — Navy
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73