Title 34 › Subtitle Subtitle III— - Prevention of Particular Crimes › Chapter CHAPTER 303— - PRISON RAPE ELIMINATION › § 30307
The Attorney General must write and publish national rules within 1 year after getting the required report. The rules must set standards to detect, prevent, reduce, and punish prison rape. The Attorney General decides the final rules after looking at the Commission’s recommendations and other information. The rules may not force big new costs on federal, state, or local prison systems, but the Attorney General can list other improvements for prisons to consider. Within 90 days after the final rules are published, the Attorney General must send the standards to each State chief executive, each State corrections head, and local officials in charge of prisons. The rules apply to the Federal Bureau of Prisons right away. The Secretary of Homeland Security must publish similar national rules within 180 days after March 7, 2013 for immigration detention facilities, including contract and intergovernmental facilities, and must check and report on compliance in facility evaluations. The Secretary of Health and Human Services must publish similar rules within 180 days after March 7, 2013 for facilities holding unaccompanied alien children and must also check and report on compliance. For certain Justice Department grant programs that give money to States for prisons, a State’s funds are cut by 5 percent each year unless the State’s chief executive certifies full compliance with the national standards or gives an assurance to adopt them and commits at least 5 percent of the funds (or asks the Attorney General to hold back 5 percent). The law sets time limits tied to December 16, 2016 for audit and certification rules, and it explains when held-back funds must be released or redistributed. The Attorney General must post state prison audit reports online within 1 year after December 16, 2016 and update them yearly, publish an annual noncompliance list by September 30, and report to Congress within 2 years after December 16, 2016. Auditors who want Justice Department certification must give fingerprints, sign a certification agreement, and meet PREA Management Office standards; that office can suspend or decertify auditors, publish decertifications, assign certified auditors, and ask the Bureau of Prisons to provide needed audit documents.
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Reference
Citation
34 U.S.C. § 30307
Title 34 — Navy
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73