Title 34 › Subtitle Subtitle IV— - Criminal Records and Information › Chapter CHAPTER 403— - CRIMINAL JUSTICE IDENTIFICATION, INFORMATION, AND COMMUNICATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - CRIME IDENTIFICATION TECHNOLOGY › § 40301
If Congress provides the money, the Office of Justice Programs, using help from the Bureau of Justice Statistics, will give each State a grant to build or modernize computer and ID systems used by police, courts, and other justice agencies. The grants help States upgrade criminal records and fingerprint systems, improve identification, make national, State, and local systems work together for criminal justice and gun background checks, identify people convicted of serious crimes, sex offenders, and domestic violence offenders, and collect data for research and statistics. To get a grant, a State must promise it can send needed records to the national instant criminal background check system (NICS) and must have or begin a statewide plan for sharing information. That plan must be made after consulting officials and must cover what “integration” means, what IT resources exist, coordination rules, the needs of all branches of State government (including advice from the State’s top court), priorities, and how the State will link these grants with other federal programs. The federal share usually cannot exceed 90% of project costs unless the State meets an implementation plan under section 40917 or the Attorney General lowers that limit. Congress authorized $250,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2018 through 2022. Up to 3% of each year’s money can pay Justice Department admin costs, up to 5% can pay technical help and studies by the Bureau of Justice Statistics, the funds must be spread fairly across the country, and the Attorney General may also award grants to Indian tribes.
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Citation
34 U.S.C. § 40301
Title 34 — Navy
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73