Title 5 › Part PART I— - THE AGENCIES GENERALLY › Chapter CHAPTER 4— - INSPECTORS GENERAL › § 404
Each Inspector General must lead and manage audits and investigations of the agency’s programs and operations. They must review proposed and existing laws and rules and report twice a year about how those laws affect efficiency, costs, and the prevention or detection of fraud. They must recommend and run projects that save money or stop fraud, set policies for working with other federal, state, local, and nongovernmental groups to improve efficiency or catch and prosecute fraud, and keep the agency head and Congress fully informed about fraud, serious problems, and needed fixes, and then report on progress. When doing audits, Inspectors General must follow audit standards set by the Comptroller General. They must have rules for when to hire nonfederal auditors and make sure any outside auditors meet those standards. Only federal audit bodies (like the Government Accountability Office or other federal OIGs) may review whether an OIG’s audit quality controls meet those standards. Inspectors General must coordinate with the Comptroller General to avoid duplicate work. If they have reasonable grounds to believe a federal crime occurred, they must report it quickly to the Attorney General. When they recommend corrective action, they must send that recommendation to the agency head, the congressional committees in charge, and any outside requester, may send it to any Member of Congress on request, and must post the final recommendation on the OIG website within 3 days, except for information the law bars from being shared.
Full Legal Text
Government Organization and Employees — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
5 U.S.C. § 404
Title 5 — Government Organization and Employees
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73