Title 14 › Subtitle SUBTITLE II— PERSONNEL › Chapter 25— PERSONNEL; GENERAL PROVISIONS › Subchapter III— COVERED MISCONDUCT › § 2531
Within 1 year of the Coast Guard Authorization Act of 2025 becoming law, the Secretary, after talking with the department’s and the Defense Department’s Inspectors General, must create a clear policy for keeping and giving access to evidence and records about sexual misconduct and other covered wrongdoing by Coast Guard members. The policy must update current rules so evidence is kept long enough for victims to seek veterans benefits, for administrative, criminal, and civil cases, and for other needed uses. Physical or forensic evidence for rape or sexual assault must be kept at least 50 years. Other covered misconduct must be kept at least as long as the statute of limitations under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Documentary records about rape or sexual assault must be kept at least 50 years. Coast Guard Form 6095 must be kept for the longer of 50 years from the member’s signature or the period already required by Coast Guard policy. The policy must say which records and physical items to keep, where and how to store them (including electronic systems), who is responsible, and how to protect privacy under FOIA and the Privacy Act. It must require training, collect uniform data on incidents and discipline, and set rules for who may see records (victims, law enforcement, the VA, others) and when victim consent is needed. Victims may get access to their own records after final case actions, with expedited handling and minimum redaction. Victims who filed a restricted sexual assault report may ask, at any time and confidentially, to have personal property from a forensic exam returned, but they must be told that returning items could affect a later criminal case if they change to an unrestricted report; forensic kits still must be kept per the retention rules. All criminal case files (for example, activity and review records, investigative plans, and agent notes) must be kept — 50 years for rape/sexual assault and otherwise for the UCMJ statute of limitations. The policy does not require turning over internal legal work product.
Full Legal Text
Coast Guard — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
14 U.S.C. § 2531
Title 14 — Coast Guard
Last Updated
Apr 18, 2026
Release point: 119-83