Title 34 › Subtitle Subtitle I— Comprehensive Acts › Chapter 101— JUSTICE SYSTEM IMPROVEMENT › Subchapter V— BUREAU OF JUSTICE ASSISTANCE GRANT PROGRAMS › Part A— Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant Program › § 10159
Gives money to states to pay for certified training for police and to help law enforcement work with local mental health services. A "certified training program or course" means training that uses the curricula the Attorney General created or approved and that the Attorney General or trained instructors run or certify. Within 90 days after the Attorney General finishes the required curriculum and certification work, the Attorney General must make grants to states. Grant money can pay for running or buying certified trainings, paying officers or mental health staff to attend, overtime for small local agencies with fewer than 50 employees, building reporting systems (up to 5% of a grant), and joining the FBI’s National Use-of-Force Data Collection (up to 5% if not already reporting). States must make sure officers who have worked at least 2 years get the required initial training before using grant money for continuing education on those topics. States may not use grant money for continuing education on those topics until 2 years after December 27, 2022, unless the officers already got the initial training with other funds during that 2-year window. States get money based on how many law enforcement officers they have. States may keep a portion for state officers and must pass the rest to local governments. States must announce local allocations within 30 days of getting funds and must explain any delays. Local governments that get funds must file yearly reports for the first year and the next two years listing how many officers were trained, which topics were covered, total officers, training barriers, results from pre/post tests and follow-up checks, and a plan and amount of funds for training. States must send those reports to the Attorney General. The Attorney General must create a data portal within 180 days after December 27, 2022, set reporting rules for incidents where de-escalation techniques are used, protect confidentiality, and review those rules every 2 years. If a recipient fails to file required reports, it cannot get funds for 2 fiscal years, though a state that loses eligibility may still pass funds to a local government that did report. The Attorney General must report to Congress starting 2 years after December 27, 2022, and every year grants are made. The National Institute of Justice must study training in at least 6 places no later than 2 years after the first grant, and the Comptroller General must review the program no later than 3 years after the first grant. The law authorizes $40,000,000 for fiscal year 2025 and $50,000,000 for fiscal year 2026.
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Citation
34 U.S.C. § 10159
Title 34 — Navy
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60