Title 34 › Subtitle Subtitle II— Protection of Children and Other Persons › Chapter 203— VICTIMS OF CHILD ABUSE › Subchapter I— IMPROVING INVESTIGATION AND PROSECUTION OF CHILD ABUSE CASES › § 20305
The Administrator must give grants to national groups to train and help people who work on child abuse cases. One grant type pays for training prosecutors and other lawyers who handle child abuse trials in state or federal courts to make prosecutions better. The other grant type pays for training child abuse professionals who protect children, respond to cases, and treat victims. Those grants must also support the Children’s Advocacy Center model and team-based responses, and help with checking programs and carefully managing federal funds. Grantees must have clear ties to the people they train and real experience doing this work. Prosecutor trainers must be linked to state court prosecutors and have a training record. Child-abuse trainers must offer many training tools, including a digital library, and have experience training police, child welfare workers, prosecutors, forensic interviewers, medical staff, victim advocates, and mental health workers. The Administrator will set application rules under sections 11183 and 11186 and must require prosecutor training to cover better child interview methods, thorough investigations, interagency teamwork, and strong courtroom presentation, including allowed alternative courtroom procedures.
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Reference
Citation
34 U.S.C. § 20305
Title 34 — Navy
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60