Title 34 › Subtitle Subtitle II— Protection of Children and Other Persons › Chapter 209— CHILD PROTECTION AND SAFETY › Subchapter I— SEX OFFENDER REGISTRATION AND NOTIFICATION › Part B— Improving Federal Criminal Law Enforcement To Ensure Sex Offender Compliance With Registration and Notification Requirements and Protection of Children From Violent Predators › § 20942
The Attorney General must create and run a national program called Project Safe Childhood. The program brings together federal, State, local, Tribal, and nonprofit groups to fight online child sexual exploitation and abuse. The law defines key words used in the program, such as child sexual abuse material (same meaning as “child pornography” in 18 U.S.C. 2256), child sexual exploitation offense (certain federal or similar State/Tribal crimes involving minors), circle of trust offender (someone related to or in a position of trust over a child), contact sexual offense (certain sexual-contact crimes involving minors), dual offender, facilitator, ICAC task forces and partners, serious offender, “State” (includes DC and territories), computer (as in 18 U.S.C. 1030), and “technology-facilitated” (means the crime used a computer). The Attorney General must work with DOJ units, the ICAC Task Force Program, and outside experts to make best practices for investigations and prosecutions. These practices must help identify child victims and serious offenders, use proactive leads and CyberTipline reports, and create a tracking system to report rescues and identifications. Funds may be used for coordinated investigations and prosecutions, training, district strategic plans (including victim-centered and tech-informed work, tracking results, and coordination with many agencies), major case coordination among federal partners, technology and information-sharing tools, and an annual nationally coordinated “Safer Internet Day” for prevention and reporting. The law also allows adding at least 20 Assistant United States Attorneys beyond the number in place the day before December 23, 2024, to work on these cases and help coordinate district plans. Authorized funding is $28,550,000 per year for fiscal years 2023–2028 for investigations/prosecution work, $4,000,000 per year for Safer Internet Day for fiscal years 2023–2028, and $29,100,000 per year for the AUSA and related purposes for fiscal years 2023–2028. Any State or local money from this law must add to, not replace, other government funding.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
34 U.S.C. § 20942
Title 34 — Navy
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60