Title 38 › Part III— READJUSTMENT AND RELATED BENEFITS › Chapter 43— EMPLOYMENT AND REEMPLOYMENT RIGHTS OF MEMBERS OF THE UNIFORMED SERVICES › Subchapter III— PROCEDURES FOR ASSISTANCE, ENFORCEMENT, AND INVESTIGATION › § 4323
If someone files a complaint about a State or private employer and the Secretary tells them the problem could not be fixed, the person can ask the Secretary to send the case to the Attorney General. The Secretary must send it within 60 days. The Attorney General then has 60 days to decide if they will represent the person and must tell the person in writing. If the Attorney General takes the case and thinks the person should get the benefits or rights asked for, the Attorney General can sue for them. A person may also file a lawsuit themselves if they did not ask the Secretary for help, did not ask for a referral, or the Attorney General refused to represent them. Cases brought by the United States go to a U.S. district court. A person suing a State can use a state court. A person suing a private employer uses a U.S. district court. The United States can sue a State in any district where the State acts. A suit against a private employer can be in any district where that employer has a business. Courts can order employers to follow the rules, pay lost wages and benefits, add interest at 3 percent per year, and, if the employer knew they broke the rules, pay the greater of $50,000 or the lost pay plus interest as extra damages. Money won in a U.S. suit is held in a special account and paid to the person, or goes to the Treasury if it cannot be paid within 3 years. Courts can also use injunctions, temporary orders, or contempt to protect rights. A person who wins and hired a private lawyer gets reasonable lawyer and expert fees and other costs. No court fees may be charged to the person bringing the claim. Definitions: State (as an employer) — the State government acting as an employer. Private employer — a non‑State employer; includes political subdivisions.
Full Legal Text
Veterans' Benefits — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
38 U.S.C. § 4323
Title 38 — Veterans' Benefits
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60