Title 5 › Part IV— ETHICS REQUIREMENTS › Chapter 131— ETHICS IN GOVERNMENT › Subchapter I— FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE REQUIREMENTS OF FEDERAL PERSONNEL › § 13108
Agency ethics officials, the relevant Secretaries, congressional ethics committees, the Judicial Conference, and the Director of the Office of Government Ethics must make sure reports filed under this law are reviewed within 60 days. The Director only reviews the reports that are sent to the Director, and must do so within 60 days after they are sent. After review, the reviewer must sign if they think the person followed the rules. If more information is needed, the reviewer will ask for it and set a deadline. If the reviewer thinks the person did not follow the rules, the person will be told, given a chance to respond, and then the reviewer will decide. If the person is found not following the rules, the reviewer will say what steps should be taken and by what date. Possible steps include selling assets, paying restitution, creating a blind trust, asking for an exemption under section 208(b) of title 18, or asking to transfer, change duties, or resign. If the steps are not taken by the deadline, the case is sent to the President for Senate-confirmed executive officers, to the Secretary for Foreign Service or uniformed service members, or to the agency head, congressional committee, or Judicial Conference for others. Supervising ethics offices may give public advisory opinions, and people who act in good faith exactly as those opinions say are protected from penalties under this law.
Full Legal Text
Government Organization and Employees — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
5 U.S.C. § 13108
Title 5 — Government Organization and Employees
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60