Title 5 › Part I— THE AGENCIES GENERALLY › Chapter 4— INSPECTORS GENERAL › § 406
Inspectors General can see all records, reports, audits, and other materials about the programs they watch. They can run investigations, ask any federal, state, or local agency for help, and use subpoenas to get documents or evidence (a court can enforce these subpoenas). They can take oaths, talk directly to the head of the agency, hire staff, buy services, and make contracts for audits or studies if money is provided. Agency heads must give Inspector General offices office space, equipment, and basic support. Inspectors General must not publicly release information that other laws bar from being shared. The Attorney General can let some Inspectors General and their investigators carry guns, make arrests without a warrant in some cases, and get warrants to search or seize evidence. The Attorney General will only allow this after finding the office is hampered without the powers, other help is not enough, and internal safeguards exist. The following offices did not need that initial finding: Commerce, Education, Energy, Health and Human Services, Homeland Security, Housing and Urban Development, Interior, Justice, Labor, State, Transportation, Treasury, Veterans’ Affairs, the Agency for International Development, Environmental Protection Agency, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Federal Emergency Management Agency, General Services Administration, NASA, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Office of Personnel Management, Railroad Retirement Board, Small Business Administration, Social Security Administration, and the Tennessee Valley Authority. The Attorney General writes rules and can suspend or remove these powers; those decisions cannot be reviewed by a court. The listed offices had to set up an external review process within 180 days after November 25, 2002. For grand jury materials, agency heads must tell the Attorney General when an Inspector General asks for them. The Attorney General has 15 days to decide and must grant access unless it would hurt a criminal case, an undercover operation, reveal a confidential source, threaten national security, or seriously harm U.S. trade or economic interests. If access is denied, the Attorney General must tell certain Congressional committees within 30 days. The Department of Justice Inspector General is not covered by that grand jury rule. Each Inspector General must send a yearly budget request for operations, training, and support for the Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency; those amounts and any IG comments must be included in the President’s budget submission. A computer comparison of federal records done by an Inspector General for an audit or review is not treated as a “matching program” under 5 U.S.C. 552a, and one part of the records law at title 44 does not apply to information collected during OIG audits and reviews. Certain privacy terms used here have the meanings given in 5 U.S.C. 552a(a).
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Government Organization and Employees — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
5 U.S.C. § 406
Title 5 — Government Organization and Employees
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60