Top Legislation - View All
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Administrative procedure, Aged, Alcoholism, Budgets, Business, Case management, Child welfare, Children, Community-based corrections, Compensatory education, Congressional reporting requirements, Corrections, Courts of special jurisdiction, Criminal justice, Data banks, Department of Justice, Drug abuse, Drug abuse treatment, Drug therapy, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Employment, Ex-offenders, Executive departments, Families, Family services, Federal aid to Indians, Federal aid to law enforcement, Government information, Government paperwork, Governmental investigations, Halfway houses, Health policy, Heroin, Identification devices, Income tax, Indian law enforcement, Indians, Job training, Juvenile delinquency, Law, Medical care, Medicine, Mental health services, Mentoring, Minorities, Nonprofit organizations, Parent and child, Parents, Parole, Performance measurement, Prison alternatives, Prisoners, Public contracts, Recidivists, Rehabilitation of criminals, Social services, Tax credits, Taxation, Technical education, Technology, Vocational education, Welfare, Welfare eligibility
Latest Action: 08/02/2007 - Committee on the Judiciary. Ordered to be reported with amendments favorably. Bill TextA bill to reauthorize the grant program for reentry of offenders into the community in the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, to improve reentry planning and implementation, and for other purposes. 3/29/2007--Introduced. Recidivism Reduction and Second Chance Act of 2007 or the Second Chance Act of 2007 - Amends the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 to reauthorize, rewrite, and expand provisions for adult and juvenile offender state and local reentry demonstration projects to provide expanded services to offenders and their families for reentry into society.Directs the Attorney General to award grants for: (1) state and local reentry courts; (2) Comprehensive and Continuous Offender Reentry Task Forces; (3) pharmacological drug treatment services to incarcerated offenders; (4) technology career training for offenders; and (5) mentoring services for reintegrating offenders into the community.Amends the Higher Education Amendments [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Administrative procedure, Budgets, Children, Communications, Conferences, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Conspiracy, Crime prevention, Criminal investigation, Criminal justice, Criminal justice information, Criminal statistics, Data banks, Department of Justice, Drug abuse, Drug law enforcement, Drug traffic, Education, Electronic surveillance, Elementary and secondary education, Evidence (Law), Executive departments, Extradition, Families, Federal aid to law enforcement, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Firearms, Gangs, Government information, Government publicity, Higher education, Homicide, Illegal aliens, Immigration, Indian law enforcement, Juvenile delinquency, Kidnapping, Law, Legal education, Limitation of actions, Minorities, Missing children, Murder, Organized crime, Prosecution, Public prosecutors, Public service advertising, Sentences (Criminal procedure), Sentencing guidelines, Social services, Student records, Technology, Terrorism, U.S. Sentencing Commission, Violence, Witnesses, Youth services, Youth violence
Latest Action: 04/20/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security. Bill TextTo increase and enhance law enforcement resources committed to investigation and prosecution of violent gangs, to deter and punish violent gang crime, to protect law-abiding citizens and communities from violent criminals, to revise and enhance criminal penalties for violent crimes, to expand and improve gang prevention programs, and for other purposes. 3/20/2007--Introduced. Gang Abatement and Prevention Act of 2007 - Amends the federal criminal code to define "criminal street gang" and "gang crime" and to prohibit: (1) the commission of a gang crime or crime of violence to further the activities of a criminal street gang ; and (2) the recruitment of another person to join a criminal street gang. Increases criminal penalties for: (1) certain violent crimes in aid of racketeering activity; (2) possession of firearms by repeat offenders; and (3) crimes of violence and drug trafficking crimes committed by illegal aliens. Provides for criminal forfeiture [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Administrative procedure, Aged, Alcoholism, Budgets, Business, Case management, Child welfare, Children, Community-based corrections, Compensatory education, Congressional reporting requirements, Corrections, Courts of special jurisdiction, Criminal justice, Data banks, Department of Justice, Drug abuse, Drug abuse treatment, Drug therapy, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Employment, Ex-offenders, Executive departments, Families, Family services, Federal aid to Indians, Federal aid to law enforcement, Government information, Government paperwork, Governmental investigations, Halfway houses, Health policy, Heroin, Identification devices, Income tax, Indian law enforcement, Indians, Job training, Juvenile delinquency, Law, Medical care, Medicine, Mental health services, Mentoring, Minorities, Nonprofit organizations, Parent and child, Parents, Parole, Performance measurement, Prison alternatives, Prisoners, Public contracts, Recidivists, Rehabilitation of criminals, Social services, Tax credits, Taxation, Technical education, Technology, Vocational education, Welfare, Welfare eligibility
Latest Action: 04/09/2008 - Signed by President. Bill TextTo reauthorize the grant program for reentry of offenders into the community in the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, to improve reentry planning and implementation, and for other purposes. 4/9/2008--Public Law. (There are 3 other summaries) (This measure has not been amended since it was passed by the House on November 11, 2007. The summary of that version is repeated here, with changes reflecting enrollment corrections.)Second Chance Act of 2007: Community Safety Through Recidivism Prevention or the Second Chance Act of 2007 - (Sec. 5) Requires the Attorney General, not later than January 31 of each year, to submit all reports required by this Act during the preceding year to the Judiciary Committees of Congress.Title I: Amendments Related To The Omnibus Crime Control And Safe Streets Act of 1968 - Subtitle A: Improvements to Existing Programs - (Sec. 101) Amends the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Arrest, Authorization, Black colleges, Budgets, Children, Community policing, Congressional reporting requirements, Counterterrorism, Crime prevention, Criminal investigation, Criminal justice, Department of Justice, Drug abuse, Drug law enforcement, Drugs and youth, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Executive departments, Federal aid to law enforcement, Federal-local relations, Federal-state relations, Fraud, Gangs, Higher education, Inspectors general, Intelligence activities, Intergovernmental fiscal relations, Job training, Labor, Methamphetamine, Minorities, Police, Police communication systems, Police training, Politics and government, Prosecution, Recruiting of employees, Retired military personnel, School security, State and local government, Technological innovations, Technology, Telecommunication, Terrorism, Veterans, Veterans' employment, Violence, Waste in government spending
Latest Action: 08/03/2007 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. Bill TextTo amend the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 to enhance the COPS ON THE BEAT grant program, and for other purposes. 5/15/2007--Passed House amended. (There are 2 other summaries) (This measure has not been amended since it was reported to the House on May 14, 2007. The summary of that version is repeated here.)COPS Improvements Act of 2007 - (Sec. 2) Amends the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 to expand the authority of the Attorney General to make grants for public safety and community policing programs (COPS ON THE BEAT or COPS program). Revises grant purposes to provide for: (1) the hiring or training of law enforcement officers for intelligence, anti-terror, and homeland security duties; (2) the hiring of school resource officers; (3) school-based partnerships between local law enforcement agencies and schools to combat crime, gangs, drug activities, and other problems facing elementary and secondary [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Budgets, Child abuse, Child pornography, Child sexual abuse, Children, Computer crimes, Conspiracy, Counterterrorism, Crime prevention, Criminal investigation, Criminal justice, Federal aid to law enforcement, Internet, Job training, Michigan, Nonprofit organizations, Police training, Prosecution, Research centers, Social services, Technology, Telecommunication, Terrorism, Texas, Virginia, White collar crime
Latest Action: 07/16/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security. Bill TextTo amend title I of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 to establish a National White Collar Crime Center grants program for purposes of improving the identification, investigation, and prosecution of certain criminal conspiracies and activities and terrorist conspiracies and activities. 6/20/2007--Introduced. Amends the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 to authorize the Director of the Bureau of Justice Assistance to make grants and enter into contracts with state and local criminal justice agencies and nonprofit organizations to improve the identification, investigation, and prosecution of multijurisdictional criminal conspiracies or activities involving terrorism, economic crime, and high-tech crime, including Internet-based crime against children and child pornography.
Also tagged in: Administrative procedure, Budgets, Children, Communications, Conferences, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Conspiracy, Crime prevention, Criminal investigation, Criminal justice, Criminal justice information, Criminal statistics, Data banks, Department of Justice, Drug abuse, Drug law enforcement, Drug traffic, Education, Electronic surveillance, Elementary and secondary education, Evidence (Law), Executive departments, Extradition, Families, Federal aid to law enforcement, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Firearms, Gangs, Government information, Government publicity, Higher education, Homicide, Illegal aliens, Immigration, Indian law enforcement, Juvenile delinquency, Kidnapping, Law, Legal education, Limitation of actions, Minorities, Missing children, Murder, Organized crime, Prosecution, Public prosecutors, Public service advertising, Sentences (Criminal procedure), Sentencing guidelines, Social services, Student records, Technology, Terrorism, U.S. Sentencing Commission, Violence, Witnesses, Youth services, Youth violence
Latest Action: 10/17/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Healthy Families and Communities. Bill TextA bill to increase and enhance law enforcement resources committed to investigation and prosecution of violent gangs, to deter and punish violent gang crime, to protect law-abiding citizens and communities from violent criminals, to revise and enhance criminal penalties for violent crimes, to expand and improve gang prevention programs, and for other purposes. 9/21/2007--Passed Senate amended. (There are 2 other summaries) Gang Abatement and Prevention Act of 2007 - Title I: New Federal Criminal Laws Needed To Fight Violent National, International, Regional, And Local Gangs That Affect Interstate And Foreign Commerce - (Sec. 101) Amends the federal criminal code to expand prohibitions against criminal street gangs. Defines "criminal street gang" as a formal or informal group, organization, or association of five or more individuals: (1) each of whom has committed at least one gang crime; and (2) who collectively commit three or more [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Block grants, Budgets, Children, Crime prevention, Criminal justice, Criminal statistics, Executive departments, Federal advisory bodies, Federal aid to law enforcement, Gangs, Government information, Government paperwork, Information services, Juvenile delinquency, Law enforcement officers, Nonprofit organizations, Police, Police training, Police-community relations, Recruiting of employees, Social services, State and local government, Victims of crimes, Witnesses, Youth services
Latest Action: 11/02/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security. Bill TextTo provide for evidence-based and promising practices related to juvenile delinquency and criminal street gang activity prevention and intervention to help build individual, family, and community strength and resiliency to ensure that youth lead productive, safe, healthy, gang-free, and law-abiding lives. 10/16/2007--Introduced. Youth Prison Reduction through Opportunities, Mentoring, Intervention, Support, and Education Act or the Youth PROMISE Act - Amends the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974 to establish a PROMISE Advisory Panel to assist the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention in: (1) assessing and developing standards and evidence-based practices to prevent juvenile delinquency and criminal street gang activity; and (2) collecting data in designated geographic areas to assess the needs and existing resources for juvenile delinquency and criminal street gang activity prevention and intervention. Authorizes the Administrator [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Actions and defenses, Administrative procedure, Americans in foreign countries, Armed forces, Armed forces abroad, Arrest, Assault, Attorney-client privilege, Birth control, Case management, Child abuse, Child safety, Children, Civil liberties, Communications, Compensation for victims of crime, Conferences, Confidential communications, Congressional reporting requirements, Counseling, Courts-martial and courts of inquiry, Crime prevention, Crimes against women, Criminal investigation, Criminal justice, Criminal justice information, Criminal statistics, Curricula, Day care, Defense policy, Department of Defense, Disciplining of employees, DNA, Drug abuse, Education, Evidence (Law), Ex-offenders, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Families, Family violence, Federal employees, Federal law enforcement officers, Federal officials, Fringe benefits, Government employees, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publications, Government publicity, Governmental investigations, Grievance procedures, Group counseling, Health policy, Higher education, Homicide, Housing, Human immunodeficiency viruses, Identification devices, Informers, Injunctions, Inspectors general, Job training, Jurisdiction, Labor, Law, Law enforcement officers, Legal fees, Legal services, Medical care, Medical education, Medical personnel, Medical screening, Medical tests, Medicine, Mental health services, Military and naval offenses, Military dependents, Military hospitals, Military law, Military medicine, Military pay, Military promotions, Military training, Military transportation, Misconduct in office, Nonprofit organizations, Nurses, Occupational therapy, Officer personnel, Paramedical personnel, Physical therapy, Physician-patient privilege, Police, Politics and government, Post-traumatic stress disorder, Pregnancy, Promotions, Prosecution, Psychiatrists, Public contracts, Public service advertising, Rape, Rape victims, Recruiting of employees, Rehabilitation of criminals, Relocation, Reproduction, Right of privacy, Sentences (Criminal procedure), Sex crimes, Sex offenders, Sexual harassment, Sexually transmitted diseases, Shelters for the homeless, Social life and customs, Social services, Stalking, State and local government, State laws, Suicide, Surveys, Telecommunication, Telephone, Transportation, Travel costs, Veterans, Veterans' benefits, Veterans' hospitals, Veterans' medical care, Victims of crimes, Whistle blowing, Witnesses, Women, Women's shelters
Latest Action: 12/05/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Military Personnel. Bill TextTo reduce sexual assault and domestic violence involving members of the Armed Forces and their family members and partners through enhanced programs of prevention and deterrence, enhanced programs of victims services, and strengthened provisions for prosecution of assailants, and for other purposes. 10/29/2007--Introduced. Military Domestic and Sexual Violence Response Act - Establishes in the Department of Defense (DOD) an Office of the Victims' Advocate to facilitate access to services for victims of domestic or family violence, sexual assault, and stalking in the military. Directs the Secretary of Defense, acting through the Director of the Office, to require DOD policies for victim assistance, family advocacy, and equal opportunity programs to provide for a victims' advocates program within each military department. Authorizes the Secretary to award contracts to: (1) support DOD crisis intervention services for victims of such violence; and (2) provide training [...] show full description
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Latest Legislation - View All
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Actions and defenses, Administrative procedure, Americans in foreign countries, Armed forces, Armed forces abroad, Arrest, Assault, Attorney-client privilege, Birth control, Case management, Child abuse, Child safety, Children, Civil liberties, Communications, Compensation for victims of crime, Conferences, Confidential communications, Congressional reporting requirements, Counseling, Courts-martial and courts of inquiry, Crime prevention, Crimes against women, Criminal investigation, Criminal justice, Criminal justice information, Criminal statistics, Curricula, Day care, Defense policy, Department of Defense, Disciplining of employees, DNA, Drug abuse, Education, Evidence (Law), Ex-offenders, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Families, Family violence, Federal employees, Federal law enforcement officers, Federal officials, Fringe benefits, Government employees, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publications, Government publicity, Governmental investigations, Grievance procedures, Group counseling, Health policy, Higher education, Homicide, Housing, Human immunodeficiency viruses, Identification devices, Informers, Injunctions, Inspectors general, Job training, Jurisdiction, Labor, Law, Law enforcement officers, Legal fees, Legal services, Medical care, Medical education, Medical personnel, Medical screening, Medical tests, Medicine, Mental health services, Military and naval offenses, Military dependents, Military hospitals, Military law, Military medicine, Military pay, Military promotions, Military training, Military transportation, Misconduct in office, Nonprofit organizations, Nurses, Occupational therapy, Officer personnel, Paramedical personnel, Physical therapy, Physician-patient privilege, Police, Politics and government, Post-traumatic stress disorder, Pregnancy, Promotions, Prosecution, Psychiatrists, Public contracts, Public service advertising, Rape, Rape victims, Recruiting of employees, Rehabilitation of criminals, Relocation, Reproduction, Right of privacy, Sentences (Criminal procedure), Sex crimes, Sex offenders, Sexual harassment, Sexually transmitted diseases, Shelters for the homeless, Social life and customs, Social services, Stalking, State and local government, State laws, Suicide, Surveys, Telecommunication, Telephone, Transportation, Travel costs, Veterans, Veterans' benefits, Veterans' hospitals, Veterans' medical care, Victims of crimes, Whistle blowing, Witnesses, Women, Women's shelters
Latest Action: 12/05/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Military Personnel. Bill TextTo reduce sexual assault and domestic violence involving members of the Armed Forces and their family members and partners through enhanced programs of prevention and deterrence, enhanced programs of victims services, and strengthened provisions for prosecution of assailants, and for other purposes. 10/29/2007--Introduced. Military Domestic and Sexual Violence Response Act - Establishes in the Department of Defense (DOD) an Office of the Victims' Advocate to facilitate access to services for victims of domestic or family violence, sexual assault, and stalking in the military. Directs the Secretary of Defense, acting through the Director of the Office, to require DOD policies for victim assistance, family advocacy, and equal opportunity programs to provide for a victims' advocates program within each military department. Authorizes the Secretary to award contracts to: (1) support DOD crisis intervention services for victims of such violence; and (2) provide training [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Block grants, Budgets, Children, Crime prevention, Criminal justice, Criminal statistics, Executive departments, Federal advisory bodies, Federal aid to law enforcement, Gangs, Government information, Government paperwork, Information services, Juvenile delinquency, Law enforcement officers, Nonprofit organizations, Police, Police training, Police-community relations, Recruiting of employees, Social services, State and local government, Victims of crimes, Witnesses, Youth services
Latest Action: 11/02/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security. Bill TextTo provide for evidence-based and promising practices related to juvenile delinquency and criminal street gang activity prevention and intervention to help build individual, family, and community strength and resiliency to ensure that youth lead productive, safe, healthy, gang-free, and law-abiding lives. 10/16/2007--Introduced. Youth Prison Reduction through Opportunities, Mentoring, Intervention, Support, and Education Act or the Youth PROMISE Act - Amends the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974 to establish a PROMISE Advisory Panel to assist the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention in: (1) assessing and developing standards and evidence-based practices to prevent juvenile delinquency and criminal street gang activity; and (2) collecting data in designated geographic areas to assess the needs and existing resources for juvenile delinquency and criminal street gang activity prevention and intervention. Authorizes the Administrator [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Budgets, Child abuse, Child pornography, Child sexual abuse, Children, Computer crimes, Conspiracy, Counterterrorism, Crime prevention, Criminal investigation, Criminal justice, Federal aid to law enforcement, Internet, Job training, Michigan, Nonprofit organizations, Police training, Prosecution, Research centers, Social services, Technology, Telecommunication, Terrorism, Texas, Virginia, White collar crime
Latest Action: 07/16/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security. Bill TextTo amend title I of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 to establish a National White Collar Crime Center grants program for purposes of improving the identification, investigation, and prosecution of certain criminal conspiracies and activities and terrorist conspiracies and activities. 6/20/2007--Introduced. Amends the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 to authorize the Director of the Bureau of Justice Assistance to make grants and enter into contracts with state and local criminal justice agencies and nonprofit organizations to improve the identification, investigation, and prosecution of multijurisdictional criminal conspiracies or activities involving terrorism, economic crime, and high-tech crime, including Internet-based crime against children and child pornography.
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Administrative procedure, Aged, Alcoholism, Budgets, Business, Case management, Child welfare, Children, Community-based corrections, Compensatory education, Congressional reporting requirements, Corrections, Courts of special jurisdiction, Criminal justice, Data banks, Department of Justice, Drug abuse, Drug abuse treatment, Drug therapy, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Employment, Ex-offenders, Executive departments, Families, Family services, Federal aid to Indians, Federal aid to law enforcement, Government information, Government paperwork, Governmental investigations, Halfway houses, Health policy, Heroin, Identification devices, Income tax, Indian law enforcement, Indians, Job training, Juvenile delinquency, Law, Medical care, Medicine, Mental health services, Mentoring, Minorities, Nonprofit organizations, Parent and child, Parents, Parole, Performance measurement, Prison alternatives, Prisoners, Public contracts, Recidivists, Rehabilitation of criminals, Social services, Tax credits, Taxation, Technical education, Technology, Vocational education, Welfare, Welfare eligibility
Latest Action: 08/02/2007 - Committee on the Judiciary. Ordered to be reported with amendments favorably. Bill TextA bill to reauthorize the grant program for reentry of offenders into the community in the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, to improve reentry planning and implementation, and for other purposes. 3/29/2007--Introduced. Recidivism Reduction and Second Chance Act of 2007 or the Second Chance Act of 2007 - Amends the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 to reauthorize, rewrite, and expand provisions for adult and juvenile offender state and local reentry demonstration projects to provide expanded services to offenders and their families for reentry into society.Directs the Attorney General to award grants for: (1) state and local reentry courts; (2) Comprehensive and Continuous Offender Reentry Task Forces; (3) pharmacological drug treatment services to incarcerated offenders; (4) technology career training for offenders; and (5) mentoring services for reintegrating offenders into the community.Amends the Higher Education Amendments [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Arrest, Authorization, Black colleges, Budgets, Children, Community policing, Congressional reporting requirements, Counterterrorism, Crime prevention, Criminal investigation, Criminal justice, Department of Justice, Drug abuse, Drug law enforcement, Drugs and youth, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Executive departments, Federal aid to law enforcement, Federal-local relations, Federal-state relations, Fraud, Gangs, Higher education, Inspectors general, Intelligence activities, Intergovernmental fiscal relations, Job training, Labor, Methamphetamine, Minorities, Police, Police communication systems, Police training, Politics and government, Prosecution, Recruiting of employees, Retired military personnel, School security, State and local government, Technological innovations, Technology, Telecommunication, Terrorism, Veterans, Veterans' employment, Violence, Waste in government spending
Latest Action: 08/03/2007 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. Bill TextTo amend the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 to enhance the COPS ON THE BEAT grant program, and for other purposes. 5/15/2007--Passed House amended. (There are 2 other summaries) (This measure has not been amended since it was reported to the House on May 14, 2007. The summary of that version is repeated here.)COPS Improvements Act of 2007 - (Sec. 2) Amends the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 to expand the authority of the Attorney General to make grants for public safety and community policing programs (COPS ON THE BEAT or COPS program). Revises grant purposes to provide for: (1) the hiring or training of law enforcement officers for intelligence, anti-terror, and homeland security duties; (2) the hiring of school resource officers; (3) school-based partnerships between local law enforcement agencies and schools to combat crime, gangs, drug activities, and other problems facing elementary and secondary [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Administrative procedure, Budgets, Children, Communications, Conferences, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Conspiracy, Crime prevention, Criminal investigation, Criminal justice, Criminal justice information, Criminal statistics, Data banks, Department of Justice, Drug abuse, Drug law enforcement, Drug traffic, Education, Electronic surveillance, Elementary and secondary education, Evidence (Law), Executive departments, Extradition, Families, Federal aid to law enforcement, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Firearms, Gangs, Government information, Government publicity, Higher education, Homicide, Illegal aliens, Immigration, Indian law enforcement, Juvenile delinquency, Kidnapping, Law, Legal education, Limitation of actions, Minorities, Missing children, Murder, Organized crime, Prosecution, Public prosecutors, Public service advertising, Sentences (Criminal procedure), Sentencing guidelines, Social services, Student records, Technology, Terrorism, U.S. Sentencing Commission, Violence, Witnesses, Youth services, Youth violence
Latest Action: 04/20/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security. Bill TextTo increase and enhance law enforcement resources committed to investigation and prosecution of violent gangs, to deter and punish violent gang crime, to protect law-abiding citizens and communities from violent criminals, to revise and enhance criminal penalties for violent crimes, to expand and improve gang prevention programs, and for other purposes. 3/20/2007--Introduced. Gang Abatement and Prevention Act of 2007 - Amends the federal criminal code to define "criminal street gang" and "gang crime" and to prohibit: (1) the commission of a gang crime or crime of violence to further the activities of a criminal street gang ; and (2) the recruitment of another person to join a criminal street gang. Increases criminal penalties for: (1) certain violent crimes in aid of racketeering activity; (2) possession of firearms by repeat offenders; and (3) crimes of violence and drug trafficking crimes committed by illegal aliens. Provides for criminal forfeiture [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Administrative procedure, Aged, Alcoholism, Budgets, Business, Case management, Child welfare, Children, Community-based corrections, Compensatory education, Congressional reporting requirements, Corrections, Courts of special jurisdiction, Criminal justice, Data banks, Department of Justice, Drug abuse, Drug abuse treatment, Drug therapy, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Employment, Ex-offenders, Executive departments, Families, Family services, Federal aid to Indians, Federal aid to law enforcement, Government information, Government paperwork, Governmental investigations, Halfway houses, Health policy, Heroin, Identification devices, Income tax, Indian law enforcement, Indians, Job training, Juvenile delinquency, Law, Medical care, Medicine, Mental health services, Mentoring, Minorities, Nonprofit organizations, Parent and child, Parents, Parole, Performance measurement, Prison alternatives, Prisoners, Public contracts, Recidivists, Rehabilitation of criminals, Social services, Tax credits, Taxation, Technical education, Technology, Vocational education, Welfare, Welfare eligibility
Latest Action: 04/09/2008 - Signed by President. Bill TextTo reauthorize the grant program for reentry of offenders into the community in the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, to improve reentry planning and implementation, and for other purposes. 4/9/2008--Public Law. (There are 3 other summaries) (This measure has not been amended since it was passed by the House on November 11, 2007. The summary of that version is repeated here, with changes reflecting enrollment corrections.)Second Chance Act of 2007: Community Safety Through Recidivism Prevention or the Second Chance Act of 2007 - (Sec. 5) Requires the Attorney General, not later than January 31 of each year, to submit all reports required by this Act during the preceding year to the Judiciary Committees of Congress.Title I: Amendments Related To The Omnibus Crime Control And Safe Streets Act of 1968 - Subtitle A: Improvements to Existing Programs - (Sec. 101) Amends the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Administrative procedure, Budgets, Children, Communications, Conferences, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Conspiracy, Crime prevention, Criminal investigation, Criminal justice, Criminal justice information, Criminal statistics, Data banks, Department of Justice, Drug abuse, Drug law enforcement, Drug traffic, Education, Electronic surveillance, Elementary and secondary education, Evidence (Law), Executive departments, Extradition, Families, Federal aid to law enforcement, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Firearms, Gangs, Government information, Government publicity, Higher education, Homicide, Illegal aliens, Immigration, Indian law enforcement, Juvenile delinquency, Kidnapping, Law, Legal education, Limitation of actions, Minorities, Missing children, Murder, Organized crime, Prosecution, Public prosecutors, Public service advertising, Sentences (Criminal procedure), Sentencing guidelines, Social services, Student records, Technology, Terrorism, U.S. Sentencing Commission, Violence, Witnesses, Youth services, Youth violence
Latest Action: 10/17/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Healthy Families and Communities. Bill TextA bill to increase and enhance law enforcement resources committed to investigation and prosecution of violent gangs, to deter and punish violent gang crime, to protect law-abiding citizens and communities from violent criminals, to revise and enhance criminal penalties for violent crimes, to expand and improve gang prevention programs, and for other purposes. 9/21/2007--Passed Senate amended. (There are 2 other summaries) Gang Abatement and Prevention Act of 2007 - Title I: New Federal Criminal Laws Needed To Fight Violent National, International, Regional, And Local Gangs That Affect Interstate And Foreign Commerce - (Sec. 101) Amends the federal criminal code to expand prohibitions against criminal street gangs. Defines "criminal street gang" as a formal or informal group, organization, or association of five or more individuals: (1) each of whom has committed at least one gang crime; and (2) who collectively commit three or more [...] show full description
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