[Congressional Bills 119th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H.R. 6982 Introduced in House (IH)]

<DOC>






119th CONGRESS
  2d Session
                                H. R. 6982

  To amend the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 to 
 provide for reporting requirements for certain grantees for grants to 
                     combat violence against women.


_______________________________________________________________________


                    IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

                            January 8, 2026

  Ms. Mace (for herself and Mr. Fine) introduced the following bill; 
          which was referred to the Committee on the Judiciary

_______________________________________________________________________

                                 A BILL


 
  To amend the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 to 
 provide for reporting requirements for certain grantees for grants to 
                     combat violence against women.

    Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the 
United States of America in Congress assembled,

SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.

    This Act may be cited as the ``Preventing Prosecutors from 
Protecting Predators Act of 2026''.

SEC. 2. GRANTS TO COMBAT VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN REPORTING REQUIREMENTS.

    (a) In General.--Part T of title I of the Omnibus Crime Control and 
Safe Streets Act of 1968 (34 U.S.C. 10441 et seq.) is amended by adding 
at the end the following:

``SEC. 2019. PROSECUTORIAL DATA REPORTING.

    ``(a) In General.--On an annual basis, each chief prosecuting 
officer of a covered office that serves a jurisdiction of 100,000 or 
more persons, if that jurisdiction receives funds under this part, 
shall submit to the Attorney General a report that contains, for the 
previous fiscal year, the following:
            ``(1) The total number of cases referred to the office for 
        prosecution of a covered offense.
            ``(2) The number of cases involving a covered offense such 
        office declined to prosecute and the reasoning for why the 
        office declined to prosecute the covered offense.
            ``(3) The number of cases involving a covered offense 
        initiated against a defendant--
                    ``(A) previously arrested for an offense arising 
                out of separate conduct;
                    ``(B) previously convicted for an offense arising 
                out of separate conduct;
                    ``(C) with a pending case involving an offense 
                arising out of separate conduct;
                    ``(D) serving a term of probation for a conviction 
                for an offense arising out of separate conduct;
                    ``(E) currently on parole for a conviction for an 
                offense arising out of separate conduct; and
                    ``(F) currently or previously enrolled on the 
                National Sex Offender Registry.
            ``(4) The number of defendants charged with a covered 
        offense--
                    ``(A) released on their own recognizance;
                    ``(B) who were eligible for bail;
                    ``(C) for whom the prosecutor requested bail and--
                            ``(i) the type of bail requested;
                            ``(ii) the amount of bail requested; and
                            ``(iii) whether additional non-monetary 
                        conditions were requested;
                    ``(D) for whom the court granted bail and--
                            ``(i) the type of bail imposed;
                            ``(ii) the amount of bail imposed;
                            ``(iii) whether additional non-monetary 
                        conditions were requested or imposed; and
                            ``(iv) outcomes after release on bail, 
                        including failure to appear or rearrest for an 
                        offense arising out of separate conduct; and
                    ``(E) held in pretrial detention.
            ``(5) The number of defendants charged with a covered 
        offense--
                    ``(A) convicted of the covered offense as the 
                result of a trial;
                    ``(B) convicted of an offense as the result of a 
                plea agreement;
                    ``(C) found not guilty of the covered offense as 
                the result of a trial;
                    ``(D) whose cases ended in a mistrial;
                    ``(E) whose charges were dismissed and the 
                reasoning for each dismissal; and
                    ``(F) whose charges were adjudicated by a diversion 
                agreement, deferred prosecution agreement, or any 
                substantively similar procedure and the reasoning for 
                each agreement.
            ``(6) For cases involving a covered offense that resulted 
        in a plea agreement reached with the defendant--
                    ``(A) the number of such cases by each initial 
                charge referred for prosecution;
                    ``(B) the number of such cases by each charge that 
                a defendant was convicted of as part of a plea-deal;
                    ``(C) the number of such cases involving a 
                defendant previously arrested for an offense arising 
                out of separate conduct;
                    ``(D) the number of such cases involving a 
                defendant previously convicted for an offense arising 
                out of separate conduct;
                    ``(E) the number of such cases involving a 
                defendant serving a term of probation for a conviction 
                for an offense arising out of separate conduct;
                    ``(F) the number of such cases involving a 
                defendant released on parole for a conviction for an 
                offense arising out of separate conduct; and
                    ``(G) the number of such cases involving a 
                defendant currently or previously enrolled on the 
                National Sex Offender Registry.
            ``(7) For cases involving a covered offense that resulted 
        in a conviction of the defendant at trial--
                    ``(A) the number of such cases by each initial 
                charge referred for prosecution;
                    ``(B) the number of such cases involving a 
                defendant previously arrested for an offense arising 
                out of separate conduct;
                    ``(C) the number of such cases involving a 
                defendant previously convicted for an offense arising 
                out of separate conduct;
                    ``(D) the number of such cases involving a 
                defendant serving a term of probation for a conviction 
                for an offense arising out of separate conduct;
                    ``(E) the number of such cases involving a 
                defendant released on parole for a conviction for an 
                offense arising out of separate conduct;
                    ``(F) the number of such cases involving a 
                defendant currently or previously enrolled on the 
                National Sex Offender Registry;
                    ``(G) the prosecutor's sentencing recommendation 
                and justification; and
                    ``(H) the actual sentence imposed.
    ``(b) Uniform Standards.--The Attorney General shall define uniform 
standards for the reporting of the information required under this 
subsection, including the form such reports shall take and the process 
by which such reports shall be shared with the Attorney General. The 
Attorney General shall require each covered office to report 
information segregated by covered offense and organized in distinct 
sections reflecting prosecutions, bail conditions, plea agreements, and 
sentencing outcomes for each such offense.
    ``(c) Submission to Judiciary Committees.--The Attorney General 
shall submit the information received under this subsection to the 
Committee on the Judiciary of the Senate and the Committee on the 
Judiciary of the House of Representatives and shall publish such 
information on a publicly viewable website.
    ``(d) Covered Offense Defined.--In this subsection, the term 
`covered offense' means any of the following, and includes any attempt 
or conspiracy to commit any of the following:
            ``(1) Rape.
            ``(2) Sexual assault.
            ``(3) Domestic violence.
            ``(4) Domestic abuse or spousal abuse.
            ``(5) Production, possession, sale, or distribution of 
        child sex abuse materials or child pornography.
            ``(6) Child abuse and neglect.
            ``(7) Sexual abuse or aggravated sexual abuse.
            ``(8) Child sexual abuse.
            ``(9) Forcible sodomy.
            ``(10) Murder or manslaughter committed before, during, or 
        after a sex offense.
            ``(11) Incest.
            ``(12) Burglary with intent to commit a sex offense.
            ``(13) Voyeurism or video voyeurism.
            ``(14) Solicitation of a minor to engage in sexual conduct.
            ``(15) Solicitation of a minor to engage in or practice 
        prostitution.
            ``(16) Endangering the welfare of a child.
            ``(17) Sexual exploitation of a minor.
            ``(18) Nonconsensual distribution of intimate images.
            ``(19) Sex trafficking.
    ``(e) Covered Office Defined.--In this section, the term `covered 
office' means any of the following:
            ``(1) The attorney general's office or substantively 
        similar office of a State, Territory, or tribal jurisdiction.
            ``(2) The office of a subdivision of a State, territory, or 
        Tribal jurisdiction responsible for prosecution, including a 
        district attorney's office, state's attorney office, county 
        attorney's office, city attorney's office or solicitor's 
        office.
    ``(f) Penalties for Noncompliance.--Beginning in the first fiscal 
year after the effective date of this section, the following shall 
apply:
            ``(1) If the chief executive of a covered office required 
        to submit a report under this section fails to submit the 
        required report, the Attorney General shall withhold not less 
        than 25 percent and not more than 50 percent of funds otherwise 
        allocable to that office under this part for the following 
        fiscal year.
            ``(2) If the Attorney General determines that a covered 
        office has declined to prosecute more than one-half of the 
        total number of cases referred to it for prosecution of a 
        covered offense during the preceding fiscal year, the Attorney 
        General may--
                    ``(A) require that office to submit a corrective 
                action plan addressing prosecutorial practices and 
                criteria for case declinations;
                    ``(B) condition continued grants under this part on 
                implementation of the corrective plan; and
                    ``(C) in cases of repeated noncompliance or failure 
                to implement such a plan, reduce or suspend future 
                grant eligibility for that office for a period not to 
                exceed two fiscal years.''.
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