Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 117.djvu/83

 117 STAT. 64

PUBLIC LAW 108–7—FEB. 20, 2003 Of the amounts provided: (1) for Public Safety and Community Policing Grants pursuant to title I of the 1994 Act, $353,238,000 as follows: $200,000,000 for the hiring of law enforcement officers including school resource officers to prevent acts of terrorism and other violent and drug-related crimes, of which up to 30 percent shall be available for overtime expenses; $20,622,000 for training and technical assistance; $25,444,000 for the matching grant program for Law Enforcement Armor Vests pursuant to section 2501 of part Y of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, as amended (‘‘the 1968 Act’’); $35,000,000 to improve tribal law enforcement including equipment and training; $57,132,000 for policing initiatives to combat methamphetamine production and trafficking and to enhance policing initiatives in ‘‘drug hot spots’’; and $15,000,000 for Police Corps education, training, and service under sections 200101–200113 of the 1994 Act: Provided, That funding agreements shall include the funding for the outyear program costs of new recruits; (2) for crime technology, $400,567,000 as follows: $189,954,000 for a law enforcement technology program; $20,000,000 for the COPS Interoperable Communications Technology Program; $40,000,000 for grants to upgrade criminal records, as authorized under the Crime Identification Technology Act of 1998 (42 U.S.C. 14601); $41,000,000 for DNA analysis and backlog reduction of which $36,000,000 shall be used as authorized by the DNA Analysis Backlog Elimination Act of 2000 (Public Law 106–546) and of which $5,000,000 shall be available for Paul Coverdell Forensic Sciences Improvement Grants under part BB of title I of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 (42 U.S.C. 3797j et seq.); $40,538,000 for State and local DNA laboratories as authorized by section 1001(a)(22) of the 1968 Act, and improvements to laboratory general forensic science capacity and capabilities; and $69,075,000 for grants, contracts and other assistance to States under section 102(b) of the Crime Identification Technology Act of 1998 (42 U.S.C. 14601), of which $17,000,000 is for the National Institute of Justice for grants, contracts, and other agreements to develop school safety technologies and training; (3) for prosecution assistance, $85,000,000 as follows: $45,000,000 for a national program to reduce gun violence, and $40,000,000 for the Southwest Border Prosecutor Initiative to reimburse State, county, parish, tribal, or municipal governments only for Federal costs associated with the prosecution of criminal cases declined by local United States Attorneys offices; (4) for grants, training, technical assistance, and other expenses to support community crime prevention efforts, $57,107,000 as follows: $10,000,000 for Project Sentry; $14,934,000 for an offender re-entry program; $15,210,000 for the Safe Schools Initiative; and $16,963,000 for a police integrity program; and (5) not to exceed $33,000,000 for program management and administration.

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