Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 98 Part 2.djvu/400

 98 STAT. 1560

Report.

Audit. Report. 28 USC 533 note.

28 USC 533 note.

PUBLIC LAW 98-411—AUG. 30, 1984

by the Director, the Assistant Director, Intelligence Division) and the Attorney General (or, if designated by the Attorney General, the Counsel for Intelligence Policy). Such certification shall continue in effect for the duration of such undercover operation, without regard to fiscal years. (2) As soon as the proceeds from an undercover investigative operation with respect to which an action is authorized and carried out under subparagraphs (C) and (D) of subsection (a) are no longer necessary for the conduct of such operation, such proceeds or the balance of such proceeds remaining at the time shall be deposited in the Treasury of the United States as miscellaneous receipts. (3) If a corporation or business entity established or acquired as part of an undercover operation under subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) with a net value of over $50,000 is to be liquidated, sold, or otherwise disposed of, the Federal Bureau of Investigation or the Drug Enforcement Administration, as much in advance as the Director or the Adminstrator, or the designee of the Director or the Adminstrator, determines is practicable, shall report the circumstances to the Attorney General and the Comptroller General. The proceeds of the liquidation, sale, or other disposition, after obligations are met, shall be deposited in the Treasury of the United States as miscellaneous receipts. (4KA) The Federal Bureau of Investigation or the Drug Enforcement Administration, as the case may be, shall conduct a detailed financial audit of each undercover investigative operation which is closed in fiscal year 1985, (i) submit the results of such audit in writing to the Attorney General, and (ii) not later than 180 days after such undercover operation is closed, submit a report to the Congress concerning such audit. (B) The Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Drug Enforcement Administration shall each also submit a report annually to the Congress specifying as to their respective undercover investigative operations— (i) the number, by programs, of undercover investigative operations pending as of the end of the one-year period for which such report is submitted, (ii) the number, by programs, of undercover investigative operations commenced in the one-year period preceding the period for which such report is s u b m i t t ^, and (iii) the number, by programs, of undercover investigative operations closed in the one-year period preceding the period for which such report is submitted and, with respect to each such closed undercover operation, the results obtained. With respect to each such closed undercover operation which involves any of the sensitive circumstances specified in the Attorney General's Guidelines on Federal Bureau of Investigation Undercover Operations, such report shall contain a detailed description of the operation and related matters, including information pertaining to— (I) the results, (II) any civil claims, and (III) identification of such sensitive circumstances involved, that arose at any time during the course of such undercover operation. (5) For purposes of paragraph (4)— .

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