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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
The
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President’s 2009 Budget will:
Counter the threat of terrorism;
Enable Federal law enforcement to arrest and prosecute Federal criminals;
Support State and local law enforcement efforts to combat violent crime in America’s
communities;
• Fight criminal activity along the U.S. Southwest border; and
• Support essential Federal detention and incarceration programs.

Countering the Threat of Terrorism
• Bolsters the national security functions of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). $7.1 billion
for the FBI, including $361 million in enhancements that will support FBI’s intelligence and
counterterrorism programs, improve surveillance capabilities, bolster response to weapons of
mass destruction, and protect the security of the Nation’s cyber systems.
• Strengthens the Department’s National Security Division (NSD). $84 million in total resources
for NSD, to support intelligence operations to combat terrorism and other threats to national
security.

Arresting and Prosecuting Federal Criminals
• Combats identity theft and financial fraud. $178 million for the FBI’s financial crime investigations, which have aided in strengthening cases leading to arrest and prosecution by the U.S.
Attorneys. In 2007, the U.S. Attorneys charged 2,470 defendants under identify theft statutes
and charged 8,566 defendants for white collar fraud, including bank fraud and embezzlement,
as well as corporate, consumer, bankruptcy, securities, tax, commodities and other fraud.
• Continues the fight against obscenity and child pornography. $40 million for the FBI to investigate sexual predators that will lead to prosecution and conviction. The $36 million provided in
2007 for FBI investigations of sexual predators enabled the U.S. Attorneys under the Attorney
General’s Project Safe Childhood Initiative to charge 2,218 defendants that year.
• Reduces procurement fraud and tax crimes. $47 million for investigating and prosecuting
promoters of tax, procurement, and other corporate fraud.

Supporting State and Local Law Enforcement
• Funds the Violent Crime Reduction Partnership Initiative. $200 million targeted to support
community-driven responses to increases in violent crime.
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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE

• Reforms the Byrne Public Safety and Protection Program. $200 million for State and local criminal justice needs, including Project Safe Neighborhoods, the DNA Initiative, Prisoner Re-entry,
and other priorities, to be funded through competitive grants.

Fighting Criminal Activity on the U.S. Southwest Border
• Creates the Southwest Border Enforcement Initiative. $100 million in new resources to strategically focus Department of Justice law enforcement and prosecutorial efforts on the U.S. Southwest border to combat violent crime, gun smuggling, and illicit drug trafficking.
• Continues the fight against illegal drugs. $2.2 billion for the Drug Enforcement Administration
(DEA) and $532 million for the Organized Crime and Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF)
program. Together, DEA and OCDETF fight the spread of illegal drugs and seek to dismantle
and disrupt major drug trafficking organizations.

Supporting Essential Federal Detention and Incarceration Programs
• Funds Federal detention and incarceration programs. $5.5 billion for the Bureau
of Prisons and $1.3 billion for the Office
of the Federal Detention Trustee (OFDT),
to ensure that Federal criminals and
those awaiting trial or sentencing are
safely and cost-effectively incarcerated
and detained.
• Expands detention capacity. $50 million
in new resources to increase the number
of contract prison beds and $38 million to
strengthen OFDT’s detention resources
along the Southwest border.

Major Savings and Reforms

Source: Carol Rodgers, Training Coordinator

Firearms training at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center.

• More than 70 State and local law enforcement assistance programs representing over $2 billion in spending are proposed for consolidation into four flexible and competitive grants. This will eliminate earmarks and formulas and
improve the ability of States, localities, and Tribes to respond to increases in violent crime by
better targeting funds to key criminal justice priorities, including:
¡ $200 million, Violent Crime Reduction Partnership;
¡ $200 million, Byrne Public Safety and Protection Program;
¡ $280 million, Violence Against Women Program; and
¡ $185 million, Child Safety and Juvenile Justice Program.

Since 2001, the Department of Justice has:
• Transformed the FBI to improve the Nation’s ability to prevent and combat terrorism.
• Made more than $3 billion in investments in critical crime-fighting initiatives, including Project
Safe Neighborhoods and the DNA Initiative, helping communities address violent crime.
• Provided more than $16 billion to DEA and OCDETF, leading to the disruption or dismantlement
of over 5,000 major drug trafficking organizations.

THE BUDGET FOR FISCAL YEAR 2009

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Department of Justice
(In millions of dollars)
2007
Actual

Estimate
2008

2009

Spending
Discretionary Budget Authority:
Federal Bureau of Investigation ......................................................................

6,040

6,514

7,108

Drug Enforcement Administration ..................................................................
Federal Prison System .......................................................................................
United States Marshals Service ......................................................................

1,761
5,427
819

1,856
5,425
851

1,937
5,534
933

Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives .........................
Detention Trustee .................................................................................................
United States Attorneys .....................................................................................
General Legal Activities .....................................................................................
National Security Division..................................................................................
Office of Justice Programs, COPS, Office on Violence Against
Women .................................................................................................................
Organized Crime and Drug Enforcement Task Force .............................
All other ....................................................................................................................
Subtotal, Discretionary budget authority ..........................................................
Less Crime Victims’ Fund cancellation.........................................................
Total, Discretionary budget authority .................................................................
Memorandum:
Budget authority from enacted supplementals .........................................
Additional funding requirements ....................................................................

984
1,226
1,656
677
67

1,008
1,081
1,748
736
73

1,028
1,295
1,831
804
84

2,687
497
778
22,619
—
22,619

2,314
497
587
22,690
—
22,690

813
532
392
22,291
2,024
20,267

356
—

286
146

—
—

Total, Discretionary outlays ...................................................................................

22,335

23,019

23,426

Total, Mandatory outlays ........................................................................................

1,135

2,112

3,199

Total, Outlays ..............................................................................................................

23,470

25,131

26,625