S-2330-116
Became Public Law No: 116-189.
Sponsored by Jerry Moran (R-KS)
What it does
This law creates new safeguards for amateur athletes in U.S. Olympic and Paralympic sports. It requires the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC) to immediately report any allegation of child abuse involving a minor athlete to law enforcement, and prohibits the USOPC and national governing bodies from interfering in abuse investigations. It also gives Congress the power to dissolve the USOPC Board of Directors and decertify national governing bodies, establishes an independent oversight commission, strengthens the Office of the Ombuds, and protects athletes, coaches, and trainers from retaliation for reporting sexual abuse or harassment.
Who benefits
Amateur athletes — especially minors — competing in Olympic and Paralympic sports who are at risk of abuse by coaches or officials. Athletes who previously faced retaliation for reporting abuse gain legal protections. The Athletes' Advisory Council gives competitors a formal voice in governance. Whistleblowers (coaches, trainers, staff) who report misconduct are shielded from retaliation. The general public benefits from greater transparency and accountability in federally chartered sports organizations.
Who is hurt
USOPC leadership and national governing body officials face new oversight, reduced autonomy, and the possibility of removal or decertification by Congress. Coaches or staff accused of abuse face mandatory law enforcement reporting with no organizational buffer. Organizations that previously handled abuse allegations internally lose that discretion. Legal and administrative compliance costs would fall on the USOPC and its affiliated governing bodies.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the systemic sexual abuse scandals in U.S. Olympic sports — most visibly in gymnastics — exposed a catastrophic failure of self-regulation by the USOPC and national governing bodies. They contend that athletes, particularly minors, were repeatedly failed when organizations prioritized institutional reputation over athlete safety. This law closes those gaps by mandating immediate law enforcement reporting, stripping organizations of the ability to manage or suppress abuse allegations internally, and giving Congress direct tools to remove leadership that fails to act. Supporters also argue that anti-retaliation protections are essential to encourage victims and witnesses to come forward without fear of losing their athletic careers, and that the independent oversight commission provides the long-term accountability that voluntary reform has failed to deliver.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that while athlete safety is a shared goal, the law's congressional power to dissolve the USOPC Board and decertify governing bodies raises separation-of-powers concerns, as it inserts the legislative branch directly into the management of private, federally chartered organizations. They contend that mandatory 72-hour reporting requirements and rigid procedural mandates may create bureaucratic burdens that slow investigations rather than improve them, and that one-size-fits-all federal rules may not account for the diverse structures of different national governing bodies. Some also argue that the existing U.S. Center for SafeSport, already established for this purpose, should have been given more resources and time to work before layering on additional federal mandates, and that the threat of congressional dissolution could politicize governance decisions that should remain independent of legislative pressure.