S-4003-117
Became Public Law No: 117-325.
Sponsored by John Cornyn (R-TX)
What it does
This law directs the Department of Justice (DOJ) to develop or identify existing scenario-based training programs for law enforcement officers. The training would cover alternatives to use of force, de-escalation tactics, and how to respond to people experiencing mental health, behavioral health, or suicidal crises. The DOJ would also award grants to states to help cover the costs of delivering this training to law enforcement officers and mental health professionals.
Who benefits
Law enforcement agencies that receive grant funding to offset training costs. Mental health professionals who gain access to federally developed training curricula. Members of the public — particularly individuals experiencing mental health, behavioral health, or suicidal crises — who may encounter officers trained in de-escalation. State and local governments that would receive federal dollars to fund training programs they might otherwise have to fund independently.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who fund the federal grants. Law enforcement agencies that may face administrative burdens in applying for grants or implementing new training requirements. Officers who must dedicate time to additional training, potentially reducing availability for other duties. States or localities that do not receive grants but feel pressure to adopt similar programs using their own budgets.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that equipping officers with scenario-based de-escalation training would reduce the frequency and severity of use-of-force incidents, particularly in encounters involving individuals in mental health crises — a population that is disproportionately represented in such incidents. They contend that many law enforcement agencies, especially smaller or rural departments, lack the resources to develop or purchase quality training on their own, and that federal grants would close that gap. Supporters also point out that the bill does not mandate any specific outcome or impose federal control over local policing decisions; it simply makes tools and funding available. By including mental health professionals in the training, the law also encourages a collaborative, multi-disciplinary approach to crisis response that many jurisdictions have already found effective at the local level.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that training program development and law enforcement standards are traditionally state and local responsibilities, and that federal involvement — even through voluntary grants — can gradually shift control over local policing toward Washington. They contend that the effectiveness of de-escalation training in reducing use-of-force incidents is not yet conclusively established by research, meaning federal dollars could be spent on programs with uncertain outcomes. Critics also raise concerns that officers trained to prioritize de-escalation in all situations could hesitate in genuinely dangerous encounters, potentially putting themselves or the public at greater risk. Finally, opponents may argue that the grant structure creates dependency on federal funding, leaving agencies vulnerable if appropriations are reduced or conditions attached to grants change in future years.