The Justice Department plans to distribute up to $3.5 billion in new law enforcement grants while simultaneously cutting millions from victim services and crime prevention programs, according to sources with direct knowledge of the plans. The money will fund immigration detention facilities, police surveillance equipment, and local prosecutors who will serve as temporary federal attorneys investigating public benefits fraud.
Victim Programs Face Shutdown Crisis
Organizations serving crime victims and at-risk youth are struggling to survive after unprecedented grant terminations and delays. Claire Selib, executive director of the National Organization for Victim Advocacy, reported that programs are shutting down and laying off staff after the Justice Department canceled one of her organization’s grants. Three additional applications have been stalled for six months. The department gave affected grantees 30 days to appeal the cuts, but one year later, many organizations still await responses.
🚨 BREAKING: DOJ to funnel $3.5B into immigration enforcement grants, reversing last year's cuts. Cui bono? 🤔
Is this a cynical ploy to federalize law enforcement under the guise of immigration, or simply responsible resource allocation? 👇#Immigration #DOJ #Grants… pic.twitter.com/OkukQQyLIj
— C247 (@C247news) April 22, 2026
The Justice Department posted a $300 million solicitation on Tuesday to fund local prosecutors investigating fraud by people living in the country illegally. Additional grant solicitations, most not yet public, will support the new National Fraud Enforcement Division. Department officials stated they are working to ensure taxpayer funds support initiatives to Make America Safe Again, with all discretionary funds not aligned with this mission subject to review and reallocation.
Congressional Programs Face Major Delays
More than an entire fiscal year passed without the Office of Justice Programs soliciting applications for many congressionally mandated funding opportunities. The popular Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant, which helps fund local police departments, did not begin accepting fiscal 2025 applications until March 13, 2026. The National Institute of Justice, which funds criminal justice research, has solicited only three grants since President Trump took office. Grants for human trafficking victim assistance were solicited in December but remain unawarded.
What This Means
The grant program overhaul reflects a significant shift in Justice Department priorities toward immigration enforcement and fraud investigation. Sources attribute the delays to decreased DOJ staffing and an executive order requiring additional review layers by political officials before grants can be solicited and awarded. The department maintains all grant money and programs are being utilized consistent with parameters set by Congress, with funds directed to organizations aligned with administration goals. Criminal justice research facilities, juvenile justice programs, and substance abuse initiatives face uncertain futures as the Justice Department reallocates resources.
