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Bill

HR 7494

Preventing Domestic Violence Homicides Through Lethality Assessment Training and Technical Assistance Act

119th Congress Introduced by April McClain Delaney and 6 co-sponsors

Bill funds a national training center to help police and agencies adopt domestic violence risk assessment programs aimed at preventing homicides.

Introduced in House
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Bill Summary · HR 7494

Legislative bill overview

HR 7494 authorizes the Attorney General to award grants for establishing a national training and technical assistance center focused on promoting and implementing lethality assessment programs (LAPs). These programs are designed to identify domestic violence situations at highest risk of becoming homicides and intervene accordingly. The bill supports ongoing adoption of these evidence-based risk assessment tools across jurisdictions.

Why is this important

Domestic violence homicides represent a significant portion of overall homicides in the United States, with research suggesting that lethality assessment tools can help identify high-risk cases before they become fatal. By centralizing training and technical support, the bill aims to standardize these programs nationally and improve their effectiveness across law enforcement and victim services agencies. This could potentially save lives while reducing the burden on individual communities to develop these systems independently.

Potential points of contention

  • Effectiveness debate: While some research supports LAPs, critics question whether risk assessment tools reliably predict homicides or may create false confidence in prevention, and whether grant funding addresses root causes like gun access or socioeconomic factors
  • Implementation variation: Creating a "national" center risks inconsistent application across states with different legal frameworks, law enforcement capacities, and victim service infrastructures
  • Scope and funding: The bill's vague "and for other purposes" language leaves unclear what additional activities the center would undertake, and the funding level is not specified, raising questions about adequacy relative to need

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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