[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 28, Volume 2]
[Revised as of July 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 28CFR50.22]

[Page 75-77]
 
                    TITLE 28--JUDICIAL ADMINISTRATION
 
              CHAPTER I--DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE (Continued)
 
PART 50--STATEMENTS OF POLICY--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 50.22  Young American Medals Program.

    (a) Scope. There are hereby established two medals, one to be known 
as the Young American Medal for Bravery and the other to be known as the 
Young American Medal for Service.
    (b) Young American Medal for Bravery. (1)(i) The Young American 
Medal for Bravery may be awarded to a person--
    (A) Who during a given calendar year has exhibited exceptional 
courage, attended by extraordinary decisiveness, presence of mind, and 
unusual swiftness of action, regardless of his or her own personal 
safety, in an effort to save or in saving the life of any person or 
persons in actual imminent danger;
    (B) Who was eighteen years of age or younger at the time of the 
occurrence; and
    (C) Who habitually resides in the United States (including its 
territories and possessions), but need not be a citizen thereof.
    (ii) These conditions must be met at the time of the event.
    (2) The act of bravery must have been public in nature and must have 
been acknowledged by the Governor, Chief Executive Officer of a State, 
county, municipality, or other political subdivision, or by a civic, 
educational, or religious institution, group, or society.
    (3) No more than two such medals may be awarded in any one calendar 
year.
    (c) Young American Medal for Service. (1) The Young American Medal 
for Service may be awarded to any citizen of the United States eighteen 
years of age or younger at the time of the occurrence, who has achieved 
outstanding or unusual recognition for character and service during a 
given calendar year.
    (2) Character attained and service accomplished by a candidate for 
this medal must have been such as to make

[[Page 76]]

his or her achievement worthy of public report. The outstanding and 
unusual recognition of the candidate's character and service must have 
been public in nature and must have been acknowledged by the Governor, 
Chief Executive Officer of a State, county, municipality, or other 
political subdivision, or by a civic, educational, or religious 
institution, group, or society.
    (3) The recognition of the character and service upon which the 
award of the Medal for Service is based must have been accorded 
separately and apart from the Young American Medals program and must not 
have been accorded for the specific and announced purpose of rendering a 
candidate eligible, or of adding to a candidate's qualifications, for 
the award of the Young American Medal for Service.
    (4) No more than two such medals may be awarded in any one calendar 
year.
    (d) Eligibility. (1) The act or acts of bravery and the recognition 
for character and service that make a candidate eligible for the 
respective medals must have occurred during the calendar year for which 
the award is made.
    (2) A candidate may be eligible for both medals in the same year. 
Moreover, the receipt of either medal in any year will not affect a 
candidate's eligibility for the award of either or both of the medals in 
a succeeding year.
    (3) Acts of bravery performed and recognition of character and 
service achieved by persons serving in the Armed Forces, which arise 
from or out of military duties, shall not make a candidate eligible for 
either of the medals, provided, however, that a person serving in the 
Armed Forces shall be eligible to receive either or both of the medals 
if the act of bravery performed or the recognition for character and 
service achieved is on account of acts and service performed or rendered 
outside of and apart from military duties.
    (e) Request for information. (1) A recommendation in favor of a 
candidate for the award of a Young American Medal for Bravery or for 
Service must be accompanied by:
    (i) A full and complete statement of the candidate's act or acts of 
bravery or recognized character and service (including the times and 
places) that supports qualification of the candidate to receive the 
appropriate medal;
    (ii) Statements by witnesses or persons having personal knowledge of 
the facts surrounding the candidate's act or acts of bravery or 
recognized character and service, as required by the respective medals;
    (iii) A certified copy of the candidate's birth certificate, or, if 
no birth certificate is available, other authentic evidence of the date 
and place of the candidate's birth; and
    (iv) A biographical sketch of the candidate, including information 
as to his or her citizenship or habitual residence, as may be required 
by the respective medals.
    (f) Procedure. (1)(i) All recommendations and accompanying documents 
and papers should be submitted to the Governor or Chief Executive 
Officer of the State, territory, or possession of the United States 
where the candidate's act or acts of bravery or recognized character and 
service were demonstrated. In the case of the District of Columbia, the 
recommendations should be submitted to the Mayor of the District of 
Columbia.
    (ii) If the act or acts of bravery or recognized character and 
service did not occur within the boundaries of any State, territory, or 
possession of the United States, the papers should be submitted to the 
Governor or Chief Executive Officer of the territory or other possession 
of the United States wherein the candidate habitually maintains his or 
her residence.
    (2) The Governor or Chief Executive Officer, after considering the 
various recommendations received after the close of the pertinent 
calendar year, may nominate therefrom no more than two candidates for 
the Young American Medal for Bravery and no more than two candidates for 
the Young American Medal for Service. Nominated individuals should have, 
in the opinion of the appropriate official, shown by the facts and 
circumstances to be the most worthy and qualified candidates from the 
jurisdiction to receive consideration for awards of the above-named 
medals.

[[Page 77]]

    (3) Nominations of candidates for either medal must be submitted no 
later than 120 days after notification that the Department of Justice is 
seeking nominations under this program for a specific calendar year. 
Each nomination must contain the necessary documentation establishing 
eligibility, must be submitted by the Governor or Chief Executive 
Officer, together with any comments, and should be submitted to the 
address published in the notice.
    (4) Nominations of candidates for medals will be considered only 
when received from the Governor or Chief Executive Officer of a State, 
territory, or possession of the United States.
    (5) The Young American Medals Committee will select, from 
nominations properly submitted, those candidates who are shown by the 
facts and circumstances to be eligible for the award of the medals. The 
Committee shall make recommendations to the Attorney General based on 
its evaluation of the nominees. Upon consideration of these 
recommendations, the Attorney General may select up to the maximum 
allowable recipients for each medal for the calendar year.
    (g) Presentation. (1) The Young American Medal for Bravery and the 
Young American Medal for Service will be presented personally by the 
President of the United States to the candidates selected. These medals 
will be presented in the name of the President and the Congress of the 
United States. Presentation ceremonies shall be held at such times and 
places selected by the President in consultation with the Attorney 
General.
    (2) The Young American Medals Committee will officially designate 
two adults (preferably the parents of the candidate) to accompany each 
candidate selected to the presentation ceremonies. The candidates and 
persons designated to accompany them will be furnished transportation 
and other appropriate allowances.
    (3) There shall be presented to each recipient an appropriate 
Certificate of Commendation stating the circumstances under which the 
act of bravery was performed or describing the outstanding recognition 
for character and service, as appropriate for the medal awarded. The 
Certificate will bear the signature of the President of the United 
States and the Attorney General of the United States.
    (4) There also shall be presented to each recipient of a medal, a 
miniature replica of the medal awarded in the form of a lapel pin.
    (h) Posthumous awards. In cases where a medal is awarded 
posthumously, the Young American Medals Committee will designate the 
father or mother of the deceased or other suitable person to receive the 
medal on behalf of the deceased. The decision of the Young American 
Medals Committee in designating the person to receive the posthumously 
awarded medal, on behalf of the deceased, shall be final.
    (i) Young American Medals Committee. The Young American Medals 
Committee shall be represented by the following:
    (1) Director of the FBI, Chairman;
    (2) Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration, Member;
    (3) Director of the U.S. Marshals Service, Member; and
    (4) Assistant Attorney General, Office of Justice Programs, Member 
and Executive Secretary.

(Authority: The United States Department of Justice is authorized under 
42 U.S.C. 1921 et seq. to promulgate rules and regulations establishing 
medals, one for bravery and one for service. This authority was enacted 
by chapter 520 of Pub. L. 81-638 (August 3, 1950).)

[61 FR 49260, Sept. 19, 1996]