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S 4094ReferredFederalsenate

Corruption Clawback Act

Introduced March 12, 2026Last action March 12, 2026
View official bill

Legislative Progress

Introduced
Referred
Committee
Floor Vote
Passed Chamber
Passed Both
Enrolled
Signed

Plain English Summary

AI-generated

Summary: Corruption Clawback Act

Based on the bill's title and standard legislative patterns for similarly named legislation, the Corruption Clawback Act appears to be a measure designed to allow the government to recover money or assets from public officials or others who engaged in corrupt activities. "Clawback" is a term that refers to taking back funds that were improperly obtained or that someone is no longer entitled to keep. Bills with this type of name typically aim to ensure that people who benefit financially from corruption cannot keep those gains.

This kind of legislation would most directly affect government officials, contractors, or others who are found to have engaged in bribery, fraud, or other corrupt conduct involving public funds or positions of trust. If passed, it could allow federal authorities to pursue and recover financial benefits — such as salaries, bonuses, contracts, or other payments — that resulted from or were obtained through corrupt behavior.

It is important to note that no official description was provided for this bill, so a fully detailed summary is not possible at this time. The bill has been introduced in the Senate and referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee, which is the standard early step in the legislative process. It has not yet been debated, amended, or voted on. Readers are encouraged to look up the full bill text through Congress.gov for complete and accurate details once available.

This summary is AI-generated for informational purposes. Always refer to the official bill text for legal accuracy.

Latest Action

Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.

March 12, 2026

Sponsor

S
Sen. Schiff, Adam B. [D-CA]DCA

Committees

the Judiciary

Legislative History

Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.

Mar 12, 2026

Introduced in Senate

Mar 12, 2026