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Public Safety Officer Medal of Valor

Public Safety Officer Medal of Valor
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Awarded by the President of the United States
Type Medal
Eligibility
Awarded for "Actions above and beyond the call of duty; and exhibiting exceptional courage, extraordinary decisiveness and presence of mind; or an unusual swiftness of action, regardless of his or her personal safety, in an attempt to save or protect human life."
Status Active
Statistics
Established , June 29, 2000
First awarded 2001
Total awarded 70
Posthumous
awards
9
Distinct
recipients
108
Precedence
Next (higher) Presidential Citizens Medal
Next (lower) President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service
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The Public Safety Officer Medal of Valor is the highest decoration for bravery exhibited by public safety officers in the United States, comparable to the military's Medal of Honor.

The original Medal of Valor was established on June 29, 2000 by President Bill Clinton with his issuance of Executive Order and was originally called the Presidential Medal of Valor for Public Safety Officers.

This award was later superseded to its current form with the enactment of the Public Safety Officer Medal of Valor Act of 2001 (Pub.L. 107–12, 115 Stat. 20, H.R. 802, May 30, 2001). It is still awarded and presented by the President of the United States but now it is done in the name of the United States Congress as recommended by the eleven-member Medal of Valor Review Board. The Attorney General no longer makes recommendations directly to the President but can provide input into the process via the Department of Justice's National Medal of Valor Office's support of the Review Board. The medal can still be awarded posthumously.

Before the establishment of the Medal of Valor, there were no Federal awards to specifically acknowledge the bravery performed by public safety officers throughout the United States; police and firefighting departments typically award their members medals at a state or local government level. The establishment of the Medal of Valor filled a huge void in the civilian decorations system of the United States, which was all the more timely given the catastrophe in New York three-and-a-half months later on September 11, 2001. (In the end, however, the 442 public safety officers killed at World Trade Center and The Pentagon that day were awarded the 9/11 Heroes Medal of Valor, a similar but separate award.)


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