Judges: Robert A. Butterworth Attorney General
Filed Date: 4/28/1999
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Mr. Robert J. Antonello Winter Haven City Attorney Post Office Box 7692 Winter Haven, Florida 33883-7692
Dear Mr. Antonello:
On behalf of the Winter Haven City Commission, you ask substantially the following question:
May a municipal law enforcement agency enter into a mutual aid agreement that permits a municipal police officer to exercise authority as a sworn law enforcement officer by making arrests and conducting searches and seizures while in another participating agency's jurisdiction?
In sum:
Municipal law enforcement agencies may enter into a mutual aid agreement that permits a municipal police officer to exercise authority as a sworn law enforcement officer by making arrests and conducting searches and seizures while in another participating agency's jurisdiction.
The powers of a municipality, including its police powers, generally cease at the municipal boundaries and cannot, absent statutory authorization, be exercised outside the city's limits.1 Thus, in the absence of statutory authorization, a municipal police officer has no power or authority to act as a police officer in any part of the state outside the corporate limits of the city in which the officer is employed, and any such action by the officer would be subject to review as if it were the action of a private citizen.2
Part I, Chapter
Section
"(a) A voluntary cooperation written agreement between two or more law enforcement agencies, or between one or more law enforcement agencies and either a school board that employs school safety officers or a state university that employs or appoints university police officers in accordance with s. 240.268, which agreement permits voluntary cooperation and assistance of a routine lawenforcement nature across jurisdictional lines. The agreement must specify the nature of the law enforcement assistance to be rendered, the agency or entity that shall bear any liability arising from acts undertaken under the agreement, the procedures for requesting and for authorizing assistance, the agency or entity that has command and supervisory responsibility, a time limit for the agreement, the amount of any compensation or reimbursement to the assisting agency or entity, and any other terms and conditions necessary to give it effect. Examples of law enforcement activities that may be addressed in a voluntary cooperation written agreement include establishing a joint city-county task force on narcotics smuggling or authorizing school safety officers to enforce laws in an area within 1,000 feet of a school or school board property.
(b) A requested operational assistance written agreement between two or more law enforcement agencies, or between one or more law enforcement agencies and either a school board that employs school safety officers or a state university that employs or appoints university police officers in accordance with s. 240.268, which agreement is for the rendering of assistance in a law enforcement emergency. The agreement must specify the nature of the law enforcement assistance to be rendered, the agency or entity that shall bear any liability arising from acts undertaken under the agreement, the procedures for requesting and for authorizing assistance, the agency or entity that has command and supervisory responsibility, a time limit for the agreement, the amount of any compensation or reimbursement to the assisting agency or entity, and any other terms and conditions necessary to give it effect. An example of the use of a requested operational assistance written agreement is to meet a request for assistance due to a civil disturbance or other emergency as defined in
(c) A combination of the agreements described in paragraphs (a) and (b)." (e.s.)
This office has stated that the use of a mutual aid agreement does not contemplate a complete assumption of law enforcement services by an assisting law enforcement agency but is more limited in scope.5 As recognized by the act itself, the use of mutual aid agreements should more appropriately be confined to specific law enforcement activities in which two or more law enforcement agencies jointly provide assistance to each other.
In Attorney General Opinion 97-45, this office considered a proposed mutual aid agreement that sought to establish cooperation and assistance of a primarily routine law enforcement nature across jurisdictional lines as provided in section
As in the mutual aid agreement considered in Attorney General Opinion 97-45, the language of your proposed mutual aid agreement provides for relinquishment of the scene and person arrested to an officer from the agency having jurisdiction. While the agreement applies not only to felonies but to misdemeanors involving breach of the peace, DUIs and reckless driving as well, the inclusion of these offenses would not, in my opinion, remove the agreement from the parameters of Part I, Chapter
The other two provisions in question authorize a law enforcement officer conducting an investigation within his jurisdiction to make an arrest or conduct searches and seizures related to the investigation in a cooperating agency's jurisdiction, provided that notice of the officer's intention is given to the on-duty communications supervisor for the cooperating agency in sufficient time to allow the cooperating agency to participate unless exigent circumstances exist. In that event, notice must be given immediately thereafter.
Section
Accordingly, in light of the above, I am of the view that a municipal law enforcement agency may enter into a mutual aid agreement that permits a municipal police officer to exercise authority as a sworn law enforcement officer by making arrests and conducting searches and seizures while in another participating agency's jurisdiction.
Sincerely,
Robert A. Butterworth Attorney General
RAB/tjw
"Because of the existing and continuing possibility of the occurrence of natural or manmade disasters or emergencies and other major law enforcement problems, including those that cross jurisdictional lines, and in order to ensure that preparations of this state will be adequate to deal with such activity, protect the public peace and safety, and preserve the lives and property of the people of the state[.]"