Judges: Robert A. Butterworth Attorney General
Filed Date: 2/14/1995
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Ms. Phyllis O. Douglas Dade County Public Schools Attorney 1450 Northeast Second Avenue Miami, Florida 33132
Dear Ms. Douglas:
On behalf of the School Board of Dade County, you ask substantially the following questions:
1. May the school board amend its rules to expand special school security officers' powers of arrest for violations of law that do not occur on school property but which are perpetrated by students or are related to the immediate protection and safety of students, personnel, and school property?
2. May the special school security officers participate in mutual aid agreements, thereby making arrests and performing other police duties off school premises and unrelated to school activities?
In sum:
1. Absent statutory authority, the School Board of Dade County may not expand the arrest powers of its special security officers for violations of law that do not occur on school property. The special security officers, however, may be appointed by the sheriff as deputies if they do not receive remuneration for serving in such capacity and they may exercise their common law right to make an arrest outside their jurisdiction under certain circumstances.
2. The School Board of Dade County is not a law enforcement agency that may enter into mutual aid agreements whereby the board's special security officers may make arrests and perform other duties off school premises and unrelated to school activities.
Question One
The Dade County School Board was authorized by Chapter 70-519, Laws of Florida, to commission one or more special officers for the protection and safety of school personnel, property and students within the school district. The act sets forth the powers to be exercised by the special officers as follows:
The special officer shall have and exercise, throughout the county in which he is employed, the power to make arrests for violations of law on the property of the district school board, and to arrest persons whether on or off such property who violate any law on such property under the same conditions which deputy sheriffs may, by law, make arrests, and shall have authority to carry weapons while in the performance of his official duties.
Thus, the special officers appointed pursuant to the act have been given arrest powers only for violations of law on district school board property. While the officers may exercise such arrest powers throughout the county in which they are employed, they are limited to arresting persons who have committed the violations of law on school board property.
The special act authorizing the appointment of the special officers was repealed by Chapter 71-29, Laws of Florida. Section 3(4), Chapter 71-29, Laws of Florida, however, provided that the repealed chapters "affecting a particular school district or school districts shall become a valid regulation of that school district, subject to modification or repeal as are other regulations." You have provided a copy of the rules adopted by the school board that set forth the arrest powers of the special officers as reflected in the repealed special act.
Generally, a law enforcement officer's powers are limited to the jurisdictional boundaries of the law enforcement agency employing the officer, unless legislatively authorized otherwise.1 In this instance, the arrest powers of the special officers for public schools was legislatively limited to be exercised for violations of law on school property. While the arrest powers of the special officers are reflected in the school board's rules, the school board has no inherent authority to expand such powers beyond that which has been legislatively authorized.2
You have not directed my attention to any statutory or constitutional grant of authority to school boards that would enable them to expand the specific arrest powers of their special officers. School boards have been given "home rule" power to "exercise any power except as expressly prohibited by the State Constitution or general law."3 This office, however, has concluded that such power must be exercised for school purposes.4
You have stated that the school board wishes to expand the school security officers' arrest powers to criminal violations on other than school property in order to ensure the safety of students, personnel and property of the school. Generally, law enforcement on non-school property is carried out by municipal police depart-ments and the county sheriff. I am unaware of any statutory or case law that supports the school board's assumption of law enforcement powers coextensive with that of the sheriff.
Under certain circumstances, however, the sheriff may appoint other law enforcement officers, such as school security officers, to be deputies. Generally a law enforcement officer in one jurisdiction may not accept employment or appointment as an officer in another jurisdiction without violating the dual officeholding prohibition in section 5(a), Article II, State Constitution. The courts, however, have recognized a limited exception to this prohibition when the officer receives no remuneration for the additional duties.5 Further, the special security officers continue to have their common law right as citizens to make arrests outside their jurisdictional territory.6
Accordingly, in the absence of legislative or constitutional provisions granting general law enforcement powers to the school district, it is my opinion that a school board may not grant arrest powers to its special officers for violations of law that do not occur on school district property. The school security officers may be appointed by the sheriff to serve as deputies, if such officers receive no remuneration for such service. They may also exercise their common law right as citizens to make arrests outside their jurisdiction.
Question Two
The "Florida Mutual Aid Act"7 (act) provides the authority for "a law enforcement agency to enter into a mutual aid agreement with another law enforcement agency of this state or any other state or with any law enforcement agency of the United States or its territories."8 The term "law enforcement agency" is not defined for purposes of the act. Definitions of this term in related statutes concerning the activities of law enforcement agencies may therefore be reviewed and read with the act to determine its meaning.9 Section
an agency of the State of Florida or a political subdivision thereof or of the United States if the primary responsibility of the agency is the prevention and detection of crime or the enforcement of the penal, traffic, or highway laws of this state and if its agents and officers are empowered by law to conduct criminal investigations and to make arrests. (e.s.)
Thus, it would appear that an agency must have, as its primary responsibility, the prevention and detection of crime before it is considered a law enforcement agency. You have not stated, nor does it appear, that the school board's primary responsibility is to prevent and detect crime.
This office has acknowledged,10 and it has been judicially determined,11 that school security officers are "law enforcement officers." Such a designation of the officers, however, does not appear to mandate finding that the school board is a law enforcement agency. In Attorney General Opinion 91-39 (1991), this office considered whether a school board's security department was a law enforcement agency entitled to share in forfeited funds or property pursuant to the "Florida Contraband Forfeiture Act" (forfeiture act), ss.
Section
Accordingly, it is my opinion that a school board is not a law enforcement agency for purposes of entering into a mutual aid agreement under Part I, Chapter
Sincerely,
Robert A. Butterworth Attorney General
RAB/tgk