JALLEN, someone can be a licensed peace officer in Texas after the required amount of training (in specific areas) as set forth by TCOLE, the governing body for Texas. Once that is done, those individuals must have their commission carried by a law enforcement agency in order to maintain their licensing, to include a certain number of hours of in service training each year. Those peace officers are normally employed by a gov't agency or subdivision....the list is in Sec 2.12 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure and it is pretty long. That said, Sec. 51.212 of the Texas Education Code authorizes the employment of peace officers at private institutions of higher learning, etc.JALLEN wrote:What is a "licensed peace officer?" Can they act as peace officers if they are not employed by a government? This seems to be a matter of authority from the government, not of the individual. Example: when I was a lawyer, I could practice law anywhere in that state regardless of any employment, by a prosecutor, law firm, or anyone. The authority was mine, not derived by virtue of being employed by an entity which had authority. A peace officer isn't an independent contractor. The authority is derivative, not individual. He can't just go to work for Walmart and arrest people as a licensed officer.baldeagle wrote:University police departments do have the power to arrest, and their detectives are licensed peace officers. Like many police departments, they also have officers who are not licensed peace officers and do not have arrest powers. UTD's Chief is the former Chief of the Richardson Police Department.JALLEN wrote:I'm sure that self interest, whatever that means, is not an argument at all.
Our culture entrusts law enforcement to government. Private police forces have no power to arrest, etc.
I am questioning whether university police departments should have the powers of peace officers. Is it a good idea? The UT case is easier than the Baylor or SMU case, I think.
http://codes.lp.findlaw.com/txstatutes/ ... 1/E/51.212
I'm not arguing for or against...just answering your question above about gov't employment being a pre-requisite in all cases.