If your looking for a Law Enforcement Officers Special Police Union in your state or work location Let the
Law Enforcement Officers Special Police Union (LEOSPU) United Federation LEOS-PBA
help you form or join a Law Enforcement Officers Special Police Union LEOSPU in your state.
LEOSPU a Affiliated Division of the United Federation LEOS-PBA Law Enforcement Officers Security &
Police Benevolent Association LEOS-PBA
1717 Pennsylvania Ave NW, 10th Floor Washington, D.C. 20006 | Telephone: 202-595-3510
Looking to Join or Form a LEOSPU Law Enforcement Officers Special Police Union in Nebraska?
If so please sign our LEOSPU, United Federation LEOS-PBA Membership Card Below
Nebraska is a midwestern U.S. state encompassing the prairies of the Great Plains, the towering dunes of the Sandhills and the panhandle’s dramatic rock formations. Lincoln, the capital and a vibrant university town, is distinguished by its soaring state capitol. The city of Omaha is home to the Durham Museum, which honors the state’s pioneering past in a converted railroad depot.
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In United States terminology, special police can mean:
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Auxiliary police, members of volunteer, unpaid or paid, part-time civilian police, security officer units, interns;
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Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT);
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Security police; or
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Special Law Enforcement Officers/ Special Jurisdiction Law Enforcement – used in New Jersey to supplement full-time police officers;
The term can also refer to limited police power granted in some jurisdictions to lifeguards, SPCA personnel, teachers, and other public sector employees which is incidental to their main responsibilities. Special Police Officers (or SPOs) can be employed to protect large campuses such as theme parks, hospital centers, and commerce centers.
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Some states, such as Maryland, New York, and the District of Columbia, grant full State Police/peace officer authority to SPOs for use in whatever area they are employed to protect. They can make traffic stops in their jurisdiction if they have had accredited training. They are also permitted to conduct traffic control and investigations pertaining to the area protected by them, while a majority of SPOs are armed with a firearm, some states permit the age for an SPO to be 18, while still they can not carry a sidearm. Special police can make a criminal arrest and run blue strobe lights on their vehicle.