Other Definitions special agent (dict)
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Special AgentSpecial agent may refer to: In the United States Government - Any civilian (i.e. non-military rank) federal criminal investigator in the 1811 (or similar) job series as so titled, including, but not limited to, those employed within theU.S. Department of Justice by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Drug Enforcement Agency, or the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, or theU.S. Marshals Service; or within the Department of Homeland Security by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the United States Secret Service; or within the Department of Treasury by the Internal Revenue Service's Criminal Investigation Division; or within the Department of Defense by the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, the Air Force's Office of Special Investigations, or the Army's Criminal Investigations Division; or within many of the 57 federal Offices of Inspector General (see also Inspector General); just to mention a few.
For a complete list of federal law enforcement agencies employing series 1811 federal agents, visit the Federal Law Enforcement Officer's Association website. - A state or municipal criminal investigator if so titled by the employing agency.
Origin of the Term The use of the term "Special Agent" for US Federal Law Enforcement Officers derives from the fact that all such individuals have limited jurisidction. They may only enforce certain sections of the US Code, or be limited to a certain geographic area, or both. There is no such thing as a "General Agent" that is empowered to enforce all laws, everywhere in the United States. This is in contrast to individual states, which can and most often do have General Agents, though they are not usually referred to as such. A State Police or Highway Patrol organization typically has the authority to enforce all state laws everywhere within the geographic confines of that state. Exactly which Special Agents have the broadest authority is a matter of debate. The issue of concurrent jurisidction (in which two agencies have non-exclusive jurisidction over a given set of the US code, such as the FBI and DEA in respect to drug laws) does not make the issue more clear. The FBI has a catch-all jurisdiction that includes enforcement of all codes not otherwise exclusively assigned to another agency, but this in fact leaves out a wide swath of the US code. The most likely candidates would be Immigration and Customs Enforcement Special Agents. While normally limited to operating at or near ports of entry, such agents not only have the power to enforce all Federal laws, but also applicable state & local laws.
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