Mr & Mrs America ...When did the American People become the ENEMY ?
DoD Issues Instructions on Military Support of Civilian Law Enforcement
April 15, 2013
The Department of Defense has issued an instruction clarifying the rules for the involvement of military forces in civilian law enforcement. The instruction
establishes “DoD policy, assigns responsibilities, and provides
procedures for DoD support to Federal, State, tribal, and local civilian
law enforcement agencies, including responses to civil disturbances within the United States.”
The new instruction titled “Defense Support of Civilian Law Enforcement Agencies” was released at the end of February, replacing several older directives on military assistance to civilian law enforcement and civil disturbances. The instruction
requires that senior DoD officials develop “procedures and issue
appropriate direction as necessary for defense support of civilian law enforcement agencies in coordination with the General Counsel of the Department of Defense, and in consultation with the Attorney General of
the United States”, including “tasking the DoD Components to plan for
and to commit DoD resources in response to requests from civil
authorities for [civil disturbance operations].” Military officials are
to coordinate with “civilian law enforcement agencies on policies to
further DoD cooperation with civilian law enforcement agencies” and the
heads of the combatant commands are instructed to issue procedures for
“establishing local contact points in subordinate commands for purposes
of coordination with Federal, State, tribal, and local civilian law enforcement officials.”
In addition to defining responsibilities for military coordination with local law enforcement, the instruction
describes circumstances in which direct participation in civilian law
enforcement is permissible. Under the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878, U.S military
personnel are generally prohibited from assisting in civilian law
enforcement functions such as search and seizure, interdiction of
vehicles, arrest and interrogation, surveillance
or using force except for in self-defense. Though the Posse Comitatus
Act originally referred only to the Army, it was extended in 1956 to
include the Air Force. Subsequent DoD regulations prevent the use of the
Marine Corps or Navy for civilian law enforcement functions. In 1981,
this principle was further codified in 10 USC § 375 which directs the Secretary of Defense to ensure that military
activities do “not include or permit direct participation by a member
of the Army, Navy, Air Force, or Marine Corps in a search, seizure,
arrest, or other similar activity unless participation in such activity
by such member is otherwise authorized by law.”
Though the Posse Comitatus Act is the
primary restriction on direct DoD involvement in law enforcement
functions, it does not prevent military personnel from participating in
circumstances “authorized by the Constitution or Act of Congress.” This
includes circumstances involving “insurrection, domestic violence, or
conspiracy that hinders the execution of State or Federal law” as well
as actions “taken under express statutory authority.” The DoD’s instruction
includes a list of more than a dozen “laws that permit direct DoD
participation in civilian law enforcement” including many obscure
statutes that are more than a hundred years old. For example, a law
passed in 1882 and codified under 16 USC § 593
allows for the President to use land and naval forces to “prevent the
felling, cutting down, or other destruction of the timber of the United
States in Florida.” Likewise, the Guano Islands Act
of 1856 enables the President to use land and naval forces to protect
the rights of a discoverer of an island covered by the Act.
Military commanders also have “emergency authority” to use military
forces in civilian law enforcement functions “in extraordinary
emergency circumstances where prior authorization by the President is
impossible and duly constituted local authorities are unable to control
the situation, to engage temporarily in activities that are necessary to
quell large-scale, unexpected civil disturbances”. This authority is
limited to actions “necessary to prevent significant loss of life or
wanton destruction of property and are necessary to restore governmental
function and public order” and “provide adequate protection for Federal
property or Federal governmental functions.” In fact, an enclosure to
the DoD instruction describing requirements for support of civil disturbance operations states that military
commanders “shall not take charge of any function of civil government
unless absolutely necessary under conditions of extreme emergency.”
According to the instruction, any “commander who is directed, or
undertakes, to control such functions shall strictly limit DoD actions
to emergency needs and shall facilitate the reestablishment of civil
responsibility at the earliest time possible.”
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