It seems that some people are conflating "security" with "law enforcement."
Those are not the same.
From my limited involvement with a couple of security units on the Navy side of the house:
1) Security personnel can and will stop and detain persons for any number of reasons; this may involve the use of deadly force, based on guidance from the base commander and higher. (Security units are departmental level, not independent commands, and report to the base. Security Officers are department heads, or OICs, not Commanding Officers.) This is NOT a law enforcement function.
2) Security personnel, if they suspect a crime has been committed, turn over findings to NCIS for actual criminal investigation. In some cases, the FBI might actually have jurisdiction. In some cases, evidence may be turned over to local authorities. Security departments do not really deal with criminal prosecutions, aside from possibly providing evidence or testimony. I would be surprised if most security personnel could actually cite federal codes defining felonies, as that is not within their normal purview.
3) DOD personnel, subject to UCMJ, can be court-martialed for failure to obey a lawful order, or various other articles.
4) Non DOD-personnel are often dealt with adminstratively, not judicially, typically by revocation of security clearances and loss of base access (and quite likely employment). On overseas bases, this may often result in deportation by the host country.
5) The ability of a base commander to set security policy is not in question. The ability of base security personnel to detain persons they suspect of violating base regulations is not in question. What is in question is how the federal judicial system will address any potential criminal charges, and what laws would come into play.
The document cited by Slamfire would seem to imply the actual charge would effectively be armed trespass.
I would still like to see a legislative definition of what constitutes "other lawful purposes."
It seems some folks are quite happy to say, "That's how it is."
Ironically, many of those are the same people who are ardent proponents, in other threads, of 1st, 2nd, 4th, and 5th Amendment rights. I would think they'd actually want to be able to read the source documents, too.
I'm still baffled as to how hostile some posters have been, because some of us would like to see what authorities actually exist, how they are derived, and how they have been applied.
Those are not the same.
From my limited involvement with a couple of security units on the Navy side of the house:
1) Security personnel can and will stop and detain persons for any number of reasons; this may involve the use of deadly force, based on guidance from the base commander and higher. (Security units are departmental level, not independent commands, and report to the base. Security Officers are department heads, or OICs, not Commanding Officers.) This is NOT a law enforcement function.
2) Security personnel, if they suspect a crime has been committed, turn over findings to NCIS for actual criminal investigation. In some cases, the FBI might actually have jurisdiction. In some cases, evidence may be turned over to local authorities. Security departments do not really deal with criminal prosecutions, aside from possibly providing evidence or testimony. I would be surprised if most security personnel could actually cite federal codes defining felonies, as that is not within their normal purview.
3) DOD personnel, subject to UCMJ, can be court-martialed for failure to obey a lawful order, or various other articles.
4) Non DOD-personnel are often dealt with adminstratively, not judicially, typically by revocation of security clearances and loss of base access (and quite likely employment). On overseas bases, this may often result in deportation by the host country.
5) The ability of a base commander to set security policy is not in question. The ability of base security personnel to detain persons they suspect of violating base regulations is not in question. What is in question is how the federal judicial system will address any potential criminal charges, and what laws would come into play.
The document cited by Slamfire would seem to imply the actual charge would effectively be armed trespass.
I would still like to see a legislative definition of what constitutes "other lawful purposes."
It seems some folks are quite happy to say, "That's how it is."
Ironically, many of those are the same people who are ardent proponents, in other threads, of 1st, 2nd, 4th, and 5th Amendment rights. I would think they'd actually want to be able to read the source documents, too.
I'm still baffled as to how hostile some posters have been, because some of us would like to see what authorities actually exist, how they are derived, and how they have been applied.