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Posse comitatus

The posse comitatus (from the Latin for "be accompanied"), frequently shortened to posse, is in common law a group of people mobilized by the conservator of peace – typically a reeve, sheriff, chief, or another special/regional designee like an officer of the peace potentially accompanied by or with the direction of a justice or ajudged parajudicial process given the imminence of actual damage – to suppress lawlessness, defend the people, or otherwise protect the place, property, and public welfare. The posse comitatus as an English jurisprudentially defined doctrine dates back to ninth-century England and the campaigns of Alfred the Great (and before in ancient custom and law of locally martialed forces) simultaneous thereafter with the officiation of sheriff nomination to keep the regnant peace (known as "the queen/king's peace").[2] There must be a lawful reason for a posse, which can never be used for lawlessness.

An American posse in 1922, which captured the outlaws Manuel Martinez and Placidio Silvas, who are in the center of the back row. Martinez and Silvas were arrested for the Ruby Murders after the largest manhunt in the history of the Southwest.[1]

Etymology edit

Derived from Latin, posse comitātūs ("force of the county/region") is sometimes shortened to simply posse from the mid-17th century onward to describe the force itself more than the legal principle.[3] While the original meaning refers to a group of citizens assembled by the authorities to deal with an emergency (such as suppressing a riot or pursuing felons and outlawry), the term is also used for any force or band, especially with hostile intent, often also figuratively or humorously.[4] In 19th-century usage, posse comitatus also acquired the generalized or figurative meaning.[5] In classical Latin, posse is a contraction of potesse, an irregular Latin verb meaning "to be able".[6][7][8] The unusual genitive in "-ūs" is a feature of the fourth declension. In its earliest days, the posse comitatus was subordinate to the king, country, and local authority.[9]

United Kingdom edit

English Civil War edit

In 1642, during the early stages of the English Civil War, local forces were employed everywhere and by all sides. The powers responsible produced valid written authority, inducing the locals to assemble. The two most common authorities used were the Militia Ordinance on the side of the Parliamentarians and that of the king, the old-fashioned Commissions of Array. But the Royalist leader in Cornwall, Sir Ralph Hopton, indicted the enemy before the grand jury of the county as disturbers of the peace, and had the posse comitatus called out to expel them.[10]

In law edit

The powers of sheriffs in England and Wales for posse comitatus were codified by section 8 of the Sheriffs Act 1887, the first subsection of which stated that:

Every person in a county shall be ready and apparelled at the command of the sheriff and at the cry of the country to arrest a felon whether within a franchise or without, and in default shall on conviction be liable to a fine, and if default be found in the lord of the franchise he shall forfeit the franchise to the Queen, and if in the bailiff he shall be liable besides the fine to imprisonment for not more than one year, or if he have not whereof to pay the fine, than two years.

— section 8, Sheriffs Act 1887 (as passed)

This permitted the sheriff of each county to call every civilian to his assistance to catch a person who had committed a felony – that is, a serious crime. It provided for fines for those who did not comply. The provisions for posse comitatus were repealed by the Criminal Law Act 1967.[11] The second subsection provided for the sheriff to take "the power of the county" if he faced resistance while executing a writ, and provided for the arrest of resisters.[12] This subsection is still in force.[13] This power can be used during the execution of a writ of seizure and sale to satisfy a debt; it allows a sheriff to call upon the police while seizing the property.

United States edit

The posse comitatus power continues to exist in those common-law states that have not expressly repealed it by statute. As an example, it is codified in Georgia under OCGA 17-4-24:

Every law enforcement officer is bound to execute the penal warrants given to him to execute. He may summon to his assistance, either in writing or orally, any of the citizens of the neighborhood or county to assist in the execution of such warrants. The acts of the citizens formed as a posse by such officer shall be subject to the same protection and consequences as official acts.

In some states, especially in the Western United States, sheriffs and other law enforcement agencies have called their civilian auxiliary groups "posses". The Lattimer Massacre of 1897 illustrated the danger of such groups and thus ended their use in situations of civil unrest. Posse comitatus in the US became not an instrument of royal prerogative but an institution of local self-governance. The posse functioned through, rather than upon, the local popular will.[14] From 1850 to 1878, the United States federal government had expanded its power over individuals. This was done to safeguard national property rights for slaveholders, emancipate millions of enslaved African Americans, and enforce the doctrine of formal equality. The rise of the federal state, like the marketplace before it, had created contradictory but congruous forces of liberation and compulsion upon individuals.[15][14]

In the early decades of the United States, before slavery became a major conflict, federal use of posse comitatus in the states was rare.[14] But the federal posse comitatus, quite literally, had compelled all of the United States to accept the legitimacy of slavery.[15] In an exhaustive study of lynching in Colorado, historian Stephen Leonard defines lynching to include the people's courts and even posses, which by definition were led by sheriffs.[14][16]

In the United States, a federal statute known as the Posse Comitatus Act, enacted in 1878, forbids the use of the US Army (and consequently its offspring, the US Air Force), as a posse comitatus or for law enforcement purposes without the approval of Congress.[17] The act does not explicitly mention the US Navy and the US Marine Corps, but the US Department of the Navy has prescribed equivalent regulations.[18] A directive in 2013 from the US Secretary of Defense directly addressed this issue and prohibited the use of the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps for domestic law enforcement.[19] The limitation does not apply to the National Guard of the United States when activated by a state's governor and operating under Title 32 of the US Code, such as deployments by state governors in response to Hurricane Katrina.[20]

Notable posses edit

In response to the dispatch of militia by the governor of Washington Territory, Isaac Stevens, to arrest Francis A. Chenoweth, the chief justice of the territory's supreme court, who was holding court in the Pierce County Courthouse, the sheriff of Pierce County deputized 50 to 60 civilians for the defense of the court. Negotiations ultimately resolved the standoff; the militia withdrew.[21]

In 1897 the sheriff of Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, deputized 100 civilians to supplement 50 deputy sheriffs in confronting 400 striking mine workers at the Lattimer Mines. The posse fired at the strikers, killing 19 workers[22] in what became known as the Lattimer massacre.

In 1994, violent bank robbers fled from Mineral County, Colorado, into remote Hinsdale County, Colorado, which at the time had two law enforcement officers for its 500 residents. The county sheriff summoned the county's power, directing more than 100 deputized civilians and 200 out-of-town police officers in house-to-house searches for the fugitives. The robbers committed suicide as the posse closed in on their location.[23]

Legal status edit

Following the Baltimore riot of 1968, 1,500 lawsuits were filed against the city of Baltimore seeking compensation for damages sustained due to the failure of the police to suppress the unrest. The city sought declaratory judgment arguing that it could not be liable for any failures of the Baltimore municipal police, as it was an agency of the State of Maryland and the city had no law enforcement authority. In rejecting the argument, the Maryland Court of Appeals observed that Baltimore, as an independent city and – therefore – a county equivalent, was still in possession of the ability to summon the power of the county as that right had not explicitly been repealed by statute and, therefore, remained part of the common law.[24] The court noted:

We are therefore of the opinion that the powers associated with that of a conservator of the peace and the power to form a "posse comitatus," which is included in the powers of a conservator of the peace, were powers available for employment by the City, through the Mayor, should the exercise of reasonable diligence have dictated that they be used.

In the Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, David Kopel observed that almost all US states provide statutory authority for sheriffs, or other local officials, to summon the county's power. In many cases, civil and criminal penalties are prescribed for members of the public who shirk posse duty when summoned; South Carolina provides that "any person refusing to assist as one of the posse ... shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction shall be fined not less than thirty nor more than one hundred dollars or imprisoned for thirty days" while in New Hampshire a fine of "not more than $20" has been set.[23]

Title 42, section 1989, of the United States Code extends the authority to summon the power of the county to United States magistrate judges when necessary to enforce their orders:

... persons so appointed shall have authority to summon and call to their aid the bystanders or posse comitatus of the proper county, or such portion of the land or naval forces of the United States, or of the militia, as may be necessary to the performance of the duty with which they are charged ...

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Legends of America. p. 3. Archived from the original on 2011-08-23. Retrieved 2011-08-02.
  2. ^ Kopel, David B. (Fall 2015). "The Posse Comitatus And the Office of Sheriff: Armed Citizens Summoned to The Aid of Law Enforcement". Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology. 104 (4): 763–781. Retrieved 2022-10-21.
  3. ^ "posse, n. 2, posse comitatus". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  4. ^ "All the Posse of Hell, cannot violently eject me." T. Fuller, Good Thoughts in Bad Times (1645) I. xv. 39. "A whole posse of the young lady's kindred – brothers, cousins and uncles – stood ready at the street door to usher me upstairs." W. Beckford Portuguese Jrnl. 10 June 1787, p. 72. (cited after OED).
  5. ^ "I can lick the whole posser-commertatus of yer. Come on, yer cowards!" Harper's Magazine July 1862, 184/1 (cited after OED).
  6. ^ Mueller, Hans-Friedrich. (2013). "Latin 101." The Teaching Company.
  7. ^ "Dickinson College Commentaries". Allen and Greenough's Latin Grammar. Irregular Verbs: Compounds of Sum. Footnotes: Other early forms.
  8. ^ Louis, Ha. "Irregular Conjugated Verb". Chinese University of Hong Kong.
  9. ^ Adams, George (1914). "Select Documents of English Constitutional History". The Macmillan Company.
  10. ^   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainAtkinson, Charles Francis (1911). "Great Rebellion". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 408.
  11. ^ Schedule 3, Part III, Criminal Law Act 1967
  12. ^ section 8, Sheriffs Act 1887 (as passed)
  13. ^ section 8, Sheriffs Act 1887 (as amended)
  14. ^ a b c d Kopel, David B. "The Posse Comitatus And The Office Of Sheriff: Armed Citizens Summoned To The Aid Of Law Enforcement". Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, Volume 104, Issue 4; Symposium On Guns In America.
  15. ^ a b Gautham, Rao (2005). "The Federal Posse Comitatus Doctrine: Slavery, Compulsion, and Statecraft in Mid-Nineteenth-Century America". Law and History Review, Volume 26, Issue 1; Spring 2005, pp. 1–56.
  16. ^ "Lynching in Colorado, 1859–1919" (University Press Colorado, 2002).
  17. ^ 18 U.S.C. § 1385
  18. ^ 32 C.F.R. § 213.2 (although the Navy and Marine Corps are not included in the Posse Comitatus Act, they were made subject to it by DoD Regulation)
  19. ^ "Department of Defense Directive 5525.5". The Posse Comitatus Act.
  20. ^
    • Samek, Joshua M. (2007). "The Federal Response to Hurricane Katrina: A Case for Repeal of the Posse Comitatus Act or a Case for Learning the Law?". University of Miami Law Review. 61: 446.
    • McGrane, Sean (2010). "Katrina, Federalism, and Military Law Enforcement: A New Exception to the Posse Comitatus Act". Michigan Law Review. 108 (7): 1316–1317, 1321.
    • Greenberger, Michael; Spaccarelli, Arianne (2010). "The Posse Comitatus Act and Disaster Response". In Abbott, Ernest B.; Hetzel, Otto J. (eds.). Homeland Security and Emergency Management: A Legal Guide for State and Local Government (2nd ed.). American Bar Association. p. 45.
  21. ^ Floyd, Kaylor (1917). Washington, West of the Cascades: Historical and Descriptive; the Explorers, the Indians, the Pioneers, the Modern, Volume 1. S. J. Clarke Publishing Company. pp. 164–166.
  22. ^ Miller, Wilbur R. (2012). The Social History of Crime and Punishment in America: An Encyclopedia. SAGE Publications. ISBN 978-1483305936.
  23. ^ a b Kopel, David (Fall 2015). "The Posse Comitatus And The Office Of Sheriff: Armed Citizens Summoned To The Aid Of Law Enforcement". The Posse Comitatus and the Office of Sheriff: Armed Citizens Summoned to the Aid of Law Enforcement. 104 (4).
  24. ^ "City of Baltimore v. Silver, 283 A.2d 788 (Md. 1972)". courtlistener.com. Court Listener. Retrieved July 19, 2018.

External links edit

  •   The dictionary definition of posse comitatus at Wiktionary

posse, comitatus, other, uses, disambiguation, posse, comitatus, from, latin, accompanied, frequently, shortened, posse, common, group, people, mobilized, conservator, peace, typically, reeve, sheriff, chief, another, special, regional, designee, like, officer. For other uses see Posse comitatus disambiguation The posse comitatus from the Latin for be accompanied frequently shortened to posse is in common law a group of people mobilized by the conservator of peace typically a reeve sheriff chief or another special regional designee like an officer of the peace potentially accompanied by or with the direction of a justice or ajudged parajudicial process given the imminence of actual damage to suppress lawlessness defend the people or otherwise protect the place property and public welfare The posse comitatus as an English jurisprudentially defined doctrine dates back to ninth century England and the campaigns of Alfred the Great and before in ancient custom and law of locally martialed forces simultaneous thereafter with the officiation of sheriff nomination to keep the regnant peace known as the queen king s peace 2 There must be a lawful reason for a posse which can never be used for lawlessness An American posse in 1922 which captured the outlaws Manuel Martinez and Placidio Silvas who are in the center of the back row Martinez and Silvas were arrested for the Ruby Murders after the largest manhunt in the history of the Southwest 1 Contents 1 Etymology 2 United Kingdom 2 1 English Civil War 2 2 In law 3 United States 3 1 Notable posses 3 2 Legal status 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksEtymology editDerived from Latin posse comitatus force of the county region is sometimes shortened to simply posse from the mid 17th century onward to describe the force itself more than the legal principle 3 While the original meaning refers to a group of citizens assembled by the authorities to deal with an emergency such as suppressing a riot or pursuing felons and outlawry the term is also used for any force or band especially with hostile intent often also figuratively or humorously 4 In 19th century usage posse comitatus also acquired the generalized or figurative meaning 5 In classical Latin posse is a contraction of potesse an irregular Latin verb meaning to be able 6 7 8 The unusual genitive in us is a feature of the fourth declension In its earliest days the posse comitatus was subordinate to the king country and local authority 9 United Kingdom editSee also History of law enforcement in the United Kingdom English Civil War edit In 1642 during the early stages of the English Civil War local forces were employed everywhere and by all sides The powers responsible produced valid written authority inducing the locals to assemble The two most common authorities used were the Militia Ordinance on the side of the Parliamentarians and that of the king the old fashioned Commissions of Array But the Royalist leader in Cornwall Sir Ralph Hopton indicted the enemy before the grand jury of the county as disturbers of the peace and had the posse comitatus called out to expel them 10 In law edit The powers of sheriffs in England and Wales for posse comitatus were codified by section 8 of the Sheriffs Act 1887 the first subsection of which stated that Every person in a county shall be ready and apparelled at the command of the sheriff and at the cry of the country to arrest a felon whether within a franchise or without and in default shall on conviction be liable to a fine and if default be found in the lord of the franchise he shall forfeit the franchise to the Queen and if in the bailiff he shall be liable besides the fine to imprisonment for not more than one year or if he have not whereof to pay the fine than two years section 8 Sheriffs Act 1887 as passed This permitted the sheriff of each county to call every civilian to his assistance to catch a person who had committed a felony that is a serious crime It provided for fines for those who did not comply The provisions for posse comitatus were repealed by the Criminal Law Act 1967 11 The second subsection provided for the sheriff to take the power of the county if he faced resistance while executing a writ and provided for the arrest of resisters 12 This subsection is still in force 13 This power can be used during the execution of a writ of seizure and sale to satisfy a debt it allows a sheriff to call upon the police while seizing the property United States editThe posse comitatus power continues to exist in those common law states that have not expressly repealed it by statute As an example it is codified in Georgia under OCGA 17 4 24 Every law enforcement officer is bound to execute the penal warrants given to him to execute He may summon to his assistance either in writing or orally any of the citizens of the neighborhood or county to assist in the execution of such warrants The acts of the citizens formed as a posse by such officer shall be subject to the same protection and consequences as official acts In some states especially in the Western United States sheriffs and other law enforcement agencies have called their civilian auxiliary groups posses The Lattimer Massacre of 1897 illustrated the danger of such groups and thus ended their use in situations of civil unrest Posse comitatus in the US became not an instrument of royal prerogative but an institution of local self governance The posse functioned through rather than upon the local popular will 14 From 1850 to 1878 the United States federal government had expanded its power over individuals This was done to safeguard national property rights for slaveholders emancipate millions of enslaved African Americans and enforce the doctrine of formal equality The rise of the federal state like the marketplace before it had created contradictory but congruous forces of liberation and compulsion upon individuals 15 14 In the early decades of the United States before slavery became a major conflict federal use of posse comitatus in the states was rare 14 But the federal posse comitatus quite literally had compelled all of the United States to accept the legitimacy of slavery 15 In an exhaustive study of lynching in Colorado historian Stephen Leonard defines lynching to include the people s courts and even posses which by definition were led by sheriffs 14 16 In the United States a federal statute known as the Posse Comitatus Act enacted in 1878 forbids the use of the US Army and consequently its offspring the US Air Force as a posse comitatus or for law enforcement purposes without the approval of Congress 17 The act does not explicitly mention the US Navy and the US Marine Corps but the US Department of the Navy has prescribed equivalent regulations 18 A directive in 2013 from the US Secretary of Defense directly addressed this issue and prohibited the use of the Army Navy Air Force and Marine Corps for domestic law enforcement 19 The limitation does not apply to the National Guard of the United States when activated by a state s governor and operating under Title 32 of the US Code such as deployments by state governors in response to Hurricane Katrina 20 Notable posses edit In response to the dispatch of militia by the governor of Washington Territory Isaac Stevens to arrest Francis A Chenoweth the chief justice of the territory s supreme court who was holding court in the Pierce County Courthouse the sheriff of Pierce County deputized 50 to 60 civilians for the defense of the court Negotiations ultimately resolved the standoff the militia withdrew 21 Main article Lattimer massacre In 1897 the sheriff of Luzerne County Pennsylvania deputized 100 civilians to supplement 50 deputy sheriffs in confronting 400 striking mine workers at the Lattimer Mines The posse fired at the strikers killing 19 workers 22 in what became known as the Lattimer massacre In 1994 violent bank robbers fled from Mineral County Colorado into remote Hinsdale County Colorado which at the time had two law enforcement officers for its 500 residents The county sheriff summoned the county s power directing more than 100 deputized civilians and 200 out of town police officers in house to house searches for the fugitives The robbers committed suicide as the posse closed in on their location 23 Legal status edit Following the Baltimore riot of 1968 1 500 lawsuits were filed against the city of Baltimore seeking compensation for damages sustained due to the failure of the police to suppress the unrest The city sought declaratory judgment arguing that it could not be liable for any failures of the Baltimore municipal police as it was an agency of the State of Maryland and the city had no law enforcement authority In rejecting the argument the Maryland Court of Appeals observed that Baltimore as an independent city and therefore a county equivalent was still in possession of the ability to summon the power of the county as that right had not explicitly been repealed by statute and therefore remained part of the common law 24 The court noted We are therefore of the opinion that the powers associated with that of a conservator of the peace and the power to form a posse comitatus which is included in the powers of a conservator of the peace were powers available for employment by the City through the Mayor should the exercise of reasonable diligence have dictated that they be used In the Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology David Kopel observed that almost all US states provide statutory authority for sheriffs or other local officials to summon the county s power In many cases civil and criminal penalties are prescribed for members of the public who shirk posse duty when summoned South Carolina provides that any person refusing to assist as one of the posse shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be fined not less than thirty nor more than one hundred dollars or imprisoned for thirty days while in New Hampshire a fine of not more than 20 has been set 23 Title 42 section 1989 of the United States Code extends the authority to summon the power of the county to United States magistrate judges when necessary to enforce their orders persons so appointed shall have authority to summon and call to their aid the bystanders or posse comitatus of the proper county or such portion of the land or naval forces of the United States or of the militia as may be necessary to the performance of the duty with which they are charged See also editCommandeering Conscription Hue and cry Ku Klux Klan raid Inglewood Misprision Vigilantism in the United States of AmericaReferences edit Ruby Arizona A Ghost Town Filled With Mining and Murder Legends of America p 3 Archived from the original on 2011 08 23 Retrieved 2011 08 02 Kopel David B Fall 2015 The Posse Comitatus And the Office of Sheriff Armed Citizens Summoned to The Aid of Law Enforcement Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 104 4 763 781 Retrieved 2022 10 21 posse n 2 posse comitatus Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required All the Posse of Hell cannot violently eject me T Fuller Good Thoughts in Bad Times 1645 I xv 39 A whole posse of the young lady s kindred brothers cousins and uncles stood ready at the street door to usher me upstairs W Beckford Portuguese Jrnl 10 June 1787 p 72 cited after OED I can lick the whole posser commertatus of yer Come on yer cowards Harper s Magazine July 1862 184 1 cited after OED Mueller Hans Friedrich 2013 Latin 101 The Teaching Company Dickinson College Commentaries Allen and Greenough s Latin Grammar Irregular Verbs Compounds of Sum Footnotes Other early forms Louis Ha Irregular Conjugated Verb Chinese University of Hong Kong Adams George 1914 Select Documents of English Constitutional History The Macmillan Company nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Atkinson Charles Francis 1911 Great Rebellion In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 12 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 408 Schedule 3 Part III Criminal Law Act 1967 section 8 Sheriffs Act 1887 as passed section 8 Sheriffs Act 1887 as amended a b c d Kopel David B The Posse Comitatus And The Office Of Sheriff Armed Citizens Summoned To The Aid Of Law Enforcement Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology Volume 104 Issue 4 Symposium On Guns In America a b Gautham Rao 2005 The Federal Posse Comitatus Doctrine Slavery Compulsion and Statecraft in Mid Nineteenth Century America Law and History Review Volume 26 Issue 1 Spring 2005 pp 1 56 Lynching in Colorado 1859 1919 University Press Colorado 2002 18 U S C 1385 32 C F R 213 2 although the Navy and Marine Corps are not included in the Posse Comitatus Act they were made subject to it by DoD Regulation Department of Defense Directive 5525 5 The Posse Comitatus Act Samek Joshua M 2007 The Federal Response to Hurricane Katrina A Case for Repeal of the Posse Comitatus Act or a Case for Learning the Law University of Miami Law Review 61 446 McGrane Sean 2010 Katrina Federalism and Military Law Enforcement A New Exception to the Posse Comitatus Act Michigan Law Review 108 7 1316 1317 1321 Greenberger Michael Spaccarelli Arianne 2010 The Posse Comitatus Act and Disaster Response In Abbott Ernest B Hetzel Otto J eds Homeland Security and Emergency Management A Legal Guide for State and Local Government 2nd ed American Bar Association p 45 Floyd Kaylor 1917 Washington West of the Cascades Historical and Descriptive the Explorers the Indians the Pioneers the Modern Volume 1 S J Clarke Publishing Company pp 164 166 Miller Wilbur R 2012 The Social History of Crime and Punishment in America An Encyclopedia SAGE Publications ISBN 978 1483305936 a b Kopel David Fall 2015 The Posse Comitatus And The Office Of Sheriff Armed Citizens Summoned To The Aid Of Law Enforcement The Posse Comitatus and the Office of Sheriff Armed Citizens Summoned to the Aid of Law Enforcement 104 4 City of Baltimore v Silver 283 A 2d 788 Md 1972 courtlistener com Court Listener Retrieved July 19 2018 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Posse Comitatus nbsp The dictionary definition of posse comitatus at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Posse comitatus amp oldid 1218440501, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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