REQUESTED BY: Senator Ray Aguilar District No. 35
You have asked whether a security guard is required to arrest someone who has committed a crime. Neb. Rev. Stat. §
The origin of Neb. Rev. Stat. §
The language of the original 1873 statute was basically the same until 1967, when Law Bill 864 included the national guard to the list of those who had powers of arrest. All of the amendments to the statute since have involved the juvenile portion of the statute, which requires officers to notify the parents of juveniles when they are arrested. In 1994, Law Bill 451, which also dealt with the juvenile portion of the statute, changed the term "watchman" to "security guard". No explanation for this change is found within the Law Bill, committee records, or floor debate. What occurred, more than likely, is that the word watchman was replaced with the more modern term of security guard without consideration of why the language was included in the statute to begin with. There is nothing to indicate that the Legislature has ever consciously delegated arrest power to security guards.
Because legislative history does not indicate why "security guard" was included in Neb. Rev. Stat. §
It is interesting to note that every individual listed in Neb. Rev. Stat. §
Other statutes give the power of arrest specifically to those named as "peace officers." Neb. Rev. Stat. §
While Neb. Rev. Stat. §
(f) Protective Service, which unit is composed of institutional security personnel, including correctional officers, building security guards, and similar classes;
(g) Law Enforcement, which unit is composed of employees holding powers of arrest, including Nebraska State Patrol officers and sergeants, game wardens, fire marshal personnel, and similar classes. Sergeants, investigators, and patrol officers employed by the Nebraska State Patrol as authorized in §
81-2004 shall be presumed to have a community of interest with each other and shall be included in this bargaining unit notwithstanding any other provision of law which may allow for the contrary.
This statute clearly distinguishes between quasi law enforcement personnel who do not have the power to arrest, such as security guards, and law enforcement personnel who have the power to arrest. See White v. State,
As mentioned, all of these statutes show that everyone listed in Neb. Rev. Stat. §
Nebraska case law also recognizes that security guards do not have the same powers as other law enforcement personnel. In State v. Wilen,
In Bishop v. Bockoven,
Despite the wording of Neb. Rev. Stat. §
Sincerely,
DON STENBERG Attorney General
George R. Love Assistant Attorney General
Approved:
_________________________________ Attorney General
