Officer James E. Aldridge Veterans Affairs Police 5201 Raymond Street Longwood, Florida 32803
Dear Officer Aldridge:
As a federal police officer with the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, you ask substantially the following question:
Do federal law enforcement officers constitute law enforcement officers entitled under Florida's Baker Act to initiate the involuntary examination of a person who may be mentally ill or to transport patients?
In sum:
Federal law enforcement officers do not constitute law enforcement officers for purposes of Florida's Baker Act, and thus possess no authority under the act to initiate the involuntary examination of a person or to transport such person as law enforcement officers.
Part I, Chapter
An involuntary examination may be initiated under a number of circumstances. Section
"A law enforcement officer shall take a person who appears to meet the criteria for involuntary examination into custody and deliver the person or have him or her delivered to the nearest receiving facility for examination. The officer shall execute a written report detailing the circumstances under which the person was taken into custody, and the report shall be made a part of the patient's clinical record."4
In addition, a court may enter an ex parte order stating that a person appears to meet the criteria for involuntary examination or a physician, clinical psychologist, psychiatric nurse or clinical social worker may execute a certificate indicating that he or she has examined the person within the preceding forty-eight hours and the person appears to meet the criteria for involuntary examination.5 In such cases, if other less restrictive means are not available, a law enforcement officer shall take the person into custody and deliver him or her to the nearest receiving facility for involuntary examination.6
Section
Generally, however, county or municipal law enforcement and correctional personnel and equipment are not to be used to transport patients adjudicated incapacitated or found by the court to meet the criteria for involuntary placement, except in small rural counties where there are no cost-effective alternatives.8 Rather, the county is responsible for contracting with private transport companies for the transportation of patients to and from a treatment facility in those instances where neither the patient nor any person legally obligated or responsible for the patient is able to pay for the expense of transportation.
For purposes of the Baker Act a "[l]aw enforcement officer" means "a law enforcement officer as defined in s.
"any person who is elected, appointed, or employed full time byany municipality or the state or any political subdivisionthereof; who is vested with authority to bear arms and make arrests; and whose primary responsibility is the prevention and detection of crime or the enforcement of the penal, criminal, traffic, or highway laws of the state. This definition includes all certified supervisory and command personnel whose duties include, in whole or in part, the supervision, training, guidance, and management responsibilities of full-time law enforcement officers, part-time law enforcement officers, or auxiliary law enforcement officers but does not include support personnel employed by the employing agency." (e.s.)
As a federal police officer, you are not appointed or employed by the state or a political subdivision thereof. The Supreme Court of Florida in McLaughlin v. State10 noted that section
"[W]e note that section
Since the federal officers were not employees or officers of "any municipality or the state or any political subdivision thereof," the Court held the officers were not covered by the provisions of section
Similarly, a federal veterans affairs police officer is not an employee or officer of "any municipality or the state or any political subdivision thereof."11 Thus, the provisions of the Baker Act imposing certain duties and responsibilities on law enforcement officers are not applicable to a federal veterans affairs police officer. Accordingly, provisions relating to the initiation of involuntary examination or the transportation of persons by law enforcement officers under the Baker Act do not apply to a federal law enforcement officer.12
This office, however, has recognized that Part I, Chapter
(1) A voluntary cooperation agreement, in writing, between two or more law enforcement agencies which permits voluntary cooperation and assistance of a routine law enforcement nature across jurisdictional lines;
(2) A requested operational assistance agreement, in writing, between two or more law enforcement agencies for the rendering of assistance in a law enforcement emergency; or
(3) A combination of the agreements described in (1) and (2).14
Thus, under the provisions of the Florida Mutual Aid Act, a state or local law enforcement agency could enter into a mutual aid agreement with a law enforcement agency of the United States to assist in the enforcement of the Baker Act as may be authorized by the terms of the agreement.
Absent such an agreement and until and unless the Legislature amends the definition of "law enforcement officer" for purposes of the Baker Act to include federal officers, I am of the opinion that federal law enforcement officers do not constitute law enforcement officers for purposes of Florida's Baker Act, and thus possess no authority under the act to initiate the involuntary examination of a person or to transport such person as law enforcement officers.
Sincerely,
Robert A. Butterworth Attorney General
RAB/tjw
