Locksteady
Member
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2012
- Messages
- 699
A clarifying correction before moving ahead: President Trump's Postmaster General, Louis Dejoy, removed all law enforcement authority from Postal Police Officers outside of real estate owned or leased by the US Postal Service.
The core argument is unaffected.
Bottom line from the previous post stands: Dejoy's decision to remove -yet another- LEO entity from protecting its own federal workers only contributes to this problem.
That definitely won't work in this case.
It is announced as an intentional practice in Chicago to protect mail carriers on their routes.
Jurisdiction and Venue of the Lawsuit: Point 29:
Neither Postal Workers nor Postal Police Officers are celebrating this decision.
The core argument is unaffected.
If you're trying to shift this from a 'do they patrol or not' question to a 'how effective is it' question, that is reasonable to ask in response to a different assertion. This issue is also exacerbated by POTUS' refusal of COVID-19-related emergency funding to the USPS.USPIS has roughly 1200 officers.
Bottom line from the previous post stands: Dejoy's decision to remove -yet another- LEO entity from protecting its own federal workers only contributes to this problem.
Honest question: Do you just reflexively use lazy suppositions to make all this up and hope something sticks?I don't know where you think they're "patrolling", because that isn't really their job, nor do they have real capacity to such a thing.
That definitely won't work in this case.
It is announced as an intentional practice in Chicago to protect mail carriers on their routes.
The practice is included in their lawsuit as something they increased from previously before.That’s why the Postal Inspection Service is responding with an extra layer of security to help carriers stay safe and avoid becoming victims of street crime.
In the Chicago District, that means using Postal Police Officers on street patrols.
. . .
Letter carriers like the program. “The patrols make me feel a lot more comfortable while delivering mail,” said Letter Carrier Erik Coates while on his route in Englewood, IL.
Letter Carrier Michelle Carlisle also likes the program. “The patrols make me feel safe,” she said. “It shows the Postal Service cares for my safety because they’re out here checking on us.”
Jurisdiction and Venue of the Lawsuit: Point 29:
And their jurisdiction to do so is undisputed, as shown in HR 6407 RDS:The Postal Service increasingly deployed Postal Police Officers for mobile patrols away from postal facilities, to protect letter carriers and the mail in dangerous areas, to stop mail theft from carriers and from collection boxes, and to insure the safety of the mail at airports.
TL;DR it has legal precedence and was employed specifically to prevent situations like the cited mail worker shooting before Trump removed their LE authority in August.SEC. 1001. EMPLOYMENT OF POSTAL POLICE OFFICERS. Section 3061 of title 18, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following: `(c)(1) The Postal Service may employ police officers for duty in connection with the protection of property owned or occupied by the Postal Service or under the charge and control of the Postal Service, and persons on that property, including duty in areas outside the property to the extent necessary to protect the property and persons on the property.
Neither Postal Workers nor Postal Police Officers are celebrating this decision.