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Probation & Parole - Officers - Firearms

  • California Penal Code Section 830.5 (2016)

    830.5. The following persons are peace officers whose authority extends to any place in the state while engaged in the performance of the duties of their respective employment and for the purpose of carrying out the primary function of their employment or as required under Sections 8597, 8598, and 8617 of the Government Code. Except as specified in this section, these peace officers may carry firearms only if authorized and under those terms and conditions specified by their employing agency.

  • Practical Action Tips on Officer Safety for Tribal Probation Personnel (2014)

    This bulletin will provide tribal probation officers with some practical action steps to make sure of safety both in the office and out in the field.

  • Voices from the Field: How California Stakeholders View Public Safety Realignment, Brief (2014)

    Commonly known as “Realignment,” the law shifted responsibility from the state to the counties for certain lower-level offenders and parolees.

  • American Probation and Parole Association - Position Statement - Weapons (2009)

    The American Probation and Parole Association (APPA) neither supports nor opposes the carrying of weapons by probation and parole officers; however, should the decision be made by an agency to authorize officers to carry weapons, that decision must be made within the framework of actual need, officer safety demands, and must be consistent with the laws and policies which guide that agency.

  • Have Perceptions Changed among Staff Regarding Parole Officers’ Carrying Firearms?: A Description of Changes in Safety Perceptions and Supervisory Styles at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Parole Division (2008)

    The purpose of this research is threefold. The first purpose is to describe the changes in safety perceptions of Parole Division staff since the implementation of the firearms policy within the division. The second purpose is to explore possible changes in supervisory style since the implementation of the firearms policy. The third purpose is to determine possible changes in staff safety perceptions since Welebob’s findings.

  • American Probation and Parole Association Adult and Juvenile Probation and Parole National Firearm Survey (2006)

    The American Probation and Parole Association (APPA) regularly receives inquiries regarding the arming policies and practices of adult and juvenile probation and parole agencies throughout the United States.