Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

High court offering bonuses, perks to attract police hires

- By Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON — Supreme Court police officers last fall staffed a table at Washington’s armory, where runners picked up their numbers and T-shirts for the Army 10-Miler road race. The officers were promoting an entirely different kind of competitio­n, seeking to recruit new officers in a tight employment market.

High court personnel also are showing up on college campuses and military bases to try to fill some of the many vacancies on a police force that’s charged with protecting the nine justices and the majestic marble building.

The struggle to find new officers is similar to staffing shortages facing police department­s across the country. But it comes as the court copes with a rise in threats against the justices, including the 2022 arrest of an armed man outside Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s house, following the leak of the draft abortion opinion overturnin­g Roe v. Wade.

The court won’t say how many jobs are open on a force with an authorized strength of 189 officers, although job postings say there are “many vacancies” for new and experience­d officers.

It would not make available either its marshal or its police chief for this story, and court spokeswoma­n Patricia McCabe said the court does not talk about security issues.

But one visible manifestat­ion of the diminished size of the force is that, as the court has reopened in recent months from its coronaviru­s pandemicin­duced closure, security officers with the U.S. Marshals Service have taken over some of the tasks previously handled by the police, including screening visitors when they enter the building.

It once was common to see justices around town without any police presence, shopping at local markets, attending cultural events or eating at Washington restaurant­s. But as security concerns have grown, even before the deadly Jan. 6, 2021, insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol and the opinion leak last May, the justices have acquired a relatively constant guard of officers dressed in suits when they travel to or from work or around town. At the court, police in uniform stand watch at various spots inside and outside the building.

Police department­s generally are dealing with a drop in applicatio­ns, an increase in retirement­s and more difficulty in keeping existing officers. Policing experts say there were signs of these issues before the pandemic, but the aftermath of the killing of George Floyd by Minneapoli­s police in 2020 sent morale spiraling in many department­s.

“The George Floyd murder had a profound impact on policing, and for some it was deciding this isn’t the profession they wanted to be in or officers deciding to leave the profession,” said Chuck Wexler, the executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum. “If you look at the Tyre Nichols case, there will be ramificati­ons for who wants to be a police officer in America after everything that’s happened in Memphis.”

The Supreme Court is offering a $5,000 recruitmen­t bonus and another $5,000 within 18 months to some officers who transfer from another department. Congress recently authorized the court to grant student loan forgivenes­s, matching a perk that long has been available for officers with the U.S. Capitol Police. New hires with no previous law enforcemen­t experience are paid a starting annual salary of $73,852.

Officers get four weeks of vacation after three years on the force and are eligible for retirement after 25 years of service, or at age 50 with 20 years of experience.

It’s unclear whether those benefits will be enough in the nation’s capital, where there are many separate police forces, including for museums, mass transit, parks, the postal service, the Capitol, Amtrak and several colleges.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP 2020 ?? The struggle to find new Supreme Court police officers is similar to staffing shortages facing most police department­s throughout the country.
ALEX BRANDON/AP 2020 The struggle to find new Supreme Court police officers is similar to staffing shortages facing most police department­s throughout the country.

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