Tracking Virginia’s General Assembly
since 2007.
HB3041: Conservators of peace; sworn municipal park rangers may be.
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia:
1. That § 19.2-12 of the Code of Virginia is amended and reenacted as follows:
§ 19.2-12. Who are conservators of the peace.
Every judge and attorney for the Commonwealth throughout the
Commonwealth and every magistrate within the geographical area for which he is
appointed or elected, shall be a conservator of the peace. In addition, every
commissioner in chancery, while sitting as such commissioner; any special agent
or law-enforcement officer of the United States Department of Justice, National
Marine Fisheries Service of the United States Department of Commerce,
Department of Treasury, Department of Agriculture, Department of Defense,
Department of State, Office of the Inspector General of the Department of
Transportation, Department of Homeland Security, and Department of Interior;
any inspector, law-enforcement official or police personnel of the United
States Postal Inspection Service; any United States marshal or deputy United
States marshal whose duties involve the enforcement of the criminal laws of the
United States; any officer of the Virginia Marine Police; any criminal
investigator of the Department of Professional and Occupational Regulation, who
meets the minimum law-enforcement training requirements established by the
Department of Criminal Justice Services for in-service training; any criminal
investigator of the United States Department of Labor; any special agent of the
United States Naval Criminal Investigative Service, and any
special agent of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and
any sworn municipal park ranger, who has completed all requirements under §
15.2-1706, shall be a conservator of the peace, while engaged in
the performance of their official duties.
Additional Data
Explanation
This is the actual text of the bill — the legislation itself. Generally this is amending existing law, proposing the addition or removal of words from laws that are already on the books.
Words that are highlighted in yellow are
proposed additions, and words that are crossed out in
red are proposed removals.
The numbers with the § symbol before them are references to existing laws, and if you click on them they’ll take you to that part of the law on the state's website.
