Bill Text: CA AB1337 | 2021-2022 | Regular Session | Amended
Bill Title: Transportation: San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District: policing responsibilities.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Passed) 2021-10-05 - Chaptered by Secretary of State - Chapter 534, Statutes of 2021. [AB1337 Detail]
Download: California-2021-AB1337-Amended.html
Amended
IN
Assembly
April 07, 2021 |
Introduced by Assembly Member Lee |
February 19, 2021 |
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
(2)Existing law establishes categories of peace officers with varying powers and authority to make arrests and carry firearms. Existing law provides that a member of the San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District Police Department is a peace officer whose authority extends to any place in the state for the purpose of enforcing the law in or about the properties owned, operated, and administered by the San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District, when performing necessary duties with respect to patrons, employees, and properties of the district, or when making an arrest if there is immediate danger to a person or property or of an escape of the perpetrator of an offense.
This bill would
provide that a member of the district’s police department whose primary duty is the enforcement of the law in or about properties, facilities, or vehicles upon which the district owes policing responsibilities to a local government is also a peace officer whose authority extends to any place in the state.
(3)
(4)
(5)
Digest Key
Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YESBill Text
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
SECTION 1.
Section 369i of the Penal Code is amended to read:369i.
(a) (1) Any person who enters or remains upon the property of any railroad without the permission of the owner of the land, the owner’s agent, or the person in lawful possession and whose entry, presence, or conduct upon the property interferes with, interrupts, or hinders, or which, if allowed to continue, would interfere with, interrupt, or hinder the safe and efficient operation of any locomotive, railway car, or train is guilty of a misdemeanor.The following persons are peace officers whose authority extends to any place in the state for the purpose of performing their primary duty or when making an arrest pursuant to Section 836 as to a public offense with respect to which there is immediate danger to person or property, or of the escape of the perpetrator of that offense, or pursuant to Section 8597 or 8598 of the Government Code. Those peace officers may carry firearms only if authorized and under terms and conditions specified by their employing agency.
(a)A member of the San Francisco Bay
Area Rapid Transit District Police Department appointed pursuant to Section 28767.5 of the Public Utilities Code, if the primary duty of the peace officer is the enforcement of the law in or about either properties owned, operated, or administered by the district or properties, facilities, or vehicles upon which the district owes policing responsibilities to a local government pursuant to an operations and maintenance agreement or similar interagency agreement or when performing necessary duties with respect to patrons, employees, and properties of the district.
(b)Harbor or port police regularly employed and paid in that capacity by a county, city, or district other than peace officers authorized under Section 830.1, if the
primary duty of the peace officer is the enforcement of the law in or about the properties owned, operated, or administered by the harbor or port or when performing necessary duties with respect to patrons, employees, and properties of the harbor or port.
(c)Transit police officers or peace officers of a county, city, transit development board, or district, if the primary duty of the peace officer is the enforcement of the law in or about properties owned, operated, or administered by the employing agency or when performing necessary duties with respect to patrons, employees, and properties of the employing agency.
(d)A person regularly employed as an airport law enforcement officer by
a city, county, or district operating the airport or by a joint powers agency, created pursuant to Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500) of Chapter 5 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code, operating the airport, if the primary duty of the peace officer is the enforcement of the law in or about properties owned, operated, and administered by the employing agency or when performing necessary duties with respect to patrons, employees, and properties of the employing agency.
(e)(1)Any railroad police officer commissioned by the Governor pursuant to Section 8226 of the Public Utilities Code, if the primary duty of the peace officer is the enforcement of the law in or about properties owned, operated, or administered by the employing agency or when performing necessary duties with respect to patrons, employees, and properties of the employing agency.
(2)Notwithstanding any other law, a railroad police officer who has met the current requirements of the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training necessary for exercising the powers of a peace officer, and who has been commissioned by the Governor as described herein, and the officer’s employing agency, may apply for access to information from the California Law Enforcement Telecommunications System (CLETS) through a local law enforcement agency that has been granted direct access to CLETS, provided that, in addition to other review standards and conditions of eligibility applied by the Department of Justice, the CLETS Advisory Committee and the Attorney General, before access is granted the following are satisfied:
(A)The employing agency shall enter into a Release of CLETS Information agreement as provided for in the CLETS
policies, practices, and procedures, and the required background check on the peace officer and other pertinent personnel has been completed, together with all required training.
(B)The Release of CLETS Information agreement shall be in substantially the same form as prescribed by the CLETS policies, practices, and procedures for public agencies of law enforcement who subscribe to CLETS services, and shall be subject to the provisions of Chapter 2.5 (commencing with Section 15150) of Part 6 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code and the CLETS policies, practices, and procedures.
(C)(i)The employing agency shall expressly waive any objections to jurisdiction in the courts of the State of California for a liability arising from use, abuse, or misuse of CLETS access or services or the information derived therefrom, or with respect to legal actions to enforce provisions of California law relating to CLETS access, services, or information under this subdivision, and provided that this liability shall be in addition to that imposed by Section
8226 of the Public Utilities Code.
(ii)The employing agency shall further agree to utilize CLETS access, services, or information only for law enforcement activities by peace officers who have met the current requirements of the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training necessary for exercising the powers of a peace officer, and who have been commissioned as described herein who are operating within the State of California, where the activities are directly related to investigations or arrests arising from conduct occurring within the State of California.
(iii)The employing agency shall further agree to pay to the Department of Justice and the providing local law enforcement agency all costs related to the provision of access or services, including, but not limited to, any and all hardware, interface modules, and costs for
telephonic communications, as well as administrative costs.