United States Postal Inspection Service

United States Postal Inspection Service
Common name Postal Inspection Service
Abbreviation USPIS

Patch of the United States Postal Inspection Service Postal police uniform division

Logo of the United States Postal Inspection Service

Badge of the United States Postal Inspection Service
Agency overview
Formed 1772 (surveyors)
1802 (special agents)
1830 (agency)
Employees 3,500 (approx)
Legal personality Governmental: Government agency
Jurisdictional structure
Federal agency United States
General nature
Specialist jurisdiction Property, personnel, and-or postal items of a postal service.
Operational structure
Headquarters 475 L'Enfant Plaza SW, Washington, D.C.
Postal Inspectors 1,200 (approx)
Agency executive Guy Cottrell, Chief Postal Inspector
Parent agency United States Postal Service
Website
postalinspectors.uspis.gov

The United States Postal Inspection Service (USPIS) is the law enforcement arm of the United States Postal Service. Its jurisdiction is defined as "crimes that may adversely affect or fraudulently use the U.S. Mail, the postal system or postal employees." The mission of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service is to support and protect the U.S. Postal Service, its employees, infrastructure, and customers by enforcing the laws that defend the nation’s mail system from illegal or dangerous use.

In fiscal year 2014, USPIS had 2,376 field employees, a decline of 44.7% from fiscal year 1995.[1] (This figure excludes headquarters staff.[1]) In 2008, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service had 2,288 full-time personnel with the authority to make arrests and carry firearms on duty.[2] This represented a 23.1% drop over the previous five years.[2]

History

The Postal Inspection Service has the oldest origins of any federal law enforcement agency in the United States. It traces its roots back to 1772[3] when colonial Postmaster General Benjamin Franklin first appointed a "surveyor" to regulate and audit the mails. Thus, the Service's origins—in part—predate the Declaration of Independence, and therefore the United States itself. As Franklin was Postmaster under the Continental Congress and was George Washington's first Postmaster, his system continued.

In 1801, the title of "surveyor" was changed to Special Agent. In 1830, the Special Agents were organized into the Office of Instructions and Mail Depredations. The Postal Inspection Service was the first federal law enforcement agency to use the title Special Agent for its officers. Congress changed this title to Inspector in 1880.

For some time, one of their primary duties was the enforcement of obscenity prohibitions under the Comstock Act.

Jurisdiction and activities

As fact-finding and investigative agents, Postal Inspectors are sworn federal law enforcement officers who carry firearms, make arrests and serve federal search warrants and subpoenas. Inspectors work closely with U.S. Attorneys, other law enforcement agencies, and local prosecutors to investigate postal cases and prepare them for court. For example, on all international mail Postal Inspectors work closely with U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) or U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) while on domestic mail Postal Inspectors work closely with state and local law enforcement agencies. There are approximately 1,200 Postal Inspectors stationed throughout the United States and abroad who enforce more than 200 federal laws covering investigations of crimes that adversely affect or fraudulently use the U.S. Mail and postal system.

The USPIS has responsibility to safeguard over 600,000[4] Postal Service employees and billions of pieces of mail transported worldwide yearly by air, land, rail and sea.

USPIS was at one time the only investigative agency of the Postal Service; however, with the creation of the USPS Office of Inspector General in 1996, they assumed many duties previously carried out by the USPIS. The USPS OIG conducts independent audits and investigations. Audits of postal programs and operations help to determine whether the programs and operations are efficient and cost-effective. Investigations help prevent and detect fraud, waste, and misconduct and have a deterrent effect on postal crimes.

The OIG primarily took over the Postal Inspection Service's audit function, as well as fraud (against the USPS) waste and abuse.

Public service announcement poster of USPIS

Since the September 11, 2001, attacks, the USPIS has also investigated several cases where ricin, anthrax and other toxic substances were sent through the mail. Although the USPIS has a wide jurisdiction, USPIS investigations can be categorized into these seven types of investigative teams and functions:

  1. Fraud: These types of investigation involve crimes that use the mails to facilitate fraud against consumers, business and government. Federal statutes that surround these types of investigations include, mail fraud, and other criminal statutes when they are tied to the mails such as bank fraud, identity theft, credit card fraud, wire fraud, and Internet/computer fraud. Mail fraud is a statute that is used in prosecuting many white collar crimes, this would include, Ponzi schemes, 419 frauds, and other white collar crimes where the mail was used to facilitate the fraud including public corruption (under the "Honest Services" provision of the federal fraud statutes). In the 1960s and 70s, inspectors under regional chief postal inspectors such as Martin McGee, known as "Mr. Mail Fraud," exposed and prosecuted numerous swindles involving land sales, phony advertising practices, insurance ripoffs and fraudulent charitable organizations using mail fraud charges.[5] McGee is credited with assisting in the conviction of former Illinois Governor Otto Kerner on mail fraud charges.[6]
  2. External Crime & Violent Crime Teams: The External Crimes Function of USPIS is a function that investigates any theft of US mail by non employees, assaults of postal employees and theft and robberies of postal property. This function also investigates robberies of postal employees and postal facilities, burglaries of postal facilities, and assaults and murders against postal employees. This investigative function focuses on ensuring that the sanctity and trust in the U.S. Mail system is maintained.
  3. Prohibited Mailing Investigations: Prohibited mailing investigations are USPIS investigations that focus on the prohibited mailing of contraband including: narcotics, precursors and proceeds; child pornography and other sexually prohibited materials; and hazardous materials to include, mail bombs, and nuclear, biological and chemical weapons. The laundering of narcotics and other criminal proceeds through the use of Postal Money Orders is sometimes categorized under this investigative function.
  4. Aviation and Homeland Security: USPIS investigations also include the securing and protecting of transportation of US Mail and any risk that might compromise the security of the homeland because of these mails. Security Audits are conducted by these teams to ensure that postal service maintains facilities secure from not only theft and robberies but also natural and manmade disasters.
  5. Revenue Investigations: USPIS investigates cases where fraudulent practices are conducted by business and consumers that mail items without proper postage or with counterfeit postage and indicia or crimes that defraud the USPS of revenue.
  6. International Investigations and Global Security: This investigative function ensures that international mail is secured and any international business decisions and campaigns remains safe, and secure. USPIS maintains investigators in the US and in posts around the world for protection, liaison, and intelligence.
  7. Joint Task Force Investigations: USPIS participates in joint task force investigations where laws applicable to the mail service are involved. These cases are often wide ranging and involve every law enforcement agency of the Federal Government. For example, USPIS participated in the largest count indictment and conviction in NASA history, the Omniplan case, that put seven companies out of business and ended with the conviction of Omniplan owner, Ralph Montijo, on 179 federal crimes.[7][8]

The Postal Inspection Service's Technical Services Unit (TSU) provides investigative support through the use of new technology and the operations of two national communication centers known as the National Law Enforcement Control Centers (NLECC). In 2003 U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement renamed their national communication center, previously known as "Sector" to the "National Law Enforcement COMMUNICATIONS Center" (also known as NLECC), USPIS NLECC and ICE NLECC are two independent federal law enforcement radio communications centers but coincidentally share the same acronym and an almost identical name.

USPS Forensic Laboratory

The U.S. Postal Inspection Service first established a crime lab in 1940.[9] Today, the main USPS Forensic Laboratory is located in Dulles, Virginia,[10] in a two-story, 44,000-square-foot facility.[11] The lab is staffed by forensic scientists and technical experts and consists of four units: the Questioned Documents Unit, the Fingerprint Unit, the Physical Sciences Unit, and the Digital Evidence Unit.[10] The laboratory is overseen by a laboratory director and each of the four units is overseen by an assistant laboratory director.[11] There are also four satellite offices, located in New York, Chicago, Memphis, and San Francisco.[12] In 2012, the entire U.S. Postal Inspection Service laboratory system had 65 employees (58 scientific staff and seven administrative staff), mostly based in the main Dulles lab.[11]

Police Force

Postal Police vehicle in New York City, a 2016 Ford Police Interceptor Utility

In addition to maintaining a staff of postal inspectors and others, the Postal Inspection Service has a uniformed force of Postal Police Officers who are assigned to major postal facilities throughout the United States; these officers "provide perimeter security, escort high-value mail shipments, and perform other essential protective functions."[13] In the year 2000, the service had about 1,400 uniformed postal police officers.[14]

USPIS Academy

The Postal Inspection Service maintains a law enforcement academy (the Career Development Unit (CDU)) based in Potomac, Maryland. It is a federally accredited law enforcement academy by the Federal Law Enforcement Training Accreditation (FLETA).[15]

Fallen officers

Fourteen US Postal Inspectors and Postal Police Officers have died in the line of duty.[16] Their names have been etched on the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial wall and to a Postal Inspection Service plaque at the agency's national headquarters, both located in Washington, D.C.

2 SMRT 4U

In 2006 the Postal Inspection Service created the "2 SMRT 4U" campaign aimed at teenage girls, the group most targeted by online sexual predators. It established the website to educate teens about how to chat and post wisely online.[17] The website has been rebranded NSTeens.org, but still provides educational information for teens. For its dedication to protecting children and fighting child exploitation, the United States Department of Justice honored the Postal Inspection Service with its Internet Safety Award.[18]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Kathryn A. Francis, U.S. Postal Service Workforce Size and Employment Categories, FY1995-FY2014, p. 6, table 2 (October 21, 2015).
  2. 1 2 Brian A. Reaves, Federal Law Enforcement Officers, 2008, Bureau of Justice Statistics, United States Department of Justice (June 2012).
  3. "A Chronology of the United States Postal Inspection Service". Retrieved 27 August 2013.
  4. "Size and Scope – Postal Facts". Retrieved 21 April 2014.
  5. "Martin J. Mcgee, Pioneer In Mail Fraud Investigation". Scribd.com. Retrieved 2015-05-21.
  6. Merriner, James L (2004-03-11). Grafters and Goo Goos. ISBN 9780809325719.
  7. Myerson, Allen R. (January 17, 1996). "Businessman Is Sentenced For Bilking Space Agency". The New York Times.
  8. Omniplan Owners Plead Guilty. The Bay Area Citizen, February 3, 1995.
  9. Suzanne Bell, Crime and Circumstance: Investigating the History of Forensic Science ( Praeger, 2008), p. 107.
  10. 1 2 Forensic Laboratory Services, U.S. Postal Inspection Service (accessed November 23, 2016.
  11. 1 2 3 Sara Goudarzi, Perspective On: A Forensics Lab, Lab Manager (January 20, 2012).
  12. Dorothy Moses Schultz, "U.S. Postal Inspection Service" in Encyclopedia of Law Enforcement, Vol. 1 (eds. Larry E. Sullivan & Marie Simonetti Rosen: SAGE Publications, 2005), p. 884.
  13. U.S. Postal Inspection Service Annual Report: FY 2014, U.S. Postal Inspection Service.
  14. Dorothy Moses Schultz, "U.S. Postal Inspection Service" in Encyclopedia of Law Enforcement, Vol. 1 (eds. Larry E. Sullivan & Marie Simonetti Rosen: SAGE Publications, 2005), p. 882.
  15. "Federal Law Enforcement Training Accreditation". Retrieved 1 March 2012.
  16. "Fallen Officers". USPIS. Retrieved 20 May 2015.
  17. "NSTeens.org - Making Safer Choices Online". 2smrt4u.com.
  18. "The National Strategy for Child Exploitation Prevention and Interdiction: A Report to Congress (page 88)" (PDF). Retrieved 1 March 2012.
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