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01-13-2020, 07:17 AM | #1 |
Join Date: Jan 2020
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Basic Set: CIA/FBI/NSA
Hi there,
according to Basic the FBI has "Legal Enforcement Powers" at its 10 points version. What do other agencies such as the CIA and the NSA have? Is it "Legal Immunity"? Have they got any "Legal Enforcement Powers" at all? |
01-13-2020, 07:41 AM | #2 |
Join Date: Feb 2016
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Re: Basic Set: CIA/FBI/NSA
Officially, they have no official law enforcement powers and, when it comes to US citizens, they have no official legal immunity. They can legally detain you until law enforcement comes, but that is just a federal version of citizen's arrest, and they do not have to give you Miranda warnings.
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01-13-2020, 07:51 AM | #3 | |
Join Date: Dec 2012
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Re: Basic Set: CIA/FBI/NSA
Quote:
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Warning, I have the Distractible and Imaginative quirks in real life. "The more corrupt a government, the more it legislates." -- Tacitus Five Earths, All in a Row. Updated 12/17/2022: Apocrypha: Bridges out of Time, Part I has been posted. |
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01-13-2020, 09:10 AM | #4 |
Hero of Democracy
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: far from the ocean
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Re: Basic Set: CIA/FBI/NSA
The CIA's mission is the collection of intelligence for the US in foreign countries. As a secondary function, they are the primary actors for covert action in foreign countries. If the CIA suspects a US citizen of say, spying, they are supposed to reach out to law enforcement to make the arrest (and possibly conduct the investigation, I'm not sure).
The NSA is about intercepting and interpreting communications to gain information. They shouldn't be putting boots on the ground in the vast majority of cases, relying instead on other organizations to take action on the information the NSA provides. Separation is supposed to be kept between law enforcement and the above organizations, and when it isn't, there is a political fuss. They are supposed to be aimed at foreigners, not citizens, and the US government very much cares about the difference, if only because citizens are protected by the bill of rights. As for Federal agencies with legal enforcement powers, You could look at the secret service and the drug enforcement administration. There are also any smaller and more niche agencies, like the United States Park Police, the National Park Service rangers, and Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigation, and the myriad internal police of the military branches.
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Be helpful, not pedantic Worlds Beyond Earth -- my blog Check out the PbP forum! If you don't see a game you'd like, ask me about making one! |
01-13-2020, 09:29 AM | #5 |
Join Date: Feb 2014
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Re: Basic Set: CIA/FBI/NSA
The NSA is military, and expressly prohibited from acting as law enforcement in any capacity.
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01-14-2020, 10:23 AM | #6 | |
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Denver, Colorado
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Re: Basic Set: CIA/FBI/NSA
Quote:
The FBI controls all counter-intelligence operations in places under U.S. jurisdiction, and (as you noted) agents do exercise law-enforcement authority. (Interestingly, they exercise law-enforcement authority when U.S.-flagged ships and boats experience crime on the high seas, while the U.S. Coast Guard takes care of crimes in U.S. coasts waters. They just get help from the U.S. Navy, sometimes, if Congress okays it.) If someone with the CIA or NSA tries to target a U.S. citizen on U.S. soil, somebody with the agencies could wind up in jail. Congress gets pretty uptight about that sort of thing, and the courts have no sense of humor about it, at all.
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-- MXLP:9 [JD=1, DK=1, DM-M=1, M(FAW)=1, SS=2, Nym=1 (nose coffee), sj=1 (nose cocoa), Maz=1] "Some days, I just don't know what to think." -Daryl Dixon. |
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01-13-2020, 09:50 AM | #7 | |
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Portland, Oregon
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Re: Basic Set: CIA/FBI/NSA
Quote:
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"The navy could probably win a war without coffee but would prefer not to try"-Samuel Eliot Morrison |
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01-14-2020, 05:02 AM | #8 |
Join Date: Jan 2020
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Re: Basic Set: CIA/FBI/NSA
So the CIA and the NSA probably have Security Clearance alone, while the FBI also have Enforcement Powers. Is it? Should the CIA and the NSA have Legal Immunity?
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01-15-2020, 04:41 PM | #9 |
Join Date: Dec 2007
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Re: Basic Set: CIA/FBI/NSA
When the CIA captures someone that's not an arrest. It's just a kidnapping by guys with legal immunity. Not only do the CIA have legal immunity in the United States for the things they do outside the U.S and by arrangement with certain governments, but in less friendly nations they often have diplomatic immunity because they have an official cover as a State Department official. The NSA just do electronic intelligence gathering so they usually don't need anything.
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