S-1563-119
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 83.
Sponsored by Amy Klobuchar (D-MN)
What it does
This bill would create a new federal grant program, administered by the Attorney General, allowing state, local, tribal, and territorial law enforcement agencies to hire retired law enforcement officers for civilian support tasks — such as assisting in homicide, carjacking, and financial crimes investigations; reviewing camera footage; crime scene and forensics analysis; and providing technology expertise. Retired hires would be explicitly prohibited from making arrests or using force. The bill also requires agencies to check the National Decertification Index and personnel records for disciplinary history before hiring, and establishes Inspector General audits, mandatory exclusions for misuse of funds, and congressional reporting requirements.
Who benefits
Retired law enforcement officers who gain part-time or consulting employment opportunities. State, local, tribal, and territorial law enforcement agencies — particularly smaller or under-resourced departments — that gain access to experienced personnel without the cost of full-time hires. Communities in jurisdictions with staffing shortages that may see improved investigative capacity. Taxpayers in those jurisdictions, if grant funding reduces local budget pressure. Victims of homicide, carjacking, and financial crimes whose cases may benefit from additional investigative support.
Who is hurt
Active-duty law enforcement officers or civilian employees who may face competition for roles or reduced hiring pressure. Private-sector forensic, IT, and investigative contractors who currently fill similar support roles and could lose business to grant-funded retired officers. Agencies that misuse funds would face a two-year exclusion from the program. Communities in jurisdictions with histories of officer misconduct may face risk if background checks under the National Decertification Index are incomplete — the bill requires only a "good faith effort," not a mandatory disqualification. Taxpayers broadly, to the extent the program is funded through federal appropriations.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that law enforcement agencies across the country face a well-documented staffing crisis — a 2023 Police Executive Research Forum survey found that officer resignations and retirements have outpaced hiring at many departments, leaving investigative units understaffed. They contend that retired officers bring immediately deployable expertise in complex investigations, forensics, and technology, allowing agencies to address backlogs without the years-long pipeline of recruiting and training new officers. The bill's explicit prohibition on arrests and use of force, combined with mandatory background checks through the National Decertification Index, addresses accountability concerns while maximizing the practical value of experienced personnel.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's "good faith effort" standard for background checks is too weak — it does not require disqualification even when misconduct findings are discovered, leaving hiring decisions entirely to agency leadership and potentially allowing officers with disciplinary records to re-enter law enforcement work. They contend that the program could entrench existing departmental cultures rather than encouraging agencies to modernize by hiring civilian specialists with up-to-date technical training. Critics may also argue that federal grant dollars would be better directed toward recruiting and training new officers or addressing root causes of the staffing shortage, rather than subsidizing a temporary workforce of retirees whose skills may not reflect current investigative standards.