Why Off-Duty Police Officers
Some security assignments call for the specific credentials of a sworn law enforcement officer. Active off-duty police carry peace-officer status, arrest authority where applicable, firearms carry credentials that exceed civilian standards, and the specific training and experience that come from operational law enforcement work. For the right assignment, this matters: large events with elevated risk profiles, executive protection details for higher-threat principals, specialty coverage for environments where LE presence specifically reassures clients and deters incidents.
U.S.S. Agency has coordinated off-duty LE assignments for over a decade. We maintain a vetted roster of active and retired law enforcement officers across the region, coordinate scheduling directly with their home agencies when required, and handle the documentation and coordination that off-duty LE work requires. For clients who need what only sworn officers bring, this is the service line.
Who We Schedule
Our off-duty LE roster includes active officers from regional agencies with their departments' approval, retired law enforcement with verifiable credentials, and specialty sworn personnel from federal, state, and local agencies. Every officer is vetted at the credential level. Agencies that require specific coordination for off-duty work have that coordination handled through our field leadership. Off-duty scheduling respects the officer's primary-agency obligations and is arranged around the officer's availability, not against it.
Assignments That Call for Off-Duty LE
Not every assignment requires sworn officers. Most civilian security assignments are well-served by licensed civilian security officers. Off-duty LE is specifically engaged when the assignment profile calls for the credentials.
- High-profile events — concerts, galas, sporting events, conventions with elevated risk or VIP attendance
- Executive protection — principals with specific threat profiles requiring sworn officer presence
- Restraining order service — civil or criminal order contexts where LE presence de-escalates
- Elevated-risk workplace deployments — specific workplace violence situations warranting sworn response
- School event coverage — specific school events where administrative leadership wants sworn presence
- Court-adjacent assignments — attorney-coordinated work requiring officer credentials
- Transportation and convoy coverage — high-value asset movement, specialty logistics
- Specific reputational or institutional assignments where sworn officer credentials are required by contract
How Off-Duty Scheduling Works
Scheduling off-duty LE requires coordination that differs from standard civilian security scheduling. For active officers, we verify primary-agency approval for off-duty work, confirm the officer's availability against their regular duty schedule, and document the engagement in the format the officer's department requires. For retired LE, we verify credentials and work history. Every assignment is documented end-to-end — officer identity, agency affiliation, assignment scope, hours, and coordination notes. Nothing informal. Nothing off-the-books.
The U.S.S. Agency Off-Duty LE Standard
The off-duty LE roster we maintain is vetted beyond our standard process. We verify credentials directly with the officer's primary agency (for active officers) or with documented service records (for retired officers). We confirm the officer has no disqualifying history. We maintain current contact with every officer on the roster. And we match officers to assignments based on fit — the right officer for the right assignment, not just the first available officer on the list.
Coordination with Civilian Security
Many engagements combine off-duty LE with civilian security officers. A large event might deploy off-duty LE in key positions (principal protection, access control at VIP areas) alongside licensed civilian officers in perimeter and general coverage roles. A workplace violence response might start with off-duty LE presence during the initial termination meeting and transition to civilian coverage in the days and weeks following. U.S.S. Agency coordinates the full deployment — LE and civilian working the same engagement under unified command.
Licensing and Insurance
U.S.S. Agency operates under Florida Statute Chapter 493, Section 6301 et seq. Our Class B Agency License is on file with FDACS. Off-duty LE officers carry their own sworn credentials in addition to the coordination U.S.S. Agency provides. We carry commercial general liability coverage well above state minimums. Certificates of insurance and additional insured endorsements are provided to clients during onboarding.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are these officers sworn? Our active off-duty roster is composed of currently-sworn law enforcement officers. Our retired roster is composed of former sworn officers with documented service records.
How fast can you schedule off-duty LE? Depends on officer availability and the assignment profile. Same-day scheduling is sometimes possible. 2-5 day lead time is more typical.
Can off-duty LE handle a restraining order service? Yes, in civil or criminal contexts where attorney or court coordination is required.
Do you coordinate directly with the officer's primary agency? Yes, when the engagement requires it.
Can off-duty LE and civilian security work the same engagement? Yes, and many engagements combine both under unified U.S.S. Agency field command.
When Credentials Matter
Not every assignment calls for off-duty law enforcement. When one does, U.S.S. Agency has the vetted roster, the coordination, and the documentation to deliver. Contact U.S.S. Agency to discuss an off-duty LE engagement.