" flight
Titles Agency executives • The
director, originally titled the chief United States Marshal, overall head of the USMS and overseer of the Marshals. • The deputy director, principal deputy and first in line of succession to the director.
Marshals • United States Marshal: the top executive of the Marshals Service in each of the 94 federal judicial districts, this allows them to work additional hours and receive an additional 25%
Law Enforcement Availability Pay on top of their base pay. Prior to this new deputies did not receive the
1811 Criminal Investigators until after they reached the GS-11 pay grade. This practice caused financial hardship and retention issues to new deputies coming into the agency in the past. After the first year in grade, they are promoted to
GS-9, then to
GS-11 after a second year, and then to
GS-12 after a third year. Duties performed include criminal investigations, execution of warrants, and other investigative operations. They also protect government officials, process seized assets of crime rings for investigative agencies, and relocate and arrange new identities for federal witnesses in the
United States Federal Witness Protection Program, which is headed by the USMS. After Congress passed the
Adam Walsh Act, the U.S. Marshals Service was chosen to head the new federal sex offender tracking and prosecution team.
Special Deputy Marshals The director of the United States Marshals Service is authorized to deputize the following persons to perform the functions of a deputy U.S. Marshal in any district designated by the director: • Selected officers or employees of the Department of Justice; • Selected federal, state, or local law enforcement officers whenever the law enforcement needs of the U.S. Marshals Service so require; • Selected employees of private security companies in providing courtroom security for the Federal judiciary; • Other persons designated by the Associate Attorney General pursuant to 28 CFR 0.19(a)(3).
Court Security Officers Court security officers (CSOs) are contracted former law enforcement officers who receive limited deputations as armed special deputy marshals and play a role in courthouse security. Using security screening systems, court security officers attempt to detect and intercept weapons and other prohibited items that individuals attempt to bring into federal courthouses. There are more than 5,000 court security officers with certified law enforcement experience deployed at more than 400 federal court facilities in the United States and its territories.
Inspectors The Marshal Service has the positions of inspector, senior inspector and chief inspector, depending on the duties and position to which a deputy marshal has been assigned to. This title was created for promotions within the service usually for senior non-supervisory personnel. Senior deputy marshals assigned to regional fugitive task forces or working in special assignments requiring highly skilled criminal investigators often receive the title Inspector. Operational non-supervisory employees assigned to the Witness Protection Program are given the title Senior Inspector. Deputy Marshals assigned to the
Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) department within the USMS also hold the title of Senior Inspector. Senior inspectors receive a
GS-13 pay grade level.
Line-of-duty deaths More than 200 U.S. Marshals, deputy marshals, and special deputy marshals have been killed in the line of duty since Marshal
Robert Forsyth was shot dead by an intended recipient of court papers in
Augusta, Georgia, on January 11, 1794. He was the first U.S. federal law enforcement officer to be killed in the line of duty. The dead are remembered on an honor roll permanently displayed at headquarters and at the United States Marshals' National Museum in Fort Smith, Arkansas.
Notable marshals and deputy marshals File:Robert Forsyth (U.S. marshal).png|
Robert Forsyth File:Wild Bill Hickok sepia.png|
Wild Bill Hickok File:BassReeves.jpg|
Bass Reeves File:Wyatt Earp portrait.png|
Wyatt Earp File:Frederick_Douglass_(circa_1879)_(cropped).jpg|
Frederick Douglass •
Robert Forsyth (1754-1794), first U.S. Marshal for the
District of Georgia; first U.S. Marshal and
federal law enforcement officer to be
killed in the line-of-duty •
Nathaniel P. Banks (1816–1894), U.S. Marshal for Massachusetts 1879–1888 •
Jesse D. Bright (1812–1875), U.S. Marshal for Indiana; later served as
U.S. senator for that state •
Seth Bullock (1849–1919), businessman, rancher,
sheriff for Montana, sheriff of
Deadwood, South Dakota, U.S. Marshal of South Dakota •
John F. Clark, U.S. Marshals Service Director and U.S. Marshal for the Eastern District of Virginia •
Charles Francis Colcord (1859–1934), rancher, businessman and U.S. Marshal for
Oklahoma •
Phoebe Couzins (1839–1913), lawyer, first woman appointed to the U.S. Marshals •
Henry Dearborn (1751–1829), U.S. Marshal for the
District of Maine •
Frederick Douglass (1818–1895), former slave and noted
abolitionist leader, appointed U.S. Marshal for the
District of Columbia in 1877 •
Virgil Earp (1843–1905), Deputy U.S. Marshal, Tombstone, Arizona. •
Wyatt Earp (1848–1929), Deputy U.S. Marshal (twice, first deputized in Arizona for the purpose of
leading a federal posse, then in Nevada for a brief period, later in life). •
James Earp (1841-1926), Special Deputy U.S. Marshal, as a member of Wyatt's federal posse. •
Warren Earp (1855-1900), Special Deputy U.S. Marshal, as a member of Wyatt's federal posse. •
Frank Eaton (1860–1958), While a legitimate cowboy and role model for
Pistol Pete, the mascot for
Oklahoma State University, claims of his service as the Deputy U.S. Marshal for Judge
Isaac C. Parker and related stories of revenge killings by him are provably false. •
Richard Griffith (1814–1862),
Brigadier General for the
Confederacy during the
Civil War •
Wild Bill Hickok (1837–1876), noted Western lawman; served as a Deputy U.S. Marshal at
Fort Riley, Kansas 1867–1869 •
Ward Hill Lamon (1826–1893), friend, and frequent bodyguard of President
Abraham Lincoln, who appointed him U.S. Marshal for the
District of Columbia •
James Longstreet (1832–1904), a former high-ranking
Confederate general in the
American Civil War who became a Republican and supporter of
Reconstruction after the war. Appointed as U.S. Marshall for the Northern District of Georgia by
James Garfield in June 1881 and served until July 1884. •
J. J. McAlester (1842–1920), U.S. Marshal for
Indian Territory (1893–1897), Confederate Army captain, merchant in and founder of McAlester, Oklahoma as well as the developer of the coal mining industry in eastern Oklahoma, one of three members of the first
Oklahoma Corporation Commission (1907–1911) and the second
Lieutenant Governor of Oklahoma (1911–1915) •
Benjamin McCulloch (1811–1862), U.S. Marshal for Eastern District of Texas; became a
brigadier general in the army of the
Confederate States during the
American Civil War •
Henry Eustace McCulloch (1816–1895), U.S. Marshal for Eastern District of Texas. Brother of Benjamin McCulloch; also a Confederate General •
James J. P. McShane (1909–1968), appointed U.S. Marshal for the District of Columbia by President
John F. Kennedy then named chief marshal in 1962 •
John W. Marshall, U.S. Marshal for the Eastern District of Virginia (1994–1999), first African-American to serve as Director of the U.S. Marshals Service (1999–2001) •
Bat Masterson (1853–1921), noted Western lawman; deputy to U.S. Marshal for Southern District of New York, appointed by
Theodore Roosevelt •
Joseph Meek (1810–1875), territorial marshal for
Oregon •
Thomas Morris (1771–1849), U.S. Marshal for
New York District •
David Neagle (1847–1925), shot former
Chief Justice of California David S. Terry to protect
US Supreme Court Justice Stephen Johnson Field, resulting in
U.S. Supreme Court decision
In re Neagle •
Israel C. O'Neal (1818-1899), Deputy U.S. Marshal for the Eastern District of Virginia and a member of the
Virginia House of Delegates. • John L. Pascucci (1948–present), former Chief of International Operations for the U.S. Marshals Service and author of ''The Manhunter: The Astounding True Story of the U.S. Marshal Who Tracked Down the World's Most Evil Criminals''. Charged with extortion in 1989. •
Bob Pavlak (1924–1994), U.S. Marshal for the District of Minnesota and Minnesota legislator •
Henry Massey Rector (1816–1899), U.S. Marshal for
Arkansas, later governor of that state •
Bass Reeves (July 1838 – January 1910), is thought by most to be one of the first Black men to receive a commission as a Deputy U.S. Marshal west of the Mississippi River. Before he retired from federal service in 1907, Reeves had arrested over 3,000 felons. •
Porter Rockwell (c.1813–1878), Deputy U.S. Marshal for
Utah •
William Stephens Smith (1755–1816), 1789 U.S. Marshal for
New York district and son-in-law of President
John Adams •
Dallas Stoudenmire (1845–1882), successful city marshal who tamed and controlled the remote, wild and violent town of
El Paso, Texas; became U.S. Marshal serving West Texas and New Mexico Territory just before his death •
Heck Thomas (1850–1912),
Bill Tilghman (1854–1924), and
Chris Madsen (1851–1944), the "
Three Guardsmen" of the
Oklahoma Territory •
William F. Wheeler (1824–1894), U.S. Marshal for the
Montana Territory • Cal Whitson (1845–1926), one-eyed Deputy U.S. Marshal for the Oklahoma Territory; served as the basis for the character
Rooster Cogburn in the novel and films
True Grit •
James E. Williams (1930–1999), U.S. Marshal for South Carolina,
Medal of Honor recipient ==Criticism and controversy==