THE AMERICA ONE NEWS
Feb 22, 2025  |  
0
 | Remer,MN
Sponsor:  QWIKET AI 
Sponsor:  QWIKET AI 
Sponsor:  QWIKET AI: Interactive Sports Knowledge.
Sponsor:  QWIKET AI: Interactive Sports Knowledge and Reasoning Support.
back  
topic
Boston Herald
Boston Herald
21 Jun 2023
Ross Marchand


NextImg:Marchand: Postal Service fails to protect workers from rising crime

Recently, mail delivery has proven a risky endeavor. In early June, New York Post contributor Allie Griffin reported that a “pair of masked muggers violently attacked and robbed a New Jersey postal worker on just his second day on the job.”

Two weeks before, two mail carriers were robbed in Portsmouth, Virginia.

These are not isolated incidents.  In fact, there were an astounding 500 mail robberies in 2022, and there’s little indication that security is improving. Yet, the U.S. Postal Service refuses to allow the postal police force to conduct patrols and protect mail carriers, instead sequestering them around agency buildings. Postal leadership must protect its workforce and ensure a safe, secure mail system.

Amid soaring postal theft, lawmakers have vented their frustration to postal leadership that mail carriers don’t have anyone watching their backs. During a May House Oversight and Accountability subcommittee hearing, Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Maryland, asked Postmaster General Louis DeJoy whether the service has “continued to prevent postal police officers from doing their jobs … by traveling to wherever the problem is taking place?”

DeJoy responded that he has no authority to deploy the 700-strong police force to high-crime areas because of laws on the books. The relevant legal language states that the service “may employ police officers for duty in connection with the protection of property owned or occupied by the Postal Service or under the charge and control of the Postal Service, and persons on that property, including duty in areas outside the property to the extent necessary to protect the property and persons on the property.”

That’s a mouthful, but it’s easy to see where postal leadership has gone astray in their interpretation of the law. The “protection of property owned or occupied by the Postal Service” makes it sound like the postal police force is limited to securing post offices and administrative buildings. The key overlooked language addresses property “under the charge and control” of the service. Because the service claims a monopoly on what goes inside mailboxes, it’s reasonable to infer that the agency effectively controls that property even though it doesn’t own outright mailboxes. And, if mailboxes meet the definition of protectable property under the law, postal police are indeed obligated to patrol mail carriers’ delivery routes.

DeJoy has all the legal cover he needs to send the postal police force on patrols.

Deploying postal police is just the first step in securing the postal system. The Postal Inspection Service, which oversees the postal police force, has an expansive mandate and receives about $500 million per year in taxpayer money to secure the mail. Even this substantial sum, though, fails to ensure smooth operations.

Shoring up Postal Inspection Service operations can go a long way toward resolving theft cases and bringing criminals to justice. However, none of this will happen without the resolve and dedication of postal leadership. The service must use all the tools to keep its workers safe.

Ross Marchand is a non-resident fellow at the Taxpayers Protection Alliance/InsideSources