A Pennsylvania State Constable is an elected office held in all Pennsylvania townships and boroughs except for Philadelphia, where it was abolished in the 1970s. Pennsylvania Constables are sworn law enforcement officers and have the right in Pennsylvania to arrest by warrant anywhere in the commonwealth, and to conduct warrantless arrests for felonies and breaches of the peace committed in their presence, including warrantless arrests for felony violations of the drug laws (see Commonwealth v. Taylor, 450 Pa. Super. 583, 596, 677 A.2d 846,852 [Pa. 1996]). They also have statutory powers of arrest in certain situations (see e.g. 32 P.S. S582; S3 P.S. §13349). Constables are exempt from the legal requirement to have a license to carry a firearm in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, as they meet the definition of "Qualified Law Enforcement Officer" under the provisions of §18 USC 926b, the Law Enforcement Officers Safety Act.
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Definition of a Pennsylvania Constable
A constable is a local elected official and serves six-year terms.
Constables belong to the executive branch of government. As such, they are answerable to the governor of Pennsylvania. However, they are not formally overseen by any state agency. They perform services for the Pennsylvania courts system, primarily serving the Minor Judiciary, but they do not belong to the judicial branch. With regard to their judicial services, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has found constables to be "independent contractors that orbit the judiciary."
In Pennsylvania, constables are defined as peace officers, with certain police powers (such as arrest authority on warrants and crimes committed in their presence).. As such, they are also empowered to quell a disturbance of the peace. A disturbance of the peace in Pennsylvania is defined as an imminent threat or danger to persons or property. For example, if a constable observes a public brawl, then the constable may arrest the participants for breaching the peace.
The role of Pennsylvania State Constable is that of a professional law enforcement officer charged with a multitude of duties and responsibilities, including providing courtroom security for the Magisterial District Courts, transporting prisoners, locating and apprehending fugitives, serving warrants, legal papers, and notices, collection of taxes, arrest offenders against forest laws, administering eviction, repossession and sale of real and personal property.
Constables are also charged by Pennsylvania statute with maintaining order at election polls and ensuring that no qualified elector is obstructed from voting. Constables are the only peace officers permitted at the polls on Election Day. In fact, this duty is mandated upon constables.
In addition to any other powers granted under the law, a constable of a borough shall, without warrant and upon the view, arrest and commit for hearing any person who:
1. Is guilty of a breach of the peace, vagrancy, riotous or disorderly conduct or drunkenness.
2. May be engaged in the commission of any unlawful act tending to imperil the personal security or endanger the property of the citizens.
3. Violates any ordinance of the borough for which a fine or penalty is imposed.
Constables belong to the executive branch of government. As such, they are answerable to the governor of Pennsylvania.
Constable’s are the oldest law enforcement position in the world.
In Pennsylvania, Constable’s are considered to be a “Peace Officer” because of their Constitutional origin, and as elected officials, they are independent of other and authority to perform his duties according to the statute, in the interest of justice.
Protecting the Polls
Constables are required by Pennsylvania statute to maintain order at election polls and ensure that no qualified elector is obstructed from voting. Constables are the only peace officers permitted at the polls on election day. Failure to protect the polls, or provide for their protection through appointed deputies, is punishable by fine and/or jail time. Constables are paid a fixed fee for performing this duty.
Working for the Courts
Constables may serve the court, but are not required to. When serving the judiciary, constables may serve any judicial process, which includes arrest warrants from summary to felony, conduct levies, perform evictions, and serve PFA orders. These services are regulated by Act 49 of 2009 of the Pennsylvania statutes. The constable is paid for these services by fees which are specified in the statutes, and paid by the defendant in criminal cases or the plaintiff in civil cases. In many Pennsylvania counties, Constables provide courtroom security and transport prisoners. For example, Bucks, Chester and Berks Counties use constables for all prisoner transports and courtroom security. This is much more cost effective then the use of sheriffs, and allows police officers to return to the street quicker then if they transported their own prisoners. Many counties have switched to this option.
Training
Presently, Constables are required to complete Act 49 certification and training before performing any court duties. Basic 'Act 49 training is provided by the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency (PCCD). The initial Basic Training course is 80 hours of classroom instructions on the follow subjects: use of force, professional development, civil law, criminal law, prisoner transport, courtroom security, defensive tactics, OC and baton, mechanics of arrest, role of the constable, and crisis intervention. Constables must pass each subject by scoring at least 70% on a written exam, and topics are updated yearly as required.
An additional (although optional) firearms certification course is also conducted by the PCCD, providing for 40 hours of intensive classroom and range instruction. Upon completing a course of fire (comparable to that of municipal and state police), and after passing with at least a 75%, constables then receive firearms certification.
Completing both courses provides for 120 hours total of initial training and education, or approximately 1/4 of the initial hours of municipal police. Each year, Constables must take 40 hours of "Continuing Education" to maintain their certification; this includes 20 hours of legal updates and refreshers and 20 hours of range qualification time. At the completion of a six year term of office, a constable will have had 320 hours of PCCD instruction and training.
Discipline and Removal
A Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas judge may remove a constable for misfeasance, malfeasance, or acts of oppression. Malfeasance is defined as a breach of a positive statutory duty or of performing a discretionary act with an improper or corrupt motive. If a court finds that a constable committed misfeasance, malfeasance, or an acts of oppression, the court may then find that the constable is unfit for office and remove him from office as constable.
State Filing Requirements
As elected public officials, constables are required to file an annual Statement of Financial Interests with the Pennsylvania State Ethics Commission.
Deputy Constables
Each constable may, with approval of the President Judge in the county the constable is elected in, appoint deputies to work under his authority. Each deputy is given the same authority as the constable himself, but serves at the pleasure of the elected constable.
In order to have a deputy constable appointed, the constable must file a petition with the Court of Common Pleas and state the reasons a deputy is needed.
A constable may appoint "Election Day" deputy constables to monitor polling places in their elected districts. These constables serve as protectors of the peace on the selected days only.
Media Coverage
Controversy over the role of constables in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania has been raised by the print media, including the Associated Press. Among the issues the press has alleged are a lack of oversight and training that constables receive. Since constables are not directly supervised by the executive branch or the courts, it is claimed that they have been able to escape accountability.
One Associated Press series reviewed the constabulary’s legal status and asserted that (i) there are no minimum qualifications to hold the office, (ii) the system remains wide open for abuse, and (iii) that statewide reform had failed on at least two prior occasions.
Some of the incidents highlighted by the press include:
List of Removed or Disciplined Constables
Proposed Reform
On December 30, 2008, Ronald Castille, the Chief Justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court told the Associated Press that the Court was studying implementing statewide regulations, including issuing a statewide constable handbook. Castille further stated that the Supreme Court's minor rules committee was studying the Berks and Chester County Constable Handbook and would welcome input from judges across the Commonwealth in making a determination.
State Representative Tom Caltagirone, the former chairman of the Pennsylvania House Judiciary Committee was working on possible reforms to the constable system. According to the Associated Press, Caltagirone met with the Pennsylvania State Constable Association and the Pennsylvania Fraternal Order of Constables to outline his proposal for reform. However, no successful proposal was ever introduced.
Castille ordered a study of the constabulary in order to get a better reign on the situation in the state. The result was the 2014 Joint State Government Committee Constable Study. In addition to providing history of the constabulary and comparisons to other law enforcement entities, the 100-plus page review cited issues with the constabulary and offered ideas to fix them, including modification of Act 49 of 2009. The JSGC study was never acted upon during 2014 or 2015.
In 2014, new Constable Rules of Court were implemented by the Pa Supreme Court applicable to all constables. However, lacking a mechanism of enforcement and penalties for failure to follow, many counties and constables alike have chosen to ignore them. Some of the rules were requiring constables to be uniformed when providing services, installing safety barriers in transport vehicles, and so on.