HGUNNER wrote:
Lets start at the beginning--to work in ny you must be a licensed pi or bea period--if you are neither you go to jail--to work in conn you must be a licensed bea period--nj has passed a license requirement and will soon be enforceing it--pa is considering a license this year and i would bet it will pass--so where will you and your team work--most states in the north east and mid atlantic region are going to a license before you think of anything else start finding out about licensing and what is needed by each state meet their requirements and than maybe you will get some more work
while i have never been to a usrb class there rep comes from a lot of problems caused by many of their graduates--if what is said by their graduates is true than the usrb plain out lies to their students about the legallity of bea work in many jurisdictions--so do some research in the states you would like to work get the needed licenses and than advertise--I believe part of the nj bea license will be 5 years leo experiance or 5 years a bea in nj--ny includes a 500.000.00 dollar bond--again research or else you will be sharing a cell with your skip
Here is part of what I found in the NY lic site.
http://www.dos.state.ny.us/lcns/bailfacts.html
PIs
This amendment does NOT have any impact on private investigators (PIs). PIs (whether new to the field or existing) AND their employees can continue engaging in bail enforcement WITHOUT further licensing requirements or training.
BEA Employee Requirements
* All staff: BEA entity must maintain in its files an Employee Statement for each of its staff and submit a fingerprint card and $75 fingerprint fee (payable to Department of State) to the Department of State.
* Staff actually engaged in the apprehension and return of a fugitive: BEA entity must maintain in its files an Employee Statement for each of its staff and submit a fingerprint card and $75 fingerprint fee (payable to Department of State) to the Department of State. Additionally, it must complete 25-hour training.
I thought in NY that if you work under a PI's license you can work as a bea. Am I wrong?