I’ve recently purchased an X-Files boxed set that includes every season AND both movies. I’ve been devouring and enjoying every episode as only a true X-Phile could, but often find myself wondering why M&S often identify themselves as “Special Agent” so-and-so. What’s the difference between a “special” agent and a normal agent? Is it something just made up for the show or something real?
Bonus question: Why do the local cops always seem so angry when M&S show up on the scene? Is there some kind of unspoken rivalry between local cops and federal authorities over jurisdiction?
As a civilian who knows really nothing of law enforcement, I always associated special agent with the police departments “Officer” or Sheriff Department’s “Deputy”
Basically, if you were going to have a random run in with an FBI/PD/Sheriff, that’s who it would be with, they’d be the person on the street. IOW, there’s nothing special about being a Special Agent and if they just called them Agent, there wouldn’t be so many questions like this (it’s come up before).
But, of course, I could be wrong.
Vincent Bugliosi, when cross-examining FBI agents as a defense lawyer, would always bring out that “special agent” was the normal title for an FBI agent. He didn’t want the jury thinking, as the OP did, that the person testifying for the prosecution was some super-duper secret agent with extraordinary ability or rank.
As others have said, Special Agents are the rank and file of the FBI. I believe the title originated with Hoover, who essentially felt that every FBI agent was a Special Agent by virtue of the fact he was employed by the FBI and wasn’t part of an “ordinary” police department.
And that probably helps answer the OP’s questions about why there’s an unspoken rivalry between the FBI and local police.
[fanboy]Hardly. Both were promising young agents that were shunted into a career dead end. Mulder because he was crazy but had enough support in high places that he couldn’t be fired – so the FBI gave him his basement office and just enough resources to keep him busy. Scully was there at first to keep Mulder from going too far off the deep end, and it really destroyed any chance of promotions. It came up several times in the earlier seasons, where people who knew Scully repeatedly said things like “why do you stay there? you could have a great career if you were in a respectable position.”[/fanboy]
Yeah, “Special Agent” is just the job title given by the federal Office of Personnel Management for the basic law enforcement jobs. Some agencies have different names but special agent is sort of the default. Even NOAA, the weather people, have special agents.
To the second part of the question. I once spend a day fishing with a person high up in a local police department. He had nothing but bad things to say about the FBI. He said that FBI should stand for Famous But Incompentent. His complaint was that they wanted all of the credit for anything they helped with, despite knowing very little about actual crime. He said that they had lots of money to pay informants and they only reason they ever solved a crime was if outbid everyone else for an informant. He told a possibly apocryphal story about the FBI and another agency working together on a case, the other agency doing most of the work and then when it came to make an arrest ditching the other agency’s men at a McDonalds on the way to the arrest. He generally felt that if the FBI showed up they would act arrogantly and not contribute anything.
Tangential question: when I was a kid I was always told that you have to have a JD degree to be an FBI agent. But looking at the qualifications on the Bureau’s web page (linked to in another recently started thread on the subject), it says that the only educational requisite is graduation from an accredited four-year university. Is what I was told wrong, or did it change somewhere along the line?
I believe you were told wrong. There’s multiple “tracks” into the FBI. Having a JD qualifies you for one of them. Fluency in a needed foreign lanugage is another. I believe the other two are law enforcement background and forensic analysis, but I can’t be bothered to look it up.
When I was considering pursuing a JD recently, one of the motivators was that it was a qualifier for the FBI. When I discovered that color-deficient vision was a disqualifier for the FBI, a big chunk of my interest in getting a JD went out the window.
Slight correction - they start (generally) at GS-10s, if memory serves. There are plenty of GS-5s in the FBI (and 7, 8, 9s). S/A just means “Criminal Investigator” or “Series 1811.” Heck, the USSS starts lots of folks out at GS-5 as S/As. Most agencies start them at GS-7.
I guess that’s why FBI is so “Special.” (Seriously, when people hear “Special Agent,” they always assume FBI - guess what? There are S/As in darn near every agency.