Within the U.S. government, the title of Special Agent is used to describe any federal criminal or noncriminal investigator or detective in the 1811, 1810, 1801, 2501, or similar job series as so titled according to the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) handbook. Agents are typically educated at least as far as the undergraduate level. Such persons are usually armed and have the power to arrest and conduct investigations into the violation of Federal Laws Just about every federal agency has some type of special agent - source: Wikipedia
No
No. All agents are "Special Agents" upon graduation from the FBI Academy at Quantico.(A "yes" answer was removed as the FBI does not, in fact, have plain "agents".)
Not Undercover Agents.
As of July 2021, there are over 13,000 special agents in the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).
Not enough.
No. FBI Special Agents live and work in every major city in the United States. They also work overseas. See the link below.
FBI Special Agents are paid according to the federal government's GS pay scale. Rookie agents are GS10s, and journeyman agents are GS 13s. Special Agents in management positions can advance to the top of the scale which is GS18.
a total of 35576 people worked for the FBI
The justice department created a staff of special agents in 1908. The group took the name FBI in 1932.
FBI Agents Association
not all the time, sometimes FBI's have a bike or motorcycle.
The Secret Service provided the Department of Justice 12 Special Agents and these agents became the first Agents. Thus, the first FBI agents were actually Secret Service agents.
All FBI agents are required to be US Citizens.