Want this question answered?
A posse m8
Yes. Sherriffs and their deputies have - and continue to- made use of long guns.
Attica state prison
Posse
As of 2007, there are about 4,000 female state police officers, 19,400 female sheriffs' deputies, and 55,300 female police officers.
and the question is ?
Of course a Sheriff can arrest! They are Law Enforcement officers, except they typically work for a county (rather than a city). Sheriffs, by the way, are the historically oldest law enforcement type in the US, I believe.
call your local sheriffs department and ask them
The correct spelling is posse (a group of deputies in pursuit of outlaws).
County Sheriffs do not have the authority to call out the Guard. That's done by the governor of the state or the president of the US.
You can request 911 call transcripts through the local police department or emergency dispatch center where the call was made. Typically, you would need to submit a formal request, and there may be some restrictions on accessing this information due to privacy or legal considerations.
That's an interesting question. In some states, deputy sheriffs serve at the pleasure of the sheriff, and derive their power from him or her. In that case, if the sheriff dies in office, the deputies are technically no longer law enforcement officers until a new sheriff is seated. For that reason, the governor of such states (Florida, for instance) normally has a document ready that temporarily appoints the undersheriff to the sheriff's spot, until a permanent appointment can be made. An emergency call is made to the governor, and he immediately disignates the stand-in. All deputies are automatically deputized as the new sheriff's deputies.