The answer depends on you. I enjoyed the county because there was more variety in area and duties. I enjoyed the city because I was able to develop relationships with people I saw frequently.
Chances are the city's police department, or the county's sheriff's office (if the burglary was outside of city limits) would investigate this.
Federal law enforcement agencies can make arrests if they have jurisdictional dominance in the case. Same with the North Carolina State Police and North Carolina Highway Patrol. The primary agency would be the Lincoln County Sheriff's Office, and, of course, local/municipal police departments.
If you have been required to register - it would most likely be with the local law enforcement agency where you reside. It depends on your residence. There is a specific jurisdiction agency to register with based on your home address. Either the city police or the county sheriff.
How do you KNOW that the statute of limitations has passed? - AND - Are you CERTAIN? My adivce would be: Call the law enforcement agency in the county where you think the warrant was issued and ask.
When a law enforcement agency acts in an unethical manner, this subverts the legal system. If the public has more to fear from law enforcement agencies than it does from the criminals that the law enforcement agencies were created to deal with, then we would be better off without law enforcement. Tyranny does more harm than crime.
Possibly. Each law enforcement agency establishes its own standards for hiring. Conduct that would be grounds for termination by one law enforcement agency might be discounted by another.
That would be the DEA, the Justice Department's Drug Enforcement Administration.
Retirement plans are dependent on who the employer is; most homicide detectives work for a government agency, state, county, city or town. Most government agencies have retirement plans. The kind of plan would differ according to what that agency could afford; the income level of the tax base of the population varies. A small population county sheriff's office would usually differ from a police department in a large city. If you're interested in working in law enforcement, you get that information from the agency where you're applying as one of the criteria for accepting a job with that agency.
The law enforcement agency for that location. It could be a policeman, a sheriff or a state officer.
(in the US) that would be your local law enforcement agency. All law enforcement agencies in the US are tied with a nationwide computer system and they ALL draw upon the same database, which is NOT available to, or accessible by, the general public.
Generally, no. The bar exam is only required if you intend to practice law in the particular state. Generally, working for a law enforcement agency does not involve practicing law. The exception would be if you're joining the agency as a "legal advisor" or legal attache.
Depending on what you mean by law? If a state statute was violated by a law enforcement officer and you want to report it the first thing I would do is contact the law enforcement officer's agency where he or she is employed by. Contact there Internal Affairs department and report the actions to them so it can be investigated. Sometimes police officers live by a code of brotherhood so your next step would be to contact your state's law enforcement agency. Here in Florida it would be the Florida Department of Law enforcement.