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posse comitatus
[pos-ee kom-i-tah-tuhs, -tey-]
noun
the body of persons that a peace officer of a county is empowered to call upon for assistance in preserving the peace, making arrests, and serving writs.
a body of persons so called into service.
posse comitatus
/ ˌkɒmɪˈtɑːtəs /
noun
the formal legal term for posse
Word History and Origins
Origin of posse comitatus1
Word History and Origins
Origin of posse comitatus1
Example Sentences
“There is a law on the books, confirmed by the Constitution, called ‘posse comitatus,’” Pritzker told reporters earlier this month.
“There is a law on the books, confirmed by the Constitution, called ‘posse comitatus,'” Pritzker said.
Authorities back then could marshal a crew of civilians, called a posse comitatus, to assist them, as sometimes happened in California during the Gold Rush.
Constitutional sheriffs — an outgrowth of the white-nationalist posse comitatus movement — claim they are above federal and state government and are the ultimate arbiters of the law.
Related is the "constitutional sheriffs" movement, which also tries to make itself sound more official by using the name "posse comitatus."
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