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The other entities in the MilGov and CivGov split
Okay so we know the MilGov and the CivGov split due the war. That we saw most of the regular military units go to MilGov with the DIA. The CivGov gets most of the reserve and left over National Guard units and the CIA.
I know that this is very over simplification, but bear with me please? So within the US Federal government there are a slew of other entities that are going to have to make decisions on who is where with the split.
So that all said, just some ideas to me how each department of the US Government would have fared post-war. As well as some of them would have had some law enforcement or para-military arm as well as an intelligence agency or two working for them. This could give additional fodder for events, NPCs, or even missions. Does anyone have an opinion one way or another about how these other agencies would have fallen to the MilGov or CilGov split that differs than mine? Anyone surprised to find out that some of these agencies have law enforcement, para-military, or even intelligence divisions?
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Hey, Law and Order's a team, man. He finds the bombs, I drive the car. We tried the other way, but it didn't work. |
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Just a minor point first every federal agency has a law enforcement branch (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federa..._United_States).
But main thing is the department of Energy does not control everything that makes energy, I know this as a former worker at Grand Coulee Dam (the largest power plant in the US) it is owned by the bureau of reclamation, department of the Interior. They have Dam Police, armed security, and unarmed security, are a veterans preference job (have to by law hire a qualified veteran if available before they can even look at a non-vet). At least at Grand Coulee when I was there most likely that dam would have sided with the military. |
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Also, thanks for the information about the DoE and hydroelectrics productions. I knew they owned most, but as you noted there is an exception to the rule. Still provides an interesting bit of potential jobs, patrons, or even NPCs for the characters to interact with beyond the usual CIA/DIA or MilGov/CivGov points that most of the officially published modules had going on.
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Hey, Law and Order's a team, man. He finds the bombs, I drive the car. We tried the other way, but it didn't work. |
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An example of a federal law enforcement officer you could encounter would be the Hoover Dam Police Department. It had 21 officers that guard the Hoover Dam and adjacent Lake Meade. They were armed with typical police weapons - semi-automatic handguns and Remington Model 870 shotguns. They don't have a SWAT team.
FYI just to give you an idea of how much ammo even a small federal agency might have, the Hoover Dam Police Department is the group that made headlines in 2015 when they ordered 41,600 rounds of 9mm hollow-point ammunition along with 10,400 rounds of shotgun ammunition for just 21 officers. Last edited by Olefin; 02-09-2021 at 09:18 AM. |
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This is from 2008 but it gives a good overview of Federal Law Enforcement officers for basically just about every agency including ones you would never think had Federal Law Enforcement officers as part of their organization. For instance, the National Institute of Standards & Technology had 28 armed officers as part of its organization.
Also keep in mind that some of these agencies would have taken a major hit during the TDM - i.e. the Secret Service between the President's plane going down and the White House getting nuked - basically what would be left would be the agents who were in field offices or who were off duty and far enough away to survive the DC nukes https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/fleo08.pdf Last edited by Olefin; 02-09-2021 at 10:16 AM. |
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