Title 28 › Part II— DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE › Chapter 37— UNITED STATES MARSHALS SERVICE › § 561
Creates the United States Marshals Service inside the Department of Justice and puts a Director in charge. The President must pick the Director with the Senate’s approval. The Director runs and supervises the Service, can carry out extra duties the Attorney General gives, can hire employees and set their pay under the rules in title 5, and can give oaths to Service staff without charging a fee. The President must also pick a U.S. marshal for each federal judicial district and for the D.C. Superior Court, with Senate approval; a marshal for the Northern Mariana Islands can also serve another district. Each marshal is part of the Service and works under the Director. Marshals serve four-year terms and must keep doing the job after their term ends until a successor is ready, unless they resign or are removed. The Director decides each marshal’s office location and requires marshals to live in their district, except that the marshals for the District of Columbia, the D.C. Superior Court, and the Southern District of New York may live within 20 miles of their district, and a Northern Mariana Islands marshal who also serves another district may live in the other district. A marshal must have at least 4 years of command-level law enforcement management experience, experience working with other law enforcement agencies, some college-level education, and experience with courts or protecting court staff, jurors, or witnesses.
Full Legal Text
Judiciary and Judicial Procedure — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
28 U.S.C. § 561
Title 28 — Judiciary and Judicial Procedure
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60