The Nixa City Council approved Resolution 2026-27 authorizing the city administrator to execute a memorandum of understanding with the U.S. Marshals Service to participate in the Midwest Violent Fugitive Task Force.
Police Chief Joe Campbell described the task force as a way to bring federal, state and local resources to bear on violent offenders, weapons offenses, felony drug cases and registered-sex-offender violations. "We look at this when we look at this, we look at it as a force multiplier," Chief Campbell said, adding that initial participation would likely be on a part-time basis and that reimbursement, equipment and training are typical benefits.
During public comment, a resident urged council caution, citing King v. Brownback and related concerns about federal officer oversight and potential civil-rights implications. The speaker said the case underscored the need for appropriate training and supervision of officers assigned to federal task forces.
Council approved the resolution by voice vote; staff said the initial participant would be assigned part time and the city would evaluate staffing and potential reimbursement arrangements if the assignment became full time. Chief Campbell said the department could request a backfill if a position moved to full-time federal duty in the future.
Next steps: The city will execute the memorandum of understanding and assign an investigator on a part-time basis; the council retains oversight on staffing and potential budget adjustments.