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Posted: April 3, 2026 (1 day ago)

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Criminal Investigator (Special Agent)

Office of the Inspector General

Department of Agriculture

Fresh

Location

Salary

$89,508 - $138,370

per year

Closes

April 9, 2026

Job Description

Summary

This job is for a special agent who investigates crimes and misconduct within the U.S. Department of Agriculture, focusing on the Southwest Region from Little Rock, Arkansas.

It involves fieldwork like gathering evidence, interviewing people, and using firearms in various conditions.

A good fit would be someone with law enforcement experience who is physically fit, mentally stable, and under 37 years old (with some exceptions).

Key Requirements

  • Under 37 years old at entry (exceptions for prior qualifying service or Veterans' Preference)
  • No convictions for misdemeanor or felony domestic violence crimes
  • Meet basic medical standards: good vision, hearing, physical dexterity, and emotional stability for demanding duties
  • Qualified to carry and use firearms and maintain certification
  • One year of specialized experience at the next lower GS grade (e.g., GS-11 for GS-12)
  • U.S. citizenship and ability to meet all law enforcement eligibility requirements

Full Job Description

This position is located in the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Office of Inspector General.

This position serves as a criminal investigator (special agent) within the Office of Investigations, Southwest Region, Alpha Branch.

This application will close upon receiving 50 applicants or at 11:59 PM on 09 April 2026, whichever occurs first.

Applicants must meet all qualifications, eligibility requirements, and specialized experience minimums (and time-in-grade restrictions for merit promotion applicants) by the closing date of the announcement.

This position is a primary law enforcement position under 5 U.S.C. 8336 (C) (CSRS and 5 U.S. C 8412 (d) (FERS).

You must not have reached your 37th birthday prior to entry into the GS-1811 series, unless you have previous service creditable under the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS) or Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS) law enforcement provisions sufficient to enable you to retire at age 57 with 20 years of creditable service.

Persons already in covered secondary positions or persons with previous approved service who apply for a primary position cannot be considered if their age at reentry into the primary position exceeds 37 years after subtracting their years of service in covered positions.

Applicants must provide evidence of current or previous coverage that would qualify. This age restriction does not apply to those entitled to Veteran's Preference.

You will be required to qualify to carry and use firearms and other weapons as part of assigned duties and maintain such qualification.

Applicants are ineligible for this position if, at any time, they have been convicted of a misdemeanor or felony crime of domestic violence, unless such conviction was expunged, set aside, or the applicant received a pardon.

Refer to the Lautenberg Amendment, titled "Gun Ban for Individuals Convicted of a Misdemeanor Crime of Domestic Violence", Pub.L.104-208,[1] 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(9).

Applicants must meet all qualifications and eligibility requirements by the closing date of the announcement including time-in-grade restrictions and specialized experience as defined below.

THIS POSITION HAS A BASIC MEDICAL REQUIREMENT: The duties of positions in this series require moderate to arduous physical exertion involving walking and standing, use of firearms, and exposure to inclement weather.

Manual dexterity with comparatively free motion of finger, wrist, elbow, shoulder, hip, and knee joints is required.

Arms, hands, legs, and feet must be sufficiently intact and functioning in order that applicants may perform the duties satisfactorily.

Sufficiently good vision in each eye, with or without correction, is required to perform the duties satisfactorily.

Near vision, with or without correction, must be sufficient to read printed material the size of typewritten characters.

Hearing loss, as measured by an audiometer, must not exceed 35 decibels at 1000, 2000, and 3000 Hz levels.

Since the duties of these positions are exacting and responsible, and involve activities under trying conditions, applicants must possess emotional and mental stability.

Any physical condition that would cause the applicant to be a hazard to himself/herself or others is disqualifying.

IN ADDITION TO MEETING THE BASIC MEDICAL REQUIREMENT ABOVE, APPLICANTS MUST MEET THE MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS BELOW.

Time in grade: Applicants must have one year of specialized experience at the next lower grade to be considered for the next higher grade (one year at the GS-11 level is required to meet the time-in-grade requirements for the GS-12 level, one year at the GS-12 level is required to meet the time-in-grade requirements for the GS-13 level).

Under competitive merit promotion procedures, any individual who is currently holding, or who has held within the previous 52 weeks, a General Schedule position under non-temporary appointment in the competitive or excepted service, must meet "time-in-grade" requirements (have served 52 weeks at the next lower grade of the grade for which you are applying).

Restrictions are contained in 5CFR 300, Subpart F. You must include an SF-50 (you may need to submit more than one) that supports meeting this requirement with your application package.

MINIMUM SPECIALIZED EXPERIENCE QUALIFICATIONS REQUIREMENT FOR GS-12: Applicants must possess one (1) year of specialized experience equivalent to the GS-11 in the federal service or the private sector that has equipped the applicant with the knowledge, skills, and abilities to successfully perform the duties of the position under appropriate supervision.

Specialized experience is defined as: conducting criminal and administrative investigations, from planning and conducting fact-finding, to reporting the results of investigations; performing undercover and surveillance work; conducting investigative interviews; and analyzing investigative facts to arrive at sound conclusions.

This experience should include the preparation of comprehensive administrative and technical reports to present findings in a clear, logical, impartial, comprehensive, and concise manner.

Applicants should possess experience conducting liaison activities and representing the interests of a parent agency to other investigative agencies, including federal, state, and local agencies, and developing new approaches to performing investigative functions, including responses to identified weaknesses and vulnerabilities in on-going operations.

MINIMUM SPECIALIZED EXPERIENCE QUALIFICATIONS REQUIREMENT FOR GS-13: Applicants must possess one (1) year of specialized experience equivalent to the GS-12 in the federal service or the private sector that has equipped the applicant with the knowledge, skills, and abilities to successfully perform the duties of the position with minimal supervisor or independently.

Specialized experience is defined as: conducting criminal and administrative investigations, from planning and conducting fact-finding, to reporting the results of investigations; performing undercover and surveillance work; conducting investigative interviews; and analyzing investigative facts to arrive at sound conclusions.

This experience includes the preparation of comprehensive administrative and technical reports in order to present findings in a clear, logical, impartial, comprehensive, and concise manner.

In addition, applicants should have experience conducting liaison activities with other investigative agencies on behalf of their organization, including federal, state, and local agencies, and developing new approaches to performing investigative functions, including responses to identified weaknesses and vulnerabilities in on-going operations.

Evidence of one year or more of specialized experience must be clearly documented in your resume.

Experience refers to paid and unpaid experience, including volunteer work done through National Service programs (e.g., Peace Corps, AmeriCorps) and other organizations (e.g., professional; philanthropic; religious; spiritual; community, student, social).

Volunteer work helps build critical competencies and can provide valuable training and experience that translates directly to paid employment.

You will receive credit for all qualifying experience, including volunteer experience, documented in your resume. Major Duties:

  • Investigate allegations of embezzlement and fraud involving USDA-funded programs.
  • Establish and maintain liaison with USDA agency personnel.
  • Analyze allegations, complaints, and investigations to identify issues involved and the types of evidence needed to properly address each matter.
  • Maintain liaison with other federal (non-USDA agencies) and state and local government organizations.
  • Advise and/or assist U.S. attorneys and/or state/local prosecutors and/or their staff members in the preparation of investigations for presentation to federal and/or state/local grand juries.
  • Appear as a witness before grand juries and trial courts or participate and assist in other legal proceedings, and lead and coordinate collateral administrative functions in a unit such as custodial officer for all investigative equipment.
  • Personally handle exceptionally complex, technical investigative problems or controversial, novel, or exploratory questions and issues and advises on potential investigation areas and new investigative approaches.
  • Report critical information to other concerned law enforcement jurisdictions and collaborate with other investigative team members as required in meeting the objectives of the USDA OIG investigative program.
  • Perform or lead and coordinate the conduct of undercover and/or surveillance work and provide technical subject matter expertise support for training, internal inspection, and/or quality control as required.
  • Serve, as required, as a task force member or outside agency liaison, working from an alternate duty location, relaying information and accessing outside agency resources to support USDA OIG investigations.
  • Perform full criminal, civil, or administrative investigations and conduct investigative interviews.
  • Develop new approaches to performing investigative functions, including responses to identified weaknesses and vulnerabilities in on-going operations and analyze investigative facts to arrive at sound conclusions.
  • Plan and conduct fact-finding and prepare comprehensive administrative and technical reports in order to present complex and conflicting findings in a clear, logical, impartial, comprehensive, and concise manner.
  • Collaborate with other investigative team members as required in meeting the objectives of the USDA OIG investigative program.

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Posted on USAJOBS: 4/3/2026 | Added to FreshGovJobs: 4/4/2026

Source: USAJOBS | ID: USDA-OIG-MP-12927825-26-FB