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Cattle
Raisers name new Special Ranger for District 17
FORT WORTH, Texas,
July 12, 2007—Texas and
Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association has named James Bond Special
Ranger for District 17. Bond will be based in Midland.
Bond has 30 years experience in law
enforcement, first working for the Texas Department of Public Safety,
then for the Round Rock Police Department.
A state trooper from 1972-1979, his duties included testing and issuing
driver's licenses to applicants, traffic enforcement, accident
investigation, enforcement of size and weight laws, and commercial motor
carrier laws.
In 1982, Bond joined the Round Rock Police Department, where he was
initially assigned as a uniformed patrol officer.
He was assigned to the department's criminal investigation division in
1984 and promoted to sergeant investigator in 1985.
In 1999, Bond was reassigned to uniformed patrol as shift supervisor.
Bond served with the Texas Army National Guard from 1965-1971, and
re-enlisted in 1983. From 1983 to 1999, he served as a criminal
investigation division agent.
His duties included investigating criminal offenses occurring against
the Texas Army National Guard and working with active duty U.S. Army
criminal investigation division agents investigating criminal offenses
against the Army and Army personnel. He retired from the National Guard
as the detachment first sergeant E-7.
Bond is no stranger to the cattle business, as he has worked as a market
inspector for TSCRA and worked part-time for several Texas ranches.
He and his wife, Sue, have four children and two grandchildren between
them and raise Quarter Horses.
Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association is a
130-year-old trade organization whose 14,800 members manage
approximately 3.7 million cattle on 96.5 million acres of
range and pasture land, primarily in Texas and Oklahoma.
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