Practice Exam 250 MCQs with correct
answers and rationales| LATEST UPDATE
Key Study Areas for the Class D Security License Exam:
Florida Statute Chapter 493 — licensing requirements, conduct standards, training
Legal authority: citizen's arrest, use of force, false imprisonment, trespass
Patrol techniques: observation, reporting, access control, post orders
Emergency response: fire (RACE/PASS), bomb threats, active shooter (Run/Hide/Fight),
medical
Report writing: accuracy, objectivity, documentation principles
Communication: de-escalation, LEAPS, tactical communication, radio etiquette
Ethics and professionalism: integrity, confidentiality, use of force limits
Florida-specific: FDACS requirements, Stand Your Ground, merchant's privilege
Life safety: CPR/AED, bloodborne pathogens, first aid basics
Liability: negligent hiring, vicarious liability, civil vs. criminal court
1. What does a Class D Security License authorize a person to do?
A) Carry a firearm while on duty
B) Work as an unarmed security officer (correct answer)
C) Perform law enforcement functions
D) Make arrests anywhere in the state
Rationale: A Class D license authorizes unarmed security work only; carrying a firearm
requires a separate Class G (Armed) license; Class D officers have no law enforcement
powers.
2. Which state agency regulates Class D Security Licenses in Florida?
A) Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE)
B) Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) (correct
answer)
C) Florida Highway Patrol
, D) Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation
Rationale: The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) —
Division of Licensing — regulates security licenses including Class D (unarmed) and Class
G (armed) in Florida.
3. What is the minimum age requirement to obtain a Class D Security License in Florida?
A) 16 years old
B) 18 years old (correct answer)
C) 21 years old
D) 25 years old
Rationale: Florida law requires applicants for a Class D Security License to be at least 18
years of age; no security license can be issued to anyone under 18.
4. How many training hours are required to obtain a Class D Security License in Florida?
A) 8 hours
B) 24 hours
C) 40 hours (correct answer)
D) 80 hours
Rationale: Florida Statutes require 40 hours of approved training for a Class D Security
License, covering legal powers, first aid, access control, patrol procedures, and emergency
response.
5. Which of the following is a disqualifying condition for a Class D Security License?
A) A minor traffic violation
B) A felony conviction (correct answer)
C) A misdemeanor from 10 years ago
D) A previous security job termination
Rationale: A felony conviction is an absolute bar to obtaining a Class D Security License;
applicants must not have been convicted of any felony or certain misdemeanors involving
moral turpitude.
,6. What is the primary role of a Class D security officer?
A) To arrest and detain criminals
B) To observe, deter, and report — protecting people and property (correct answer)
C) To enforce criminal laws
D) To replace law enforcement officers
Rationale: Security officers are not law enforcement; their primary role is to observe, deter
criminal activity, and report — they protect people and property through a visible
presence and timely reporting.
7. What is the "observe and report" doctrine for security officers?
A) Security officers must arrest all criminals they observe
B) Security officers observe conditions and activities and report findings without taking
law enforcement action (correct answer)
C) Security officers observe only and never report
D) Security officers report only to supervisors, never to police
Rationale: "Observe and report" defines the fundamental security officer role — gathering
and communicating information about security-related events to supervisors and law
enforcement without attempting law enforcement functions.
8. A security officer witnesses a robbery in progress. What is the FIRST action the officer should
take?
A) Physically intervene and detain the robber
B) Ensure personal safety, call 911, observe and report details to law enforcement
(correct answer)
C) Chase the suspect
D) Ignore it and continue patrol
Rationale: Security officers are not law enforcement; the first priority in a violent crime is
personal safety, then calling 911, providing information to police, and being a good witness
— not physical intervention.
9. What is the legal authority of a Class D security officer to make an arrest?
A) Full law enforcement arrest authority
B) Citizen's arrest authority only, under very limited circumstances (correct answer)
, C) No authority to detain anyone under any circumstances
D) Authority to arrest only on their employer's property
Rationale: Class D security officers have only citizen's arrest authority — the same as any
private citizen; in Florida, a citizen's arrest is authorized only when a felony has been
committed in the officer's presence.
10. What is a "citizen's arrest"?
A) An arrest made by a uniformed police officer
B) The right of a private citizen to detain a person who commits a felony in their
presence (correct answer)
C) The right to arrest anyone on private property
D) A security officer's primary law enforcement power
Rationale: Citizen's arrest allows any person (including security officers) to detain someone
who commits a felony in their direct presence; misuse of this power exposes the security
officer and employer to civil and criminal liability.
11. What must a security officer do immediately after making a citizen's arrest?
A) Transport the suspect to the police station
B) Immediately notify law enforcement and transfer custody to arriving officers (correct
answer)
C) Conduct an interrogation
D) Release the suspect after getting their ID
Rationale: After a citizen's arrest, law enforcement must be contacted immediately;
security officers cannot conduct interrogations, transport prisoners, or hold detainees —
they must transfer custody to law enforcement promptly.
12. What is "false imprisonment"?
A) Incarcerating someone in the wrong prison
B) Unlawfully restraining or detaining a person without legal authority or consent
(correct answer)
C) Arresting someone for a crime they did not commit
D) Detaining a suspect for questioning