Biography

Arva Marie Johnson was born on February 3, 1950, in Rocky Mount, North Carolina. Having attended public schools, Johnson graduated from Booker T. Washington High School in 1968. Six years later, a family member working on the Hill informed her that the Capitol Police Force was hiring women officers. Johnson applied and accepted a position in 1974, becoming the force’s first uniformed female officer—three other women worked in the plainclothes detail.

During her 32-year career, Johnson participated in sweeping changes to Capitol security. As a young officer during the late 1970s—before the widespread use of X-ray machines and metal detectors—Johnson and her colleagues hand-searched bags. Following the Senate bombing in 1983, the shooting death of two friends and colleagues at the Capitol in 1998, and the terrorist attacks in 2001, security tightened dramatically and, among other adjustments, Johnson received sophisticated training in chemical and bomb identification. Over the course of Johnson’s time on the Hill, the Capitol Police Force developed into a leading anti-terrorism organization.

As the Capitol Police Force grew, Johnson spearheaded efforts to reform many of its internal policies, lobbying for better promotion opportunities and special assignments for women officers. As a founding member of the U.S. Capitol Black Police Association—a group organized on behalf of career advancement for minority officers—she and her colleagues successfully pressed for an overhaul of the force’s promotion process during the 1990s.

Johnson’s commitment to the force earned her praise from colleagues and Members alike. As one Congressman said, “She’s the kind of person that you would want your whole department to be like.” Johnson left the Capitol Police Force in 2007 when department policy required that she retire at the age of 57.