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History of police

  • history about poilce

    history about poilce
    By the early 1900s the population of the City had increased to more than 100,000, with fewer than 70 officers struggling to maintain the peace.
  • how police officers dressed in the 1900's

    how police officers dressed in the 1900's
    The paramilitarisitic uniforms and gear of the St. Louis County Police Department have made headlines as clashes between police and protestors in Ferguson, Missouri, continue. Parallels have been drawn between the influx of heavy, military-style gear into suburban police departments and the starkly adversarial relationship between black residents in Ferguson and the majority-white police forces there.
  • police in 2000 are vary strict

    police in 2000 are vary strict
    In the last 30 years, the U.S. has seen only three other incidents with police deaths on this scale or larger. Two of those were broad terrorist attacks – September 11, 2001, and the Oklahoma City Bombing. (See below.) The third was a California helicopter crash which killed five sheriff’s deputies and three national guardsman in 1988.
  • how police care for there own

    how police care for there own
    Some have died while fighting storms (Galveston, 1900). More recently, many others, have been killed in car or helicopter crashes. Some have died trying to defuse bombs. (Nine in one incident in 1917.) A significant number, in recent times, have passed away from heart attacks or other illness on the job.
  • how police officers helped on 9/11

    how police officers helped on 9/11
    , only 40% of African Americans and 59% of Hispanic Americans also have a favorable view. Republicans (81%) are 22 points more favorable toward the police than independents (59%) and Democrats (59%). Although some groups have less positive views of the police, findings weaken the ascertain that these groups are “anti-cop.” For instance 9 in 10 white, black, and Hispanic Americans oppose cutting police forces and 6 in 10 worry the police have very dangerous jobs
  • what police did on 9/11

    what police did on 9/11
    On September 11, 2001, 19 militants associated with the Islamic extremist group al-Qaeda hijacked four airplanes and carried out suicide attacks against targets in the United States. Two of the planes were flown into the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York City, a third plane hit the Pentagon just outside Washington, D.C., and the fourth plane crashed in a field in Pennsylvania. Almost 3,000 people were killed during the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
  • how police where in 2002

    how police where in 2002
    In 2002, Deputy Chief Glenn Bondy was named Chief of Police after the retirement of Chief Bonner. Chief Bondy retired following the mayoral election of 2005. Commander. Dale Tamsen was named Deputy Chief and then named Chief in February of 2006.
    In June 2002, the department promoted it's first female officer to the command ranks when Corporal Mary Sclabassi was promoted to sergeant.
  • police officers help out the community

    police officers help out the community
    this former officer went out of her way to go and help out these kid and give them food and drinks.
  • police officers help out the community

    police officers help out the community
    this police officer teaching kids not to bully and to help out kids that are being bulled
  • police officers help out the community

    police officers help out the community
    this officer is letting kids sit on his motorcycle
  • police officers one patrol

    police officers one patrol
    f there is a sacred cow grazing in the field of law enforcement, it can be named in two words: community policing. Mayors and town councils clamor for it. Police chiefs endorse it. However, many of these people have no real clear idea of what constitutes community policing and what benefit, if any, it might bring to their cities. Worse, they may not realize that the secret to the success of a community-policing program is the capabilities of patrol officers.
  • new york police on bikes

    new york police on bikes
    A city already patrolled by police horses and bicycles, police speedboats and helicopters, and all manner of cars, vans and armored vehicles bearing the emblem “NYPD,” now has a new crime-fighting tool: the rolling lollipop known as the Segway.
  • police patrol around houses

    police patrol around houses
    Police officers have a higher risk of incurring a work-related injury or illness than most other occupations. On average, 115 police and sheriff’s patrol officers suffered fatal work injuries each year from 2003 to 2014. Another 30,990 nonfatal injuries involving days away from work were reported for police and sheriff’s patrol officers on average each year from 2009 to 2014.1,2
  • FBI working

    FBI working
    The FBI reported today that 57 law enforcement officers were feloniously killed in the line of duty last year; 83 officers died in accidents while performing their official duties; and 59,201 officers suffered assaults while on duty. The 2007 edition of Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted released today provides comprehensive tabular data about these incidents and brief narratives describing the fatal felonious attacks.