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police |
Also found in: Legal, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia | 0.18 sec. |
policeCivil law-and-order force. In the US, law enforcement is the responsibility of municipal and state government except for violations of specific federal laws or cases in which state borders have been crossed. Unlike many countries, there is no national police force. The Federal Bureau of Investigation assists state and local law-enforcement authorities. The FBI reported that in 2005 55 law enforcement officers were killed feloniously in the line of duty, 67 died in accidents while performing their official duties, and 57,546 officers suffered assaults while on duty. Offenders used firearms to kill 50 of the 55 victim officers. Of these 50 officers, 42 were shot with handguns, five with shotguns, and three with rifles.
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All this has a purpose, it's explained -- it trains these aspiring law enforcers to respond clear-headedly to chaotic situations -- but here, it's depicted so repeatedly that it becomes dramatically monotonous. Chicago law enforcers pioneered the use of the Bertillon criminal identification system in 1888 and finger printing in 1904. The Lawmen by western author Alton Pryor is an engaging focus on law enforcers that plied their trade on the western American frontier. |
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