Police
in sentence
3345 examples of Police in a sentence
In study after study, in countries ranging from Bangladesh to the United States, between 20 and 60 percent of the people in the sex trade who were surveyed said that they had been raped or assaulted by the
police
in the past year alone.
We created a deployment plan that specified where every single support person and
police
officer would be every minute of the day, and we monitored at every second of the day, and, our best invention ever, we devised a schoolwide discipline program titled "Non-negotiables."
And of course, if anyone's breaking the rules, the
police
are there and the car has to understand that that flashing light on the top of the car means that it's not just a car, it's actually a
police
officer.
And when a
police
officer stood in the road, our vehicle should understand that this means stop, and when they signal to go, we should continue.
So this is another very serious problem, and the basic problem is prostitution, because there's not a whorehouse in America that's not known by the local officials, the local policemen, or the chief of
police
or the mayor and so forth.
It means that the
police
are going to have a tougher time catching bad guys.
But I know it's not the same photograph that I would have seen, because I wouldn't take my oath to be a
police
officer until 1989.
But I also knew that
police
could not do it alone.
The relationship between the African American community and the
police
is a painful one.
And so, you can imagine, for
police
officers who have to make split-second decisions can be a very detrimental decision-making point.
I have worked with young people who manifest hope and promise, despite being at the effect of racist discipline practices in their schools, and
police
violence in their communities.
They've used it between members of the
police
and members of community, and they've used it between people of opposing political ideologies.
All three feature the original armchair detective, C. Auguste Dupin, who uses his genius and unusual powers of observation and deduction to solve crimes that baffle the
police.
The second caused the Detroit
police
department crime lab to be closed.
He told me that he had just visited what he thought was an abandoned warehouse where the Detroit
police
department was storing evidence.
During the course of these decades where these kits sat in that warehouse, we discovered there had been multiple changes of
police
leadership, with different priorities and different agendas.
There was woefully inadequate training for sex crimes officers in the
police
department in general.
We had to take that discretion away from
police
officers, and pass state laws to ensure that every rape kit released by the victim to law enforcement is tested immediately.
They sent a team of experts out and fanned the Detroit area, talked to all the stakeholders and developed a plan, and studied the life of a rape kit, from the time the rape kit was collected, through to the time that it was tested in the lab and returned to the
police
personnel.
So the
police
started searching through missing reports from the local area, national missing reports, and looked for accidents with a possible connection.
But then, after a month, the
police
in Norway got a message from the
police
in the Netherlands.
But the
police
in the Netherlands managed to trace the wetsuit by an RFID chip that was sewn in the suit.
And right there was a plausible theory about the identity of the two people, and the
police
made this theory as well.
Your friends or family would report you missing, the
police
would come search for you, the media would know, and there would be pictures of you on lampposts.
The
police
won't come search for you because nobody knows you're gone.
Although the government district is governed by a strict
police
order, there are no specific laws relating to digital communication.
There's a riot going on on campus, and the
police
are chasing me, right?
All of the action is informed by the real 911 recorded calls to the
police.
I am now part of a small but growing cadre of women of color in STEM who are poised to bring new perspectives and new ideas to life on the most pressing issues of our time: things like educational inequities,
police
brutality, HIV/AIDS, climate change, genetic editing, artificial intelligence and Mars exploration.
The Roman Empire was able to develop infrastructure to overcome these limitations, but other than that, modern cities as we know them, didn't really get their start until the Industrial Revolution, when new technology deployed on a mass scale allowed cities to expand and integrate further, establishing police, fire, and sanitation departments, as well as road networks, and later electricity distribution.
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