Police
in sentence
3345 examples of Police in a sentence
The film might suggest to the unfamiliar, that these were some kind of Paris riots, where the
police
used real guns.
Swedish policeman Roger Nyman is promoted to the Special Branch/Secret
police.
Shrewd, hard-boiled
police
investigator Dr. Chet Walker (an excellent and engaging performance by Richard Denning) becomes determined to stop Buchanan.
Not that I know anything about
police
procedure but I would have thought that you would have to be a higher rank to throw a Chief Inspector off the case.
In London, the aspirant actress Eve Gill (Jane Wyman) and her friend Jonathan Cooper (Richard Todd) are fleeing from the
police
in her car to her father's boat two hours far from the city.
Jonathan decided to go to her apartment to bring a new dress for Charlotte, but her maid saw him in the crime scene and called the
police
that are chasing him as prime suspect.
We see the decimation of the
police
force, agriculture, and the entertainment biz.
Another unbelievable thing is the
police
that in camp with so much strange happenings does not suspect anything.
He is also an escapee from a mental asylum who is wanted by German
police
for crimes against minors.
By this time the police, Inspector Tanner (Olivier Mathot) and his Deputy Malou (Roger Germanes) are hot on his tail, but will they be able to save Anne and put an end to Vogel's twisted ways?
I think that
Police
Officers should maintain their honesty.
Can the dashing
police
detective save the day?
Nobody seems to notice the lines around Davis's mouth which make it appear she is older, so the local
police
are on the look-out for young hippies.
Then, there is Jack Cassidy's oh-so-stupid
police
commisioner.
"A Perfect Murder" is an excellent example of this, as the number of devious characters is increased and the body count is higher, and the denouement which in the original saw a wily
police
detective resolve matters now has one of those endings in which the heroine puts herself in danger.
Developed as The City is Dark and shot as Don't Cry, Baby before being released as Crime Wave, Andre de Toth's still surprisingly tough
police
procedural is a film that wears its economy as a badge of pride.
He is often in trouble with the police, he has only a few friends.
A wealthy banker kills women with his crossbow as part of some hunting ritual from South America which is never really explained or given any elaboration whilst the
police
investigation headed by Robert Forster tries to get to the bottom of things.
And everyone will wet their pants when seeing the episode where Chris dates a female
police
officer who is CRAZY!
A talking, Scottish-accented
police
dog (though he won't speak to grown ups) and his British owner (what are they doing so far from home?) are on an isolated island somewhere off the coast of America staking out drug smugglers.
Scenes and dialogue in this film just stick with you, like when a young pickpocket is sharing a popsicle in a
police
interrogation room with streetwise and experienced Inspector Sato (played by one of my favorite actors, Takhashi Shimura).
Plus, it was a great casting decision to have her work with
police
detective James Gleason and give him better than usual writing for such a role.
In practically every B-detective series, the
police
are complete morons--so much so that the films lack any suspense or chemistry at times.
Nia Peeples was the only reason I watched this (principally) But her usual classy acting was let down by her co-stars (the noticeably and unusual wooden Dan Aykroyd) plus her great figure was mostly hidden by a
police
uniform!
Both the
police
and Mai are hoping to find them.
We're to also believe that this thing is running around, abducting women and ripping people apart, and the state
police
never arrive and no media circus ensues.
The
police
and eventually the government are on the case, picking up traces of radio-active chemicals left behind by the zombified killers.
People after the worst criminal activity is gone, want to have a more peaceful and less visible law-enforcing
police
force.
I liked this show in the very beginning for Tony Shalhoub's masterful portrayal of extreme social awkwardness (not so much the writers' cartoon version of OCD), nicely contrasted against Ted Levine's dry-witted
police
lieutenant, and the clever mysteries that called to mind the glory days of "Columbo."
Jim Davis, of Dallas, is a silly
police
detective who endlessly babbles his philosophy about the "freaks and weirdos."
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