Police.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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In larger agencies, executive officers may be selected through a civil service or merit system, after moving through the ranks from patrol officer to sergeant,lieutenant, captain, and (in still larger agencies) deputy or assistant chief.
At the county level, the head of the agency usually holds the title sheriff.
The sheriff is almost always elected and has the power to appoint deputies.
Sheriffs'departments often provide law enforcement services for unincorporated areas of counties and are usually responsible for functions not normally carried out by municipalpolice, such as operating the county jail, providing courtroom security, and serving legal documents, including subpoenas and court orders.
C Police Operations
A police department's goals are to prevent crime, investigate crime and apprehend offenders, control traffic, maintain order, and deal with emergencies and disasters.
C1 Prevention of Crime
The patrol division, consisting of uniformed patrol officers and supervisors, provides basic police services.
In addition to foot and automobile patrol, officers engage in avariety of activities in response to citizens' needs.
The greater part of patrol today is carried out by officers in police cars assigned to specific beats, or designated areasof the community.
In small agencies, one-officer patrol cars are prevalent; in larger cities, combinations of one- and two-officer cars are common.
Use of women officersfor patrol duty is increasing; before 1970 the practice was unknown.
Recent research has raised doubts about the effectiveness of preventive patrol to curb most kinds of crime.
Crime prevention, however, also means activities related toimproving the security of homes and businesses, and to educating citizens to protect themselves.
Most large police departments maintain a crime prevention unit toprovide these services.
C2 Criminal Investigation
After patrol officers have conducted preliminary investigations, detectives who work in plain clothes further investigate serious crimes.
Most detectives are assigned tothe criminal investigations division after several years on patrol duty.
In large departments, detectives are organized into specialized units, such as homicide, robbery,and narcotics.
Contrary to popular belief, many cases solved by detectives are based on arrests made by patrol officers, or on leads supplied by officers or victims as aresult of preliminary investigations.
C3 Traffic Control
Most traffic law enforcement and accident investigation is carried out by patrol officers.
In large cities, however, specialists may handle serious or hit-and-run accidents,and motorcycle patrols may be responsible for freeway traffic.
In the largest jurisdictions, officers may be assigned to traffic direction at busy intersections.
A recenttrend in many cities has been toward the use of civilian employees to handle parking violations.
C4 Special Police Units
Modern police service often includes special units to handle special problems.
In major American cities, tactical units, highly trained and well equipped, are available toquell riots.
Bomb squads are also on call; the bomb squad of the New York City Police Department, for example, is widely known for its outstanding work in handlingbomb cases and scares.
Other units specialize in dealing with hostage situations.
C5 Noncriminal Services
In most communities, about 60 to 70 percent of the time spent by patrol officers on operational activities is not crime related.
Officers are called on to locate missingpersons and lost children and to deal with marital disputes, crowd control, and ambulance calls.
D Police Technology
Requests for police services are generally transmitted to headquarters by telephone and then by radio to officers in the field.
Police have long operated on the theorythat fast response time results in more arrests and less risk or injury to victims.
The current trend is toward handling calls by priority, with emergency responsereserved for cases involving an injured party or those in which a reasonable chance exists to prevent a crime or make an arrest at the scene.
Modern computer-assisteddispatching systems permit automatic selection of the nearest beat officer in service.
In some cities, officers can receive messages displayed on computer terminals intheir cars, without voice communication from headquarters.
An officer, for example, can key in the license number of a suspect vehicle and receive an immediateresponse from the computer as to the status of the vehicle and the owner's identity.
An increasing number of agencies are now using computers to link crime patterns with certain suspects.
Fingerprints found at crime scenes can be electronicallycompared with fingerprint files.
Other departments use computers for workload analysis, budgeting, and payroll systems.
In recent years technological advances have been made in such areas as voiceprint identification, use of the scanning electron microscope, and serology (an importanttool because only 2 persons in 70,000 have identical blood characteristics).
Some of the new laboratory techniques, although highly effective, are extremely expensive,so their use is limited to the most challenging cases.
See Crime Detection.
E Contemporary Issues and Trends
In the United States today, important and controversial issues have arisen regarding the administration and operations of police forces, especially in urban centers.
E1 Police Unions
In recent years, police unions, including groups associated with national labor organizations, have grown rapidly.
Critics of this trend argue that unionized police forcesare less likely to be neutral in controlling disorders that occur during labor strikes.
Some people also believe that union affiliation will weaken official authority inmaintaining discipline.
Others argue that management deficiencies often prompt the need for unions and that unionization will lead to greater job satisfaction, highermorale, and increased tenure.
Because police are public employees, laws restrict their right to strike or to participate in other job actions.
The trend seems to be forpolice unions to engage in compulsory or binding arbitration when labor disputes arise..
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Liens utiles
- Prénom Nom Ville, le Rue CP Ville Au directeur du Bureau du Service national Rue CP Ville CV et Lettre de motivation : incorporation dans la Police nationale (service actif - personnes nées avant le 1er janvier 1979).
- CV et Lettre de motivation : demande d'intervention de la police pour mettre fin à un trafic sur la voie publique.
- L'homme Qui Rit l'homme de police, à ce glas de la prison où il avait été conduit, venait s'ajouter, disons mieux, s'ajuster cette chose tragique, un cercueil porté en terre.
- Quel est le rôle de la police en matière de bruit ?
- police, n.