Example sentences of "in the [noun] [prep] [art] police " in BNC.

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1 In the case of the police car , my belief fails to track the truth in both ways , and so is not knowledge .
2 There is a real element of truth in it if we conclude , as I think we must , that in those who have failed to come to terms with the demands of a civilized existence any representative of that existence can be seen as an incitement to protest , especially if , as in the case of the police , that representative has only too obvious a. resemblance to the forbidding father of early childhood with whom the individual has not come to terms because of chronic irresolution of the Oedipal dilemma .
3 There are studies by organizational sociologists that suggest the limitations upon the formal control of subordinates by means of rules , and the behavioural studies of law enforcements which have emphasized the significance of bargaining and discretion in the activities of the police and other rule-enforcers .
4 Morse turned to look at the waters once more before he left , then sat silently in the passenger-seat of the police car as Lewis had a final word with Sergeant Dixon .
5 There may also have been earlier differences in the decision whether to take ‘ no further action ’ after arrest , or indeed in the decision by the police to arrest .
6 The schemes are not in the ownership of the police , local authorities , any political party or any business .
7 The letter she had left for me remained in the possession of the police as evidence .
8 The effect of this requirement is probably in practice to make the power unusable in many cases , as unless the prosecution anticipate that the court will wish to make such an order , it will not be equipped with the necessary evidence , particularly as the car will not necessarily be in the possession of the police at this stage , and the court will be faced with an adjournment if it wishes to proceed with an order .
9 Another type of work which is disliked is emotionally demanding work , a category not recognized elsewhere in the literature on the police .
10 THE good councillors of Darlington , bent on keeping the wages of sin away from the eyes of their townsfolk , may ponder the growing demands of the homosexual community to have more representation in the ranks of the police .
11 Concern has been expressed in many quarters about recent apparent changes in the attitude of the police to Charity Sponsored Walks , etc. on public highways .
12 There is no requirement in the Act for the police to tell the individual that the procession or assembly is being held in breach of the conditions imposed .
13 The Indian kids would n't matter , but the Yuppie type might get half an hour in the back of a police car checking the pavements and the pub car parks for some sign of his attacker .
14 But the element caused difficulties in Lewis v. Cox A friend of the defendant was arrested and placed in the back of a police van .
15 Rita sat in the back of the police car as she was told to do .
16 The two were handcuffed together , taken off the bus and put in the back of the police car which then escorted us into town with lights flashing and siren blaring .
17 Amaranth sat in the back of the police car with Mrs de Crespigny ( ‘ Nora , my dear ’ ) .
18 Furthermore , the respondent 's confidence in the ability of the police to deal with problem had declined .
19 Few prior to Jones had cared to admit this seditious point except in the columns of the Police Review , where disgruntled beat officers ( often anonymously ) indicate the paradox of being the revered and reviled base on which all the hierarchy is built .
20 All patrol units must have a buddy patrol notified and present in the event of a police matter .
21 I think Mr Chairman there is a feeling of erm well there 's a feeling that these meetings would be far more positive now , with the change in the hierarchy of the police in
22 He is accompanied in the cab by a police officer armed with binoculars , two cellphones and a radio who can spot vandals hundreds of yards ahead .
23 He is accompanied in the cab by a police officer armed with binoculars , two cellphones and a radio , able to spot vandals hundreds of yards ahead .
24 In the aftermath of the Police Strike , senior officers were doubly concerned to prevent the kind of rank-and-file interaction that might lead to common cause against their superiors .
25 This placed an unfortunate obstacle in the path of the police who might otherwise , simply on the grounds of suspicion , make a ‘ clean sweep ’ of all known criminals — a policy that had been advocated for some years by Matthew Davenport Hill , the Recorder of Birmingham — as a sure means to guarantee the safety of the streets .
26 Margaret Hughes wept in the backseat of the police car that took her from the court to prison .
27 Numerous questions have been asked in the House about the police national computer , but to my knowledge this is the first opportunity we have had in recent times to discuss wider issues .
28 Even after the abuses of the Star Chamber had been curbed the magistrates , who in the absence of a police force had some of the functions of a modern juge d'instruction , had power to interrogate the accused before trial .
29 Even after the abuses of the Star Chamber had been curbed the magistrates , who in the absence of a police force had some of the functions of a modern juge d'instruction , had power to interrogate the accused before trial . ’
30 It is commonplace in the sociology of the police to emphasize how police stations are a ‘ symbolic bureaucracy ’ , to use Jacobs 's telling phrase ( 1969 ) , or that they have , in Goffman 's terminology , front and backstage regions where different sets of rules apply ( see Holdaway 1980 ) .
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