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

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1 The patrol boat , on loan to the council from the police , is now crewed by Vandaline workers who have been specially trained in boathandling and who also have passed swimming tests and been briefed on river byelaws and enforcement .
2 Against these criticisms , the Royal Commission noted that it had heard from ‘ witnesses representing a wide range of interests a great many tributes to the integrity of the police ’ .
3 If the scope of that measure were widened to take in the contents of magazines which are easily accessible to persons under 18 , it would form a useful adjunct to the powers of the police .
4 They relate to the recognition and enforcement of court orders abroad , and to the powers of the police to arrest people they suspect of illegally attempting to remove a child aboard .
5 At seven she was already wise to the likes of the police .
6 To the surprise of the police all eight panels from Weimar were recovered , together with eleven paintings stolen from a private home near Stadthagen .
7 A shopkeeper who refused to sell constables cigarettes at a discount and complained of the illegal sale of similar goods to the public from their own trading organization , the Police Guild , could find himself summonsed by the same officers for employing children under age ( which in turn gave rise to the banning of the Police Guild by the Watch Committee ) .
8 Whereas the line item approach bears no relation at all to the activities of the police force it is possible to identify various functions carried out by the police and thereby determine suitable programmes .
9 The trouble is that having er agreed to a er more flexible approach to the size of the police authority , the Government has not taken the opportunity despite many effective speeches from the Conservative benches at second reading to er ret to return to the tripartite system of policing in this country which was er the e the essential element of the nineteen sixty four Act which is now in effect being replaced .
10 It went ‘ without saying ’ that the rule was devoted ‘ not to the interests of the police , but to the protection and welfare of the public ’ .
11 Croom-Johnson J. plainly thought that he is ; one of the reasons advanced for accepting the contentions of the appellant was that , if the law were otherwise , the ‘ well meaning ’ defendant who went to the aid of the police and accidentally obstructed them would be guilty of an offence .
12 Apart from containing pictures of part of the scene where it is said the violent disorder had taken place and an incident leading up to the arrival of the police which was held to be part of the res gestae , the tape would have been useful to establish alibis some defendants wished to rely upon in respect of their presence in the club at a relevant time and the timing between significant incidents .
13 Earlier cases had tended to defer to the judgment of the police officer on the spot without setting out an objective definition to which he or she was required to adhere .
14 They claimed that the ruling nullified the government 's argument that it had no liability for the death of the Palestinian because it was an act of war , and that it effectively restored the government 's response to the intifada to the status of a police operation .
15 A man whose name was linked to the killer of a police informer was found murdered at his home in Chapel Street , Stroud , Glos , early yesterday .
16 If we need people with financial experience and managerial experience , then appoint them to the local to the Police Committee , given them a job to do , they 're the ones that are should advise the Chief Constable and the Police Committee as to whether they 're spending the right of money on computers and are using it properly , not whether they 're using them operationally correctly .
17 Externalisation or blaming — admitting that there are problems but saying that the causes are due to pressures at work or unemployment or due to social , financial or other stresses or due to doctors or " pushers " or due to the inadequacy of the police , customs officials or the Government .
18 It involves visits to the homes of children who are either convicted offenders , children at special risk , or who have recently been involved in trouble and have come to the attention of the police .
19 More significantly , if questions may not even be asked in open court about illegal tapping , how is the victim to find out about it in order to bring it to the attention of the police ?
20 In the winter of 1926–7 a power struggle brought it to the attention of the police .
21 They normally come to the attention of the police by neighbours , ringing up , There 's an argument or there 's a lot of noise from next door .
22 If the hon. Gentleman believes that there is evidence of criminality , he should draw it to the attention of the police , if he has not done so already .
23 Between July and October this year in Leeds , two children aged under 10 came to the attention of the police for vehicle theft offences .
24 To the strains of the Police Band , the men marched past , first in column later in fours .
25 There is , however , a minority of people coming to the notice of the police or courts in whom mental disorder has played a direct causal role in the offence .
26 ‘ I tried to bring this to the notice of the police and the Army but they did not want to know .
27 First , he accepted many of the recommendations of the Report , particularly in relation to the role of the police .
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