Example sentences of "in [noun pl] stations " in BNC.

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1 In some cases , cameras which produce high definition close-up pictures are linked to video recorders or to screens in police stations .
2 The corollary to this is the claim that bureaucracy in police stations is chimerical .
3 BY 1984 those who sift through your files in police stations , hospitals and local authority housing departments could be talking with artificial intelligence .
4 Sometimes they are purpose built ( Wiltshire and London ) , sometimes specially furnished rooms in police stations ( Northamptonshire ) , sometimes separate rooms in hospitals ( Hampshire ) .
5 A parallel development , which started in 1983 in anticipation of implementation of what became the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 , saw the planning and introduction of the ‘ 24-hour duty solicitor scheme ’ for the provision of legal advice to suspects and others in police stations .
6 Research conducted for the Royal Commission on Criminal Justice found that solicitors ' representatives involved in giving advice in police stations are often inexperienced and lack proper training .
7 Work also began to develop a scheme for training and accrediting clerks who advise suspects in police stations .
8 Perhaps my hon. Friend will be reassured when I announce to the House that we will be laying tomorrow an order to ensure that , for all indictable offences , there will be the compulsory taking of evidence by tape recording in police stations .
9 On the same day Baasam Abu Sharif , senior adviser to Arafat , claimed that 210 Palestinians had died in Kuwait under torture , and by shooting and hanging , and that hundreds of Palestinians were being held in police stations and were being tortured " in indescribable ways " .
10 The Amnesty report detailed 35 cases of torture of detainees in police stations and prisons since 1986 and claimed that the practice was tolerated by magistrates .
11 In the matter of police access to HIV status , shedding blood in police stations is common , and police , like health professionals , have their occupational health to consider , but drawing attention publicly to this issue is certainly inappropriate .
12 Detainees in police stations should have no more difficulty in obtaining therapeutic agents than the average citizen at home , and probably less , since the latter does not generally have a car and driver to collect his medicines from the local pharmacy .
13 Keeping remand prisoners in police stations is another matter and is reprehensible .
14 Police spokesman Martin Wallwork said : ‘ In police stations civilians will do the duties of officers who man the front desk giving us the opportunity to redeploy them on the streets . ’
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