Uploaded by Philipp Melnikov

Presentation "Police of USA"

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Private professional educational institution
"Anapa Industrial College»
Presentation
Theme : «Law enforcement of the USA»
The presentation was
created by first-year
Student Philipp Melnikov
Specialization : 40.02.02
«Law enforcement»
Anapa
2021
Сontents
The first police forces
The US police today
Police functions
Types of police
Entry qualifications
Police weapons
Specialized weapons
Police communications
Transport of the Police
History and interesting
facts
The United States inherited England’s Anglo-Saxon common law and
its system of social obligation, sheriffs, constables, watchmen, and
stipendiary justice. As both societies became less rural and agrarian
and more urban and industrialized, crime, riots, and other public
disturbances became more common. Yet Americans, like the English,
were wary of creating standing police forces. Among the first public
police forces established in colonial North America.
• In this place watchmen organized in Boston in 1631 and in New Amsterdam
(later New York City) in 1647. Although watchmen were paid a fee in both
Boston and New York, most officers in colonial America did not receive a
salary but were paid by private citizens, as were their English counterparts.
• In the frontier regions of the United States in the late 18th and early 19th
centuries, there arose a novel form of the Saxon tradition of frankpledge: the
vigilante. In areas where a formal justice system had yet to be established or
the rudimentary policing apparatus had proved inadequate in the face of
rampant crime, it was not uncommon for citizens (called “regulators”) to
band together in “committees of vigilance” to combat crime and to introduce
order where none existed. This socially constructive form of vigilantism—
lawlessness on behalf of lawfulness—and the question of when and where it
degenerated into rank mob rule have been popular topics in American
historiography.
.
The first police forces
The investigation of crimes was not a
central function of the early preventive
police departments in England and the
United States. Yet, despite the high
hopes of reformers when they created
police forces, the number of
preventable crimes was limited. As
crimes continued to occur, police were
pressured into accepting responsibility
for investigations and creating
detective units. The London
Metropolitan Police established the first
detective branch in 1842; that unit
became the Criminal Investigations
Department (CID) in 1878. Detective
units later were established in the
police departments of many American
cities, including New York City in 1857
In the 20-th police also engaged in
and helped organize widespread
election fraud in their role as
political functionaries for the
machine. In return, police had
virtual carte blanche in the use of
force and had as their primary
business not crime control, but the
solicitation and acceptance of
bribes. It is incorrect to say the late
19th and early 20th century police
were corrupt, they were in fact,
primary instruments for the creation
of corruption in the first place.
Photos of XX-th police
Law enforcement in the United States is
one of three major components of the
criminal justice system of the United
States, along with courts and corrections.
Although each component operates
semi-independently, the three collectively
form a chain leading from an investigation
of suspected criminal activity to the
administration of criminal punishment.
Law enforcement operates primarily
through governmental police agencies.
There are 17,985 U.S. police agencies in
the United States which include City
Police Departments, County Sheriff's
Offices, State Police/Highway Patrol and
Federal Law Enforcement Agencies.
The law-enforcement purposes of these agencies are
the investigation of suspected criminal activity,
referral of the results of investigations to state or
federal prosecutors, and the temporary detention of
suspected criminals pending judicial action.
Police functions
 Peace and order




maintenance.
Law enforcement.
Crime Prevention.
Crime Detection.
Crime Solution.
Types of police
Policing in the US is conducted by numerous agencies at many different levels. Their
duties varies from state to state.
 Federal Police was founded two hundred years old.
The Department of Justice (DOJ) is responsible for most law enforcement duties at
the federal level. It includes the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Drug
Enforcement Administration (DEA), the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and
Explosives (ATF), the United States Marshals Service and others.
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is another branch with numerous
federal law enforcement agencies.
Types of police
 State Police
States police agencies provide law enforcement duties,
including investigations and state patrols. They may be
called State Police, State Patrol or Highway Patrol.
Types of police
 Sheriffs' departments
In the United States, a sheriff is generally, but not
always, the highest law enforcement officer of a
county. A sheriff is in most cases elected by the
population of the county. In some states the sheriff
is officially titled "High Sheriff", although the title is
very rarely actually used.
They provide all traditional law-enforcement functions,
including countywide patrol and investigations.
Sheriffs' departments are divided into 3 categories:
• Full service
• Limited service
• Restricted service
Types of police
 County Police
• County law enforcement is
provided by Sheriffs' Departments
or Offices and County police.
• County police tend to exist only in
metropolitan counties and have
countywide jurisdiction.
• Hawaii - Hawaii has only county
police, there are no local police.
County police is divided into three
broad categories:
• Full-service
• Limited service
• Restricted service
Types of police
• Other
The other types of special police departments are:
• Transport police.
• Campus police.
• Airport police.
• Park police.
• Police departments responsible for protection
property of government.
Entry qualifications
 To be a citizen of US.
 To have a high school diploma or a college degree, or service in the United
States military;
 To be in good physical and psychological condition;
 To have a valid driver's license with a clean driving record;
 To be of high moral character;
 Not to use narcotics or alcohol;
 Not to have a history of ethical, professional or financial violations;
 Not to have a history of domestic violence or mental illness;
 To be legally eligible to own and carry a firearm.
Police weapons
Handguns
Police
in the United States
usually carry a handgun on
duty. Many are required to
be armed on-duty and offduty.
Some police departments
allow qualified officers to
carry shotguns and/or
semiautomatic rifles in their
vehicles for additional
firepower.
Specialized
weapons
Most
large police
departments have elite
SWAT units which are
called in to settle
dangerous situations.
These units usually have
e guns, carbines or rifles,
shotguns, sniper rifles,
gas, smoke and grenades,
and other specialized
weapons .
 A few departments have
an armored vehicle for
especially dangerous
work.



Most American police
departments are dispatched
from a centralized
communications center.
American police cars are
equipped with portable
computers linked by radio to
a network allowing them
access to state department
of motor vehicles information,
criminal records, and other
important information.
The number "911" is the
universal emergency number
for everyone in the United
States. In 2000, approximately
150 million calls were made to
911, according to the
National Emergency Number
Association (NENA).
 The
New York City
Sheriff's Office was
founded in 1626.
 The first local police
department
was
the
Boston
Police
Department in 1838.
 The New York City
Police Department was
founded in 1845.
 The first women were
assigned as officers in
California, 1910.
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Thanks for
watching!
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