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| | BIGpedia - Police - Encyclopedia and Dictionary Online |
 | | Police in the United States usually carry a pistol (Glocks and Sig-Sauers are the most common) and an impact weapon, a baton also known as a "nightstick". |  | | For fictional accounts of police work, see: Crime fiction. |  | | Arizona which led to the widespread use of Miranda warnings. |
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http://www.bigpedia.com/encyclopedia/Police
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| | Human Right Abuses by Hong Kong Police - encyclopedia article about Human Right Abuses by Hong Kong Police. |
 | | "the only things police are authorized to do by s54 PFO is to seek production of proof of identity, detain for a reasonble period while police records enquiries are being made, and search only as appropriate. |  | | This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a of quality. |  | | Calls for reform, from both local non-government organisations, political parties as well as the UNCHR, have gone to deaf ears at HKSAR government. |
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http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Human+Right+Abuses+by+Hong+Kong+Police
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| | World Police Encyclopedia |
 | | The only systematic survey of the police systems in over 190 countries |  | | The World Police Encyclopedia fulfills this need by providing a systematic survey of the police systems of all the member nations in the United Nations and Taiwan. |  | | The increasingly international nature of crime underscores the need for countries to work together to control crime and terrorism. |
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http://www.routledge-ny.com/ref/worldpolice/index.html
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| | James Randi Educational Foundation — An Encyclopedia of Claims, Frauds, and Hoaxes of the Occult and Supernatural |
 | | The police, by the very nature of their duties, must choose to record any volunteered information. |  | | There is no recorded instance in England of any psychic solving a criminal case or providing evidence or information that led directly to its solution. |  | | In all of the eight districts of London that the Yard covers, he made inquiries, and he found that rather than the officers seeking out the psychics, it was the other way around. |
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http://www.randi.org/encyclopedia/police%20psychics.html
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| | Casebook: Jack the Ripper - The Police Encyclopedia: Volume IV |
 | | As you enter the room immediately on your left, is a postcard written in red ink, and with a smudge of red ink across it, intended for an imitation of a blood-stain, which was sent to the police at the time of the notorious Whitechapel murders. |  | | H.L. Adam also authored a number of other works which contained references to the Ripper murders, including Police Work From Within (1914) and The Trial of George Chapman (1930). |  | | The Police Encyclopedia, published in 1920, has two short sections which contain information on the Whitechapel murders; two pages in the preface (authored by Robert Anderson) and two pages in Volume IV discussing, in part, Anderson's views on the case. |
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http://www.casebook.org/ripper_media/rps.adam1.html
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