Stop police

Stop police




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Stop police
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

^ "Weekly Top 30 Programmes" . BARB. 4 July 2009 . Retrieved 27 September 2018 .

^ "Police Stop!: 1" . Amazon UK . January 1994.

^ "Police Stop!: 2" . Amazon UK . April 1994.

^ "Police Stop!: America" . Amazon UK . May 1994.

^ "Police Stop or We'll Shoot" . Amazon UK . 14 November 1994.

^ "Police Stop!: 3" . Amazon UK . 8 April 1996.

^ "Police Stop!: 4" . Amazon UK . 23 October 1995.

^ "Police Stop!: Worst of Police Stop!" . Amazon UK . 8 April 1996.


Police Stop! is a British television documentary series, narrated and presented by Graham Cole , best known for his role as PC Tony Stamp in the Thames Television drama series The Bill , that was first developed in 1993 as a Direct-to-video series by creator Bill Rudgard. The series compiles footage filmed on cameras mounted in police cars and helicopters , with occasional material from road-side or hand-held cameras, with each episode focusing on a different type of road related crime, such as speeding, driving without due care and attention or dangerous overtaking, or in more extreme cases, hazards relating to weather conditions or car chases involving wanted criminals.

Seven episodes were released straight to VHS before a deal was struck with BSkyB to broadcast the series on Sky One , with a new episode to be broadcast each year from 1996 onwards. A total of fourteen episodes were filmed, with the final episode, a special focusing on policing in the United States , airing in 2001. Prior to the broadcast of Police Stop! 5 , Sky also broadcast the first four episodes previously released exclusively to VHS. The series also broadcast in the United States on Syndication, which notably resulted in several episodes being cut to remove footage for which clearance rights were unavailable.

The series also spawned an international spin-off, which began broadcasting in New Zealand in 1996. The series aired on TV3 , and was fronted by former Australian race car driver Peter Brock . The series' format was similar to the British versions, using footage from both the United Kingdom and United States , with additional content from the New Zealand police. Later series were retitled Police Stop – Caught in the Act , which in addition to car chase footage, also featured footage from security cameras, often from shops or public places. Footage also extended to Brock himself working alongside the New Zealand police, giving an insight into general lines of police work. Although the series concluded in 1998, a special episode was screened in 2006 as a tribute to Brock, a week after he died in a Motorsport accident.

The first episode of Police Stop! was released on video in 1993, and was widely successful, partly due to a campaign ran by The Sun , which offered readers a discount when ordered directly from the manufacturer. As such, a second video followed swiftly in April 1994. The second video is the only episode not to be presented by Graham Cole, instead fronted by Inspector David Rowland, a traffic division inspector from the Metropolitan Police . Although the episode was narrated by Cole. Graham Cole returned to voice two episodes focusing on policing in the United States , the first aptly titled Police Stop! America and the second Police Stop! Or We'll Shoot , which predominantly focuses on the work of the Texas Rangers . Police Stop! 3 and Police Stop! 4 both followed in 1995, before a compilation video, entitled Worst of Police Stop! , followed in 1996.

Police Stop! and Police Stop! 2 were produced with the co-operation of several British police forces, who contributed most of the material. Aside from the two American specials, Police Stop! 3 and Police Stop! 4 also included material primarily from the United States and mainland Europe . Notably, all seven videos were exempt from classification . From Police Stop! 5 onwards, the series transferred to Sky One , where a new episode was broadcast yearly until 2001. From this point onwards, the series continued to use more clips from non-British sources.

Police Stop! was regularly repeated on Men and Motors and ITV4 during the late 2000s, although the repeats resulted in some confusion for viewers when both channels erroneously listed the series as being presented by Alastair Stewart , confusing it with the former ITV series Police Camera Action! , which Stewart fronted. Notably, only ten of the fourteen episodes were repeated on both channels, with Police Stop! America , Police Stop! Or We'll Shoot , Worst of Police Stop! and Police Stop! 11 remaining unrepeated. Labyrinth Media, who produced the series, also produced two further direct-to-video releases featuring a similar format.
Riot Police , released in 1994, features graphic footage of riots, including the riot of March 31, 1990 in Trafalgar Square , London. Real Life Rescues , presented by Alastair Stewart and also released in 1994, features camera footage of real-life rescues involving the emergency services.

Graham Cole introduces us to the worst types of driving on Britain's roads.

A look at driving internationally, featuring hazards in Australia, South Africa, and the United States.

All new footage from police cameras both inside cars and outside, focusing mainly on the phenomena that is road rage and some of the most gruesome incidents of reckless driving.

This episode takes a look at drink-driving, road rage , speeding, roadworthiness checks and Christmas hazards on the roads.

Graham Cole takes a look at the dangers of large lorries and HGVs on our roads, plus how ice affects drivers.

1 January 1994 ( 1994-01-01 ) – 2001 ( 2001 )

A hard hitting look at the police on America's meanest streets, including drug busts, car chases and high speed action.
14 November 1994 ( 1994-11-14 ) [5]

Graham Cole looks at car chases which have resulted in the police having to threaten the culprits with weapons.
23 October 1995 ( 1995-10-23 ) [7]

This episode features the best bits from Police Stop! 1—4, and also includes brand new, never before seen footage.

Scare Scary Evil Teacher 3D: Spooky Creepy Games
to darmowe oprogramowanie dla Androida, które należy do kategorii 'Przygoda' a>.
Ten program został opublikowany w Softonic 16 stycznia 2020 r. i nie mieliśmy jeszcze okazji go przetestować.
Zachęcamy do wypróbuj i zostaw nam komentarz lub oceń na naszej stronie. Pomoże to bardzo reszcie naszych użytkowników!
Zatrzymaj policję wymaga Androida 9.0 lub nowszego. Obecna wersja programu to 2 i można ją pobrać tylko w języku angielskim.
com-overfile-games-stop-police-3-46943993-95012009b66c3962d78bd94b7c089d3c.apk
Czy próbowałeś Stop Police? Bądź pierwszy zostawić swoją opinię!
Stwórz swój własny, unikalny świat w darmowej grze w stylu Minecraft
Trudna, ale wciągająca platformówka 2D dla wytrwałych graczy
Zabierz karty Pokémon o krok dalej dzięki Pokémon TCG Online
Przepisy dotyczące korzystania z tego oprogramowania różnią się w zależności od kraju. Nie zachęcamy do korzystania z tego programu ani nie akceptujemy go, jeśli narusza on prawo.
Nazwa i logo Softonic są zarejestrowanym znakiem towarowym SOFTONIC INTERNATIONAL S.A. Prawa autorskie SOFTONIC INTERNATIONAL S.A. © 1997-2022 - Wszelkie prawa zastrzeżone
Softonic skanuje wszystkie pliki udostępniane na naszej platformie w celu oceny i zapobieganiu zagrożeń dla twojego sprzętu. Każdy nowy plik zostaje zweryfikowany przez nasz zespół wraz z wszystkimi bieżącymi plikami, które są regularnie sprawdzane w celu potwierdzenia lub aktualizacji ich statusu. Ten kompleksowy proces pozwala nam przypisać status do dowolnego dostępnego do pobrania pliku w następujący sposób:
Istnieje duże prawdopodobieństwo, iż to oprogramowanie jest wolne od zagrożeń.
Przeskanowaliśmy ten plik i powiązane z tym oprogramowaniem łącza URL w ponad 50-ciu wiodących światowych usługach antywirusowych i nie wykryto żadnego zagrożenia.
Najprawdopodobniej to oprogramowanie jest złośliwe lub zawiera niepożądane dołączone oprogramowanie.
Na podstawie naszego skanu systemowego zweryfikowaliśmy, że najprawdopodobniej te oznaczenia dają fałszywie pozytywne wyniki .
Oznacza to, że bezpieczne oprogramowanie jest błędnie oznaczone jako złośliwe w wyniku zbyt ogólnikowo zdefinowanego wykrywania ataku opartego na sygnaturach lub jako wynik algorytmu użytego w programie antywirusowym.
Prawdopodobnie to oprogramowanie jest złośliwe lub zawiera niepożądane dołączone oprogramowanie.
Na podstawie naszego skanu systemowego zweryfikowaliśmy, że te oznaczenia dają wiarygodne rezultaty.
Chcielibyśmy zaznaczyć, iż od czasu do czasu może się zdarzyć, że pominiemy potencjalnie złośliwe oprogramowanie. W celu zapewnienia wolnego od wirusów katalogu oprogramowania i aplikacji, nasz zespół zaimplementował funkcję Raportowania Oprogramowania na każdej stronie katalogu, tak aby wasza informacja trafiała z powrotem do nas.
Wystarczy zgłosić napotkane zagrożenie a Softonic zajmie się niezwłocznie twoim problemem.
Co sądzisz o aplikacji Stop Police? Poleciłbyś ją? Dlaczego?
Ups, coś poszło nie tak. Spróbuj może tego:



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Stephanie Pappas





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This article only interviews white men, does not include any input from those currently protesting, fails to distinguish between correlation and causation, and fails to provide actionable items - the "how to" of a how-to. It's just an overview of descriptive research about police violence rather than an assessment of actual practical tactics that would satisfy the promise of the headline. Disappointing.


Like most news articles these days, the text of the article doesn't deliver on the headline. Very disappointing.


The answer is simple. Require 4 year college/university degree for all police officers.


cops are no different then the common criminal, except that cops get away with it and they do what ever they want without the worry of repercussions. now if that can change then ill be impressed, but we all know that will never happen.


This is the BEST and most constructive article I've seen yet on how to instill real change in the police force. I honestly don't know what those who disagree are talking about - I'm reading 5 excellent suggestions starting with #1 - TRACK the problem. This is an actual productive conversation about what can be done to change and improve the situation. Protests get attention, but there has to be a goal. This is a step in the right direction. Thank you. Most police are hard-working, caring persons who simply want to keep their communities safe from harm, and those of you who disagree - I sincerely hope you get the opportunity to see what life is like without them.




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By


Stephanie Pappas


published June 04, 2020

Cities across the U.S. have been rocked by nightly protests against police brutality following the May 25 killing of a Black Minneapolis man named George Floyd by a White police officer.
And as videos proliferate of police arresting or tear gassing seemingly peaceful protestors, the issues raised by the protestors seem more insurmountable than ever. But researchers and activists say that solutions are no mystery: Evidence-based changes to policy around policing can reduce deaths at the hands of the police. These steps alone can't end racism overnight or erase the myriad inequalities in American society, but they can save lives.
Here's what the science says on how to combat police bias and killings: This is not a comprehensive list of suggested reforms, or even of suggested reforms that have been researched. And some ideas, such as defunding police departments, have yet to be thoroughly studied because they have not been tried on a widespread basis.
There is no comprehensive government clearinghouse for data on police killings or police use of force. After the killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, in 2014, several private and nonprofit groups began keeping their own databases. These include Mapping Police Violence , an effort led by data scientist and activist Samuel Sinyangwe, Fatal Encounters , a catalog by journalist D. Brian Burghart, and efforts like the Washington Post's Fatal Force database.
Thanks to databases like these, it's clear that Black people are killed at a disproportionate rate by police officers, making up 24% of deaths despite being only 13% of the population, according to Mapping Police Violence. But the databases rely on media reports of deaths, not police department, city, state or government data, for the simple reason that many police departments are not forthcoming with this information.
"Data on policing is notoriously terrible," said Casey Delehanty, a political scientist at Gardner-Webb University in North Carolina. "It's very spotty. It's unreliable and often inaccurate, and this has really precluded a lot of study and understanding and also accountability in real-time of local, state and federal police."
Even when the government does keep data, it's incomplete and often held on laughably out-of-date technology. In the summer 2019, Delehanty embarked on an effort to get raw data from the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Uniform Crime Reporting Database. The email provided by the FBI for researchers to request data bounced back. The phone number for researchers led to a phone tree that automatically hung up after Delehanty picked the academic option. He finally reached a person by using the field office's media line, only to learn that the only way to get the data was by mail, on a CD (compact disk). After a few weeks of waiting, the CD arrived and Delehanty dug out a computer that still had a CD-ROM drive. The data was in an old, rarely-seen format (a fixed-width delimited text file) without the necessary file that would automatically define the data columns. It took days to define the columns by hand, Delehanty said.
Sometimes, incompetent data management by the government means that information just doesn't exist. Edward Lawson, Jr., now a data analytics researcher for the state government of South Carolina, once tried to find out from the Defense Logistics Agency, part of the Department of Defense, how much military equipment was being sent to police departments around the country. He learned that prior to mid-2014, the agency had simply been updating each quarter's information in the same document, erasing and rewriting whatever inventory had been transferred the previous quarter.
"Before the later part of 2014, there were no records that existed," Lawson told Live Science.
Police department data should be accessible through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), which allows citizens to request records from public agencies. But FOIA requests often come up empty, in many cases because police decide they simply do not want their department's data scrutinized. On Twitter, one data scientist who used to work on police use-of-force research wrote that some departments are forthcoming . Others ignore requests, deny them summarily or ask for enormous fees — such as a deposit of $1 million — to release records.
Some state laws make transparency more difficult. For example, Section 50-a in New York state seals personnel records for police officers , keeping complaints or histories of misconduct secret.
For decades, police departments have been gradually adopting more and more gear from the U.S. military. Departments get this gear in a variety of ways, but one common route is the 1033 program , which provides free surplus military gear to departments for the cost of shipping. Some of this gear is innocuous, Delahanty told Live Science — filing cabinets, gloves, binoculars and other run-of-the-mill supplies that departments would otherwise have to buy on their own. But departments have also received equipment such as grenade launchers, bayonets and mine-resistant ambush-protected vehicles (MRAPS), which are military trucks designed to take blows from improvised explosive devices in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Both Delehanty and Lawson have found that police departments with more military equipment from the 1033 program kill more people. In a paper published in Political Research Quarterly in 2018, Lawson and his colleagues found that in all 50 states between 2014 and 2016, the number of police-involved deaths rose with militarization, as measured by the value of the equipment sent to a department via the 1033 program, even after controlling for factors such as population numbers, poverty, race and violent crime. In 2017, Delehanty and colleagues reported in the journal Research & Politics that in four states where they had records (Connecticut, Maine, Nevada and New Hampshire), military equipment via the 1033 program was linked with more killings by police. In a given year, a department with no 1033 requisitions could expect 0.287 killings of suspects, on average, Delehanty found; those with the max expenditure could expect 0.656 killings, more than twice as many.
It's likely that departments with a militaristic, us-versus-them mindset seek out more military equipment, Lawson said. But Delehanty's findings hint that the cycle can feed on itself, with more military equipment encouraging a more violent force. By comparing departments over time, he and his colleagues found that the annual change in military equipment could predict a department's suspect deaths in the next year. A department with no new equipment in a year could expect 0.068 fewer suspect deaths in the following 365 days. A department with the most new requisitions could expect 0.188 more deaths. The researchers even found a similar increase in police killings of dogs, suggesting that cops weren't necessarily gearing up for big, casualty-heavy raids with their requisitions. They were simply becoming more violent in general.
The protests have led to renewed calls to end or restrict the 1033 program. In 2015, President Barack Obama put some limits on the program via executive order. President Donald Trump repealed that executive order in 2017. Now, Senator Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii), has said he plans to introduce legislation to end the 1033 program entirely, The New York Times reported .
Training is often cited as a way to reduce racial biases among police officers and encourage de-escalation. Some training methods have evidence to back them up. For example, training in procedural justice, which focuses on fairness, was shown in one randomized experiment to reduce police officers' likelihood of ending encounters with arrests or using force, according to a 2018 study published in the journal Criminology & Public Policy . But training is a nebulous concept with little oversight, and departments don't necessarily turn to evidence-based programs. In 2017, for example, Fox 9 reported that the St. Paul Police Department's "main attraction" in its annual equity training was watching the children's movie "Zootopia." There are also questions about the efficacy of methods like implicit bias training, in part because of
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