Police fall under jurisdiction of the state government, not being an enumerated power of the federal government.
The federal government is in charge of all police forces in Australia.
There are police officers at every level of government. Federal, state, county, city and agencies all can have sworn police officers.
Federal officers are police officers working for the government like a border patrol, police and sheriff(those are just some of them)
If this is a question, the answer is no.
helps for the streets and roads.Commuinities and police centers
police firemen transportation etc.
Both. Your 'everyday' police officer is probably an employee of your municipality, county, or state, but federal agents (e.g.: FBI - ATF - ICE - etc) and certain uniformed forces (e.g.: US Park Police - White House Police - US Capitol Police - etc) work for the federal government.
In the US it can be private, local, county, state, or federal
Yes, for the simple reason that there is no such thing as a "federal speeding ticket". The federal government has no police force that controls federal highways. That control is left to the states.
Although it is not in the printed record, it is a demand on the Federal Government to police the borders.
it sent army troops to help state police stop the violence
Because the constitution gives the states all the power that wasn't given to the federal government.