Typically when a member of the police is placed on suspension it also entails them being cut off from access to the resources they had as a member of the police - whether it be a beat-cop or chief of police. They don't go into the office, they don't have access to the phones, radios, or computers unless one of their buddies does it for them. A police chief would only be granted access to your computer accounts as part of their official duties, and within the constraints of the law. If they are suspended, they are not allowed to perform their duties until re-instated, so they should not be able to access your accounts while suspended.
Suspension
No you cant but you can access the police computer when you are in a police car stationary and press L1Hope this helps
The police officers have a computer system in their car to do that. The computer allows them to access the database to see people's license plate number.
No standard method- as a private citizen, you cannot access the police computer database of stolen property.
If you are talking about learner's permits for drivers, those are recorded by the Department of Motor Vehicles; police officers have access to those records.
Absolutely, yes!
Yes, the police can trace a deleted account. The cyber security cell can trace older accounts too. They have advanced features to trace back accounts.
No dude. its not real.
You can submit a subject access request online to the UK Association of Chief Police Officers Criminal Records Office (ACRO). This will cost £10 and the ACRO will give you details of all information about you (if any) that is stored on the UK Police National Computer (PNC).
A doctor sales representative will definitely use a portable computer for customer management. A policemen will have access to police records that can be looked up in the case of arrest or traffic ticket.
Police scanners check for police radar beams so that a person knows whether or not they are being monitored. A computer scanners scans a physical document and makes it into a computer document.
not yet