No, it only matters that they identified themselves as a LEO, and that the assaulter had reasonable cause to believe they were being told the truth.
The plural form is... 'officers in charge'.
yes.
Officer in charge is just a general term used to describe the officer who has authority over a specific situation. It can refer to many thing - an officer in charge of a specific criminal or traffic case, the officer who is in charge of a division's station house at a specific point in time, or even a command officer in charge of a specific event. This term does not reflect or describe any one specific rank.
A Train Officer
OIC
OIC
A General.
Misdemeanor charge yes. Felony charge very doubtful.
Eod officer
An officer is someone in charge of others. A police officer is in charge of making sure people obey the law. Military officers are in charge of their units. Here are some sentences.He is an officer of the law.The Marine officer made certain all his men got home safely.I'm training to become an officer.A Police Officer was dealing with the assault on my daughter.My father was an Officer in the British Army.
The Tagalog term for "officer-in-charge" is "opisyal sa tungkulin."
There was no single German officer in charge - there were dozens. Had Rommel been in charge he may have organised a real defence, but his orders were ignored by some and countermanded by other Officers.