unit numbers. the car is assigned to an officer and they report their number and the car number evrymorning for check ins
Ted L. Stoica has written: 'Roof-mounted light systems on police vehicles' -- subject(s): Fuel consumption, Lighting, Police vehicles, Traffic accidents
Yes, the police do need a warrant to search your locked roof mounted cargo box.
So people can easily recognize the vehicle as a police vehicle.
You can fit a roof rack in many different ways for different vehicles. Vehicles will either use fixpoint locations pre-drilled into the roof, use the securing points underneath the rubber door surrounds or secure on a vehicles pre-fitted roof rails. These pre-fitted roof rails normally run from front to the rear of a vehicle, allowing easy fitment anywhere along the rail. For a comprehensive guide of fitment, type Carracks.co.uk in to Google, you can see how it works and also where to buy the parts that you need for a roof rack.
Strobes are flashing lights, as on police vehicles.
Over 1000 police vehicles in the County
A police report is a document outlining an incident. Citizens are never required to make one.
Yes. They are police officers, the same as any other State Police Officer. Them being Motor Carrier Enforcement Officer simply means that their specialty is Commercial Vehicles - it doesn't mean their authority is limited only to commercial vehicles.
Yes, a police officer can pull over multiple vehicles at once.
Legally, they can be anywhere - even disguised as non-police-type vehicles.
No, within the past few years, marked police vehicles have switched from "M" plates to "MP" or Munucipal Police plates.
Top speed for a Crown Victoria police interceptor is 140MPH. This is not because it is all that the car is capable of, it's because it's governed by the vehicles computer and will stop accelerating once it hits the top speed listed on the speedometer of 140MPH. I sell police vehicles for a living. To check out my credibility look up my company on Google: Martel Autos or Martel's Police Vehicles.