It is capitalized at the beginning of the sentence or when it forms part of the proper noun.
Example:
The US Federal Police
Yes, "Federal Prosecutor" should be capitalized when referring to the official title of the position.
No, the word "federal" is only capitalized when it is part of a proper noun, such as "Federal Reserve" or "Federal Bureau of Investigation". Otherwise, it is typically lowercase.
Yes, you capitalize the word "Constitution," but the word "constitutional" would be lowercase.
Yes, the words "federal holidays" are not capitalized unless they appear at the beginning of a sentence or as part of a proper noun, such as "Federal Holidays Act."
Yes, because it is a propernou n. It should be Gree n Police.
You only capitalize it if it is part of a proper noun. The FBI is the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
No, they are not proper nouns.
Yes, It should be Federal Centers for Medicaid.
Yes. It should be--- Federal Work- Study Program.
You capitalize 'police' after the department name, where the word is part of the department name, as in, 'The Somerville Police Department is looking to recruit more policeofficers.'
Federal Railroad Police was created in 1852.
Argentine Federal Police was created in 1884.
Australian Federal Police was created in 1979.
Federal Reserve Police was created in 2001.
Yes, "Federal Prosecutor" should be capitalized when referring to the official title of the position.
Yes, the FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) is a police agency. They're considered the "federal police".
No. Not really, unless its like an exclamation like "I HATE POLICE OFFICERS!" then yea you would.