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The National Park Service commonly refers to law enforcement operations in the agency as Visitor and Resource Protection. In units of the National Park System, law enforcement rangers are the primary police agency. [1] The National Park Service also employs special agents who conduct more complex criminal investigations. Rangers and agents ...
The United States Park Police (USPP) is the oldest uniformed federal law enforcement agency in the United States. It functions as a full-service law enforcement agency with responsibilities and jurisdiction in those National Park Service areas primarily located in the Washington, D.C., San Francisco, and New York City areas and certain other government lands.
The 163-acre (0.66 km 2) National Zoo is a Smithsonian facility in the District of Columbia and is staffed 24 hours a day by full-time US National Zoological Park police officers. The National Zoo also maintains a 3200-acre Research facility (Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute; SCBI) in Front Royal, Virginia; which is staffed by members ...
Woodstock Police Service - Containment Team [45] York Regional Police - Emergency Response Unit (ERU) [46] Atlona Police Service, Morden Police Service & Winkler Police Service - Regional Support Tactical Team [47] Other units. Atomic Energy of Canada Limited (AECL) - Nuclear Security Response Team; Bruce Power - Nuclear Response Team (NRT) [48]
A 44-year-old Fort Worth man accused of shooting at his neighbors was arrested Monday night after a standoff with SWAT and other law enforcement officers, police said.
Federal authorities are searching for Gregory Yetman, a former New Jersey National Guard police sergeant, who is wanted on charges related to Jan. 6. FBI SWAT team on the hunt for ex-National ...
The Savannah Police Department (SPD) part-time SWAT unit responds to more incidents, according to preliminary figures sent by SPD Public Information Officer Neil Penttila. In 2019, SPD SWAT ...
The term was then adopted by the National Park Service. [2] The first Director of the National Park Service, Stephen T. Mather, reflected upon the early park rangers in the US National Parks as follows: They are a fine, earnest, intelligent, and public-spirited body of men, these rangers. Though small in number, their influence is large.