Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Kyoto Prefectural Riot Police Unit officers on duty during the Gion Matsuri 2008 festival. Crowd control is a public security practice in which large crowds are managed in order to prevent the outbreak of crowd crushes, affray, fights involving drunk and disorderly people or riots. Crowd crushes in particular can cause many hundreds of ...
Usually, when front-facing a riot, officers slowly walk in a line parallel to the riot's front, extending to both its ends, as they noisily and simultaneously march and beat their shields with their batons, to cause fear and psychological effects on the crowd. German police deploy an armoured riot control vehicle at a demonstration in Hamburg.
An element of the Georgia State Patrol Mobile Field Force pictured in 2016. A mobile field force (MFF), within the context of United States law enforcement, is a large element of police officers specially organized to support anti-riot operations through the use of maneuver tactics aimed at dispersing crowds during their embryonic phase or extracting agitators and leaders from larger groups.
Crowd control and riot control techniques (2 C) F. Firearm training ... Color of the day (police) Communications Data Bill 2008;
Uniqode examined news reports, market research, and other sources to see how ticketing technology is changing the future of live events.
The snatch squad in riot control involves several police officers, usually wearing protective riot gear, rushing forwards—occasionally in a flying wedge formation—to break through the front of a crowd, with the objective of snatching one or more individuals from a riot that are attempting to control the demonstration at which they are present.
Crowd control barriers During the 2014 London Marathon, a police officer keeps spectators behind the barrier. Crowd control barriers (also referred to as crowd control barricades, with some versions called a French barrier or bike rack in the USA, and mills barriers in Hong Kong [1]) are commonly used at many public events.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more