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Rank Car Partners Order of TV Adaptation Order of Radio Adaptation Cover Her Face: 1962: Detective Chief Inspector: Detective Sergeant George Martin [2] [3] Third TV Adaptation (Anglia, 1985) First Radio Adaptation (BBC, 1993) A Mind to Murder: 1963: Detective Superintendent: Cooper Bristol: Detective Sergeant George Martin [4] [3] Eighth TV ...
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (US, 1999–present) Закон и порядок: отдел оперативных расследований (Law & Order: Division of Field Investigation) – official foreign adaptation of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (Russia, 2007–2011) Law & Order: Criminal Intent (US, 2001–2011)
In the NYPD, the detective rank is technically a designation: detectives do not actually outrank police officers although they are in charge of cases and are often senior in years of service, and so have a certain degree of authority beyond police officers in specific situations. Detectives also perform undercover duties for some of their cases.
[10] [11] Usually, uniforms denote the bearer's rank by particular insignia affixed to the uniforms. [12] [5] Rank is not only used to designate leadership, but to establish pay-grade as well. [13] As rank increases, pay-grade follows, but so does the amount of responsibility. [14]
The plot centers on a police detective with a lot of heart, despite having many innocent, but comical mishaps. Leslie Nielsen stars in each installment in the protagonist role of Detective Sergeant Franklin "Frank" Drebin, with a fourth film starring Liam Neeson as Frank Drebin Jr. scheduled for release
Detective Sergeant George Kitchener Bulman was a fictional detective created by Kenneth Royce in his series of books about The XYY Man (semi-reformed cat burglar Spider Scott), where the character's name was initially Alf Bulman. Here Bulman is presented as a 'bent copper', though the only examples of his corruption given are that he gained ...
While with the Oxford City Police, Morse is taken under the wing of veteran Inspector Thursday. Thursday names Endeavour his designated "bag man" and shows him the ropes as Morse begins to solve a string of complex murders, much to the envy and annoyance of some of his superiors, particularly Detective Sergeant Peter Jakes and Police Chief Superintendent Reginald Bright.
The character also appears, as a Police Constable and Detective Sergeant, in the prequel series Endeavour, portrayed by Sean Rigby. [1] Although Strange does not appear in every episode of Inspector Morse, he is present in the whole series (of 33 2-hour TV films) from beginning to end. He is absent from only a few of the intervening episodes.