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  2. Railroad police - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Railroad_police

    Railroad police or railway police are people responsible for the protection of railroad (or railway) properties, facilities, revenue, equipment (train cars and locomotives), and personnel, as well as carried passengers and cargo. Railroad police may also patrol public rail transit systems.

  3. Transit police - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transit_police

    Where the term "transit police" is used for a law enforcement agency or unit working for a railroad/railway, it usually refers to a railroad providing urban mass transit (such as a city-elevated system or subway) as opposed to long-distance rail carriage. Law enforcement agencies of both cargo railroads and long-haul rail carriers are usually ...

  4. Railway Protection Force - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Railway_Protection_Force

    On the recommendation of Railway Police Committee, 1872, Railway Police was organized into ‘Govt. Police’ (The precursor of GRP) for Law enforcement and ‘Company Police’ (The precursor of RPF) for Watch and Ward duties in Railways. The actual separation of duties came into effect in 1881.

  5. Amtrak Police Department - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amtrak_Police_Department

    The APD is one of six American Class I railroad law enforcement agencies, alongside those of BNSF, CPKC, CSX, Norfolk Southern, and Union Pacific. Since 1979, most Amtrak police officers have been trained at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Centers (FLETC) [4] [5] although some recruits may be certified through a local police academy.

  6. BNSF Police Department - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BNSF_Police_Department

    Like most railroad police, its primary jurisdiction is unconventional, consisting of 34,000 miles of track in 28 western U.S. states. Railroad police are certified state law enforcement officers, authorized under federal law, to operate as such in any state that allows railroad police authority under state law.

  7. Canadian Pacific Kansas City Police Service - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Pacific_Kansas...

    CPKC Police Service, formerly Canadian Pacific Police Service and CP Railway Police, have a long and storied past within Canada and CP Rail is a part of Canada's history. Railway police were called upon many times to police railway towns, and to keep the peace during the building of the Canadian Railways from coast to coast. The railway police ...

  8. Government Railway Police - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government_Railway_Police

    Government Railway Police (GRP), or simply Railway Police, are branches of the state police forces in India responsible for maintaining law and order, as well as preventing and detecting crimes in railway premises and trains. Its duties correspond to those of the district police in the areas under their jurisdiction.

  9. Railway detectives in the United Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Railway_detectives_in_the...

    Some early-19th-century references to "railway police" or "policemen" do not concern constables but instead describe the men responsible for the signalling and control of the movement of trains (it is still common colloquial practice within railway staff for their modern equivalents in signal boxes and signalling centres to be called "Bobbies ...