Policing in Great Nortend: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
==Constabularies Office== | ==Constabularies Office== | ||
In practical terms, various ''constabularies'' formed under the | In practical terms, various ''constabularies'' formed under the ''Constabulary Act'' are organised on a county-by-county basis, under the political control of the King's Clerk who has responsibility over domestic security and law enforcement through the Under-Clerk for Constabularies who heads the Constabularies Office, a sub-office of the Clerk's Office. The Constabularies Office is the main liaison office between the Government and the Constabularies. | ||
==Organisation== | ==Organisation== |
Revision as of 09:40, 10 October 2020
Law enforcement in Great Nortend is undertaken by sworn police constables serving on a local parochial and hundred level. There is a national constabulary hierarchy formally answering to the Sheriff and thence to the King's Lieutenant of the county.
Constabularies Office
In practical terms, various constabularies formed under the Constabulary Act are organised on a county-by-county basis, under the political control of the King's Clerk who has responsibility over domestic security and law enforcement through the Under-Clerk for Constabularies who heads the Constabularies Office, a sub-office of the Clerk's Office. The Constabularies Office is the main liaison office between the Government and the Constabularies.
Organisation
Ranks
The Constabulary Act did not abolish the traditional offices of constable, high constable and sheriff who were the officers of the peace for a parish, hundred/borough and county respectively. Rather, it formalised the existing system of ad hoc deputies and deputies of deputies to these legally recognised office holders (titled subunderconstables, underconstables, underbeadles, beadles, undertipstaves and tipstaves) into a system of statutory ranks. This ensured that deputy officers of the peace were in fact substantive constables themselves.
Properly, a Constable Class I holds the office of constable, whilst mere Police Constables Class III and Constables Class II are subunderconstables and underconstables respectively. A Serjeant properly holds the office of underbeadle. An Intendent or Inspector holds the office of beadle, and is deputy to a Superintendent who properly holds the office of high constable of the hundred or borough. A Commander holds the office of undertipstaff, deputy to the Constable General who holds the office of tipstaff.
The Act does not allow for more than one holder of the three traditional offices of the peace at one time (except in those places with existing privileges). There may still only be one Constable Class I sworn in for a given manor at a given time, and only one Superintendent sworn in for a given hundred. There is no limit to the number of Constables Class III or II, Serjeants, Intendents or Commanders.
A constable may exercise his statutory powers anywhere in Great Nortend. Furthermore, the Lady Constables Act permitted women to join a constabulary for the first time, with all of the statutory law-enforcement powers of male constables, albeit without certain regular law powers. Lady constables are, however, restricted to the ranks of subunderconstable, underconstable, constable, underbeadle and beadle.
Structure
Operational policing is undertaken by bodies of constables known as constabularies, each whereof being independent of another, but located in the same hierarchy. There are 52 regular constabularies and 30 special constabularies. Each has a particular territorial jurisdiction known as a constablewick. Most constabularies have a constablewick over a given county. Some cities have their own independent constabularies.
The lowest level of police organisation is the individual police house, one of which is located in every parish. For small parishes, a Constable Class I is in charge of a police house, which may also have Constables Class II or III. Most villages, however, are large enough to have a Serjeant in charge of the police house.
A subdivision is a number of parishes clustered together commanded by an Intendent. The Intendent is usually based in the largest town or village of the division, where a police station is located. A division is a hundred or a group of hundreds or borough commanded by a Superintendent (who is High Constable of all of the hundreds within the division). Most constabularies have around eight to ten divisions. A Commander and Constable General operates from the constabulary headquarters which may, in the case of a small borough or county, be at the divisional headquarters.
Each constabulary has a a C.I. division (Chief Inspector's division) and a S.O. division (Special Operations division). The former is tasked with investigative and detective police work whilst the latter encompasses a variety of different branches such as the Dog Branch, the Mounted Branch, the Firearms Branch and the Security Branch.
Equipment
Uniform
Weapons
Vehicles
This page is written in Erbonian English, which has its own spelling conventions (colour, travelled, centre, realise, instal, sobre, shew, artefact), and some terms that are used in it may be different or absent from other varieties of English. |