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This is a semi-overt black Range Rover used by the
Metropolitan Police's royalty protection team (SO14). It is one of a fleet
of identical Range Rovers which are used to protect royalty at home and
abroad, visiting foreign royalty and royal buildings. |
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The rear view of another from the fleet. The temporary
blue light bar (with police wording) is fixed to the roof rails and wired
through the door seal. The Met logos are magnetic. The means the car can
be quickly converted between covert and semi-overt guises depending on its
use. The registration plates have been digitally disguised due to the work
of these vehicles. |
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This is a Vauxhall Vectra 3.2, capable of 159 mph, as
proven by PC Milton in a court case as he 'familiarised himself' with his
new police car. |
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N46
KWR This is a West Yorkshire Police 9-ton Iveco Truck, used
by the Mounted Section. |
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YJ05
AHA This is another West Yorkshire Police truck used
by the Mounted Section. It is a much newer Mercedes in the same livery as previous mounted
police vehicles, with blue bodywork around the roof and side skirts. This
11-tonne truck also has the corporate West Yorks. yellow stripe. |
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The rear view. The rear half of this vehicle houses the
horses, whereas the front is an office area for officers to be briefed,
get changed and take breaks. Notice the lack of blue lights on this police
vehicle. |
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The nearside view, giving an indication of the length
of this truck. |
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PX03 CCN
This is a Cumbria Constabulary Ford Transit personnel / prisoner transport
vehicle. The rear section (without windows) houses a caged area for
prisoners. Notice the short blue light bars at diagonally opposite corners
of the roof, along with two directional white spot lights in the other
corners. |
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The rear aspect of a police VW Golf VR6. This demonstration car does not have any police wording! It was used by Gloucestershire Constabulary around 1997/8 as a traffic car. The poor ground clearance meant that they did not buy any after the evaluation. |
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SV05
CXP This 2005 Jaguar X-type estate is in service with Grampian
Police. |
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LM53
OJA is a silver BMW used by the City of London Police. |
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Y907
PMX This is an example of a 2001 personnel carrier
belonging to the City Police in London. It is a white Mercedes Sprinter
van with single yellow stripe down the sides. It has a riot grille and two
blue light bars. |
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N206
OYL This is an equivalent vehicle the above, but dating
from 1996. It is an LDV with an identical livery. |
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SV51
ETA This Ford Iveco Cargo belongs to Grampian Police.
It is an Underwater Search Unit with a double-height band of yellow and
blue chequers down the sides. |
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YW52
LLP This Humberside Proton Wira has had the force's
non-emergency telephone number added to the side: 0845 60 60 222. Also
notice the flashing lights mounted on the rear parcel shelf. |
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NA52
AJX is a long wheel base Ford Transit personnel carrier
from Northumbria Police. |
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The rear view showing the high visibility striping. |
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S628
CRO is a Vauxhall Omega and BF02
OWZ is a Subaru Impreza Turbo photographed at the
Yorkshire TV studios in Leeds. They are used for filming purposes and are
not real Police cars. Both vehicles have their blue lights covered up and
tape across their Police markings. |
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The side view of the Omega. You can just see the sign
in the offside rear window stating the vehicle is used for filming. |
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YJ05
ACZ is a North Yorks Volvo traffic car. It is one of a
number with consecutive registration plates. Notice the lack of badges and
wording down the sides, only the non-emergency number is written in the
gap below the rear-most window. |
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NK51
WWU This is a Northumbria Police Ford Transit, used as a
mobile cctv unit. The phrase 'caught on camera' is written down the side
and a white camera pod can be seen sticking out of the roof. |
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The side-on view of a regular Northumbria Police
personnel carrier. |
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V259
ECN Before the introduction of battenburg markings,
Northumbria's Transits used to look like this. This HiCube model has a
single orange stripe down the sides and large police wording on the
bonnet. Four rotating blue beacons are on the roof, and two small repeaters
on the grille. |
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The rear view of the same Transit. This example has accrued
an unhealthy amount of rust as it nears the end of its police life. It was
approximately 5½ years old when this photo was taken. |
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YJ04
CCD Very rarely police vehicle are involved in road
traffic collisions en-route to emergency calls. After passing through a
red traffic light at a busy junction, this North Yorkshire Police Ford
Focus was involved in a low-speed collision with a member of the public in
a J-reg black Mazda. Colleagues are quickly on the scene to direct traffic
and investigate the incident.
On the right of the picture is the motorist
being breathalysed by a plain-clothed police officer. This is standard
practice for all drivers in collisions. An officer can be in plain
clothing at any time to make the requirement for a breath test, but must
be in uniform to administer the test, unless it is after a road traffic
collision.
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YE52
URT In this scene two West Yorkshire Vauxhall Zafiras
have been escorted into York city centre on blue lights by a local North Yorkshire
Volvo V70 traffic car. The officers are being briefed at the scene of a
decontamination emergency. Fire and ambulance service personnel can be
seen in the background, along with inflatable decontamination tents. In
the rear of the Zafiras are racks of equipment. |
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FH51
CZB This is a Nottingham Mercedes ML-series. It is a
Traffic car used to investigate serious and fatal collisions. Its powerful
lighting system fitted on an extendable roof pylon helps illuminate
collision scenes. |
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FD03
YLG The Nottinghamshire Police Volvo V70 is pictured
outside an emergency gate at East Midlands Airport. Notice the
Crimestoppers advert on the passenger door. |
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FD02
RCY This Volvo S60 is one of a pair that replaced a T-reg
and a R-reg S70 with Nottinghamshire Police. Due to the restricted boot
space for traffic policing equipment, they opted predominantly for V70
models (as above). |
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V619
DRB This is one of Nottinghamshire's Subaru Imprezas.
This very fast, rally-bred car is the fastest in the fleet. Notice the
single repeater blue light in front of the nose badge and the 'police'
wording on the bonnet, which is elongated and mirrored to be easily read
from the perspective of a driver's rear view mirror. |
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The rear of the Impreza. The side stripe stops short of
the rear of the car to accommodate the force crest. The large spoiler
dominates the rear, which is absent of any police wording. |
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The side view showing the unmistakable silhouette of
the 'Scooby'. Unfortunately Notts. decided to withdraw the six-or-so
Imprezas from their fleet in 2003. |
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Nottinghamshire also ran a hatchback version of the
Impreza (pictured). Although this car has the appearance of an estate
model, it is no slouch! It was the same specification as the saloon above:
Prodrive tuned to 276 bhp, racing seats, but no air conditioning. The
police drivers reported few negative points, including the uncomfortable
seats and thirst for oil (one litre per 8-hour shift). |
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A rather scenic shot of a Nottinghamshire Volvo V70 T5 in full battenburg
livery. |
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At the scene of a road traffic collision is a silver
police Peugeot, partly obscured by an overturned BMW which has hit a Ford
Focus. |
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Y714
CKN A closer look at the front of the Kent Police
Peugeot 406. |
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The opposing view of the collision scene, including the
rear view of the above 406. These photos were taken in the village
of Denton, on the A260 Folkestone to Canterbury Road, near Canterbury in Kent. |
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P39
PWY A double-exposure shot of a West Yorkshire Land
Rover Defender. This Land Rover has a black bonnet, only one blue light on
the roof (and two on the bull bars) and a spot light on the roof. It is
used for armed siege work, which is why it is fitted with a armour plating
on all sides and bullet-proof windows all-round, as well as a fold-down
windscreen guard. |
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GN04
VHE is a Kent Police Skoda Octavia in silver. |
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The same car from another angle. |
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FJ04
YYZ
This white Skoda Octavia vRS is a Notts. Police ANPR interceptor.
This means that it is equipped with an automatic number plate reading camera on board
which detects suspect vehicles. It checks every vehicle registration it
sees against the Police National Computer database. |
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GN54
FFL A Kent Peugeot 206 in half battenburg. The racy
looking air intake on the bonnet serves no practical purpose at all! |
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The rear aspect of this 5-door beat car. Notice that the full-size
lightbar is hanging over the edge of the roof. |
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