police | The Police | Royal Canadian Mounted Police | Metropolitan Police Service | Los Angeles Police Department | Police | John Constable | Constable | Police and Crime Commissioner | Chicago Police Department | New York City Police Department | Police Academy | Tokyo Police Club | Victoria Police | Police Woman (TV series) | Police Woman | police officer | England and Wales Police and Crime Commissioner elections, 2012 | Police Service of Northern Ireland | Melton Constable | Indian Police Service | Australian Federal Police | Queen's Police Medal | Police procedural | Constable & Robinson | Constable of France | Police and Judicial Co-operation in Criminal Matters | Pennsylvania State Police | New York City Police Commissioner | Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department |
Dixon's experience as a police constable was frequently in evidence, and he was often shown as being able to solve crimes and to keep the peace using his knowledge of human behaviour and of the Dock Green area.
In February 2008, Mel became WPC Morton, joining her friend Abi Sharpe in the police force where she began training to become a full-time Police Constable.
The expedition comprised Treverton Charles Sholl, Alexander Joseph McRae, PC W. Gee, John Stainer and native constable Billy.
An interesting bit of Parland trivia is that G.P. Partland served as a Police Constable with the Metropolitan Toronto Police Force at 31 Division from 1976-1979.
Ben Rauter is a former student of Erindale College in Wanniassa, and is now a Police Constable in Townsville, Queensland.
Colin McCormack (2 December 1941 – 19 June 2004) was a professional Welsh actor who enjoyed considerable success in classical stage performances and television shows over a career approaching fifty years from his debut as a child actor in a BBC TV's Dixon of Dock Green episode, a show he returned to twenty years later when he played a police constable.
Having been impressed by his performance in a West End production of the Agatha Christie murder mystery The Mousetrap, Anderson cast actor Anthony Oliver in the leading role of Police Constable Don Ross.
The first of Anderson's productions to use live actors, Crossroads to Crime is about the investigations of a police constable (Anthony Oliver) who, working undercover and without the support of his colleagues, confronts and brings down a gang of vehicle hi-jackers.
Marudhamalai (Arjun), a police constable, goes to work in the village of Nachiapuram after passing his police exams and getting a merit.
On the condition of law and order maintenance in India,"All the judges of the Supreme Court do not have the power of a single police constable. That constable makes or breaks us. The judges can't re-write the laws and have to listen to learned lawyers of both sides. A constable here simply makes his own laws. He can do almost anything."
Da Vinci's Inquest - Police Constable #4 (The Ducks are Too Depressing) - 2003
Wallace Lupino as Police Constable Winch (billed as Wally Lupino)