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I'm trying to decide whether to include police in my book, and how much; and in order to do so I have to find out as much pertinent information as possible. Can anyone suggest to me some resources? A good book I'll buy if I can; internet resources would be invaluable if they're worthwhile.
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I don't know if it's the same where you come from, but in my hometown, you can ask to ride for a day with a police officer. I know that first-hand experience beats any other type of research, and while some book research will be necessary, I'd start with trying that out. That way you could ask the officer you shadow for the day (or the couple of hours) some specific questions, or ask him or her to talk about the job in general.
Posts: 814 | Registered: Nov 2000
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That sounds like it would be great, but in my current circumstances, I wouldn't be free to do that even if it proved to be a possibility.
As far as what book this is, it is a novel I'm working on that does not actually revolve around police procedure; but the main character's father is a police officer, and I need to know enough about the police to portray him convincingly-- and also to know what he can and can't do.
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I'm going to assume that you're setting this book in the present or very near future, then.
If you just want to know what the rules are for police in a particular area, then there is a good deal of information available online, rather too much, actually. The thing is that the body of case law that restricts police in what they may or may not do is extremely complex (and sometimes seems to have very little to do with the putative principles of law referanced).
As a practical matter, police do pretty much whatever they can get away with (much like intelligent criminals). If it turns out that a judge doesn't like what they did, then a criminal gets off and the cops don't try that particular trick again.
General information about the sorts of things police can and cannot do is readily available on the websites of many lawyers (particularly criminal defense lawyers). If you want to review the "Constitutional" issues, then law school sites have plenty of information about the theories on which laywers base their arguments.
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Depends. A small town 2-man department will not resemble LAPD or NYPD, and the federal agencies are a whole other level of complexity.
Then, a patrolman will not resemble a SWAT-team member will not resemble the FBI's hostage rescue team, so on and so forth.
The autobiography COLD ZERO by Whitcomb is interesting because it covers many different aspects: from his time as a junior FBI agent in No-wheres-ville, Middle America, to being one of the HRT snipers at Ruby Ridge and Waco.
It's a case study, not a text, mind you. But it's good!
2) The character in question is going to be either a patrolman or a homicide detective; I haven't decided yet.
3) I need to know about the procedures used by both of the above, chains of command, and various mundane details.
4) The book is set in Santa Rosa, California; for those who don't know, it's a smallish city between San Francisco and Sacramento that has two gangs that are more likely to carry knives than guns.
Oh, by the way, I grew up there but I live 2,000 miles away now.