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Transit police, or transport police, are a specialized type of police employed by a common carrier, usually a railroad (but may also include a bus line or other transport carrier) that are tasked to prevent and investigate crimes committed against the carrier or by or against passengers or other customers of the carrier. A common carrier is an organization that transports a product or service using its facilities, or those of other carriers, and offers its services to the general public. ...
This is the top-level page of WikiProject trains Rail tracks Rail transport refers to the land transport of passengers and goods along railways or railroads. ...
An early motorized bus - a Benz truck modified by Netphener company (1895) A bus is a large automobile intended to carry numerous persons in addition to the driver and sometimes a conductor. ...
A passenger is a person using but not operating an airplane, train, bus or other mode of transport. ...
A transit police force may consist of officers employed directly by a transit provider, such as the Amtrak Police, or it may exist as a department of another police entity contracted to the transit provider, such as the Transit Police Services Bureau of the Orange County, California Sheriff's Department, which serves the Orange County Transportation Authority. Official website: http://www. ...
OCTA logo. ...
Where the term "transit police" is used for the police working for a railroad, 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. Police who work either for a non-passenger railroad or long-haul rail carrier are usually referred to as "railroad police" or "railway police". In the United States of America, transit describes local area common carrier passenger transportation configured to provide scheduled service on fixed routes on a non-reservation basis. ...
Metro is: a general term, synonymous with rapid transit, subway or underground, for an urban underground rail public transit system (see list of rapid transit systems); any of several specific public transport systems, including: Bi-State Development Agency in Missouri and Illinois, d/b/a Metro since 2003 Buffalo Metro...
Some of the crimes transit police and railroad police investigate include trespassing on the right-of-way of a railroad, assaults against passengers, tagging of graffiti on railroad rolling stock and buses or bus stops, pickpocketing, ticket fraud, robbery and theft of personal belongings, baggage or freight. Depending on the jurisdiction, they may not have any more authority than a private security firm. Others, such as the British Transport Police, New Jersey Transit Police, Maryland Transit Administration Police and DART Police, have rather extensive jurisdictions, including traffic enforcement, with arrest powers on and off property. In the United States, major Class I railroad police such as Union Pacific, BNSF or CSX police have state and federal arrest powers in any state in which the railroad owns property. In law, trespass can be: the criminal act of going into somebody else’s land or property without permission; it is also a civil law tort that may be a valid cause of action to seek judicial relief and possibly damages through a lawsuit. ...
A right-of-way is an easement or strip of land granted to a railroad company upon which to build a railroad. ...
Tagging is a term used in a number of contexts for different purposes, mostly referring to adding a tag of some form. ...
Graffiti on the banks of the Tiber river in Rome, Italy. ...
Rolling Stock banner Rolling Stock was a newspaper of ideas and a chronicle of the 1980s published in Boulder, Colorado by Ed Dorn and Jennifer Dunbar Dorn. ...
An early motorized bus - a Benz truck modified by Netphener company (1895) A bus is a large automobile intended to carry numerous persons in addition to the driver and sometimes a conductor. ...
A typical bus stop in Singapore. ...
Pickpocketing is a crime, a form of larceny which involves the stealing of money and valuables off the person of a victim without them noticing. ...
Luggage is any number of bags, cases and containers which hold a travellers articles during transit. ...
Cargo is a term used to denotes goods or produce being transported generally for commercial gain, usually on a ship, plane, train or lorry. ...
Police employed by the Maryland Transit Administration to patrol public transportation and related facilities in and around the Baltimore Maryland area. ...
A Class I railroad in the United States, or a Class I railway (also Class I rail carrier) in Canada, is one of the largest freight railroads, as classified based on operating revenue. ...
The Union Pacific Railroad (AAR reporting mark UP) (NYSE: UNP) is the largest railroad in the United States. ...
The BNSF Railway (AAR reporting mark BNSF), headquartered in Fort Worth, Texas, is one of the largest railroad networks in North America (only one competitor, the Union Pacific Railroad, is comparable in size). ...
CSX Transportation (AAR reporting mark CSXT) is a Class I railroad in the United States, owned by the CSX Corporation. ...
Transit and railroad police tend to have better results in finding perpetrators of crimes they investigate than public police forces, possibly due to specialization and smaller case loads. For other uses, see Crime (disambiguation). ...
List of specialised transit/transport police agencies and departments - Hong Kong
- Railway District, Hong Kong Police Force
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