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Minggu, 08 Juli 2018

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The color of the day is a signal used by plain clothes officers of some police departments in the United States. It is used to assist in the identification of plainclothes police officers by uniformed officers. Perhaps its best known use is by the New York City Police Department (NYPD), the NYPD Transit Bureau (formerly the New York City Transit Police) and the NYPD Housing Bureau (formerly the New York City Housing Authority Police Department) among other law enforcement agencies.

A "plain clothes" police officer will wear a headband, wristband or other piece of clothing in the "color of the day"; and officers will be told of this color at the police station before they start work. The system is for officer safety and first started during the violence of the 1970s and 1980s in New York City.


Video Color of the day (police)



Purpose

The color of the day system is about officer safety. With so many armed officers in New York City, undercover police officers need to have an easy-to-use system to provide for discreet identification of plainclothes officers by uniformed ones. The system is in place to prevent friendly-fire incidents from uniformed officers from mistakenly shooting plain-clothed officers not immediately identifiable as police officers.


Maps Color of the day (police)



History

The now-defunct NYPD Street Crime Unit started in 1971. From the late 1970s through the early 1990s, crime in New York City was at record levels. Undercover officers were asked to go into the New York City Subway and other such high-risk areas in plain-clothes or dressed as a homeless person as a decoy. Many of these officers feared that uniformed officers would mistake them for criminals in a use-of-force situation.

Many of these officers would dress and pretend to be drunk, homeless, or act as decoy victims in order to catch muggers who were attacking those at-risk groups. The color of the day system was developed to prevent friendly fire incidents. In the beginning, colored headbands were given to each undercover Street Crime Unit member.

Other officers would be briefed on that color to allow them to quickly recognize the undercover officers, while the general public would not notice anything unusual. This began the "Color of the Day" system. Later they also used wristbands in a similar manner. Today's officers often dress in the color.


Color Of The Day Police Police Looking For Their Next Chief For A ...
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In popular culture

  • Color of the day is mentioned in Shawn Ryan's The Shield, Roger Abell's The Black Shields, Greg Faliis' Just the Facts Ma'am, and Leslie Glass' novel, A Killing Gift.
  • In the Law & Order episode "Bad Faith," Detective Lennie Briscoe identifies the color of the day as aquamarine when making an inquiry to the DMV.
  • The color of the day is used as a security method in the Law and Order: SVU episode "Birthright" to catch a child kidnapper. When Detective Tutuola demands a supposed undercover officer reveal the color of the day. When he fails to guess the correct color, Tutuola draws his weapon on him.
  • Color of the day is mentioned in the Blue Bloods episodes "Loss of Faith" and "Pain Killers."
  • Color of the day is mentioned several times throughout the run of NYPD Blue.
  • CSI Cyber season 2 episode 6 - "Gone in 6 Seconds" @ ~17:00
  • Law & Order: Special Victims Unit S17 E17 - "Manhattan Transfer" - When the NY SVU team is tipped off about a party with potentially trafficked underage girls in attendance, they send in Detective Sonny Carisi undercover. A dispute ensues, and the SVU team is forced to rush in when a gun is drawn. Members of the party turn out to be UC (under cover) Vice, and identify the color of the day as "yellow."
  • Color of the day is mentioned in the movie World Trade Center, where it is identified as "green" by the lieutenant during morning briefing in the Port Authority Police Department Bus Terminal Precinct.
  • In White Collar S2 E4 - "By the Book", color of the day is mentioned when setting up a sting with the FBI.
  • In "Shooter" S1:E1 "Point of Impact", the protagonist, Bob Lee, mentions Color of the Day.

Why Toronto police are changing the colour of their scout cars ...
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See also

  • Street Crime Unit, New York Police Department
  • Law enforcement in New York City

Color Of The Day Police May Police Officer C Arrives Color Of The ...
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References

  • NYPD'S (New York Police Department) Street Crime Unit by J J Breslin, published in Police Product News 1979
  • Changes, Real and Imagined in the NYPD by Jim Fay ENN NYC-NJ Metro Correspondent

Source of article : Wikipedia