Sentences with phrase «like police inspector»

Not exact matches

Andy Carter, one of Lewisham borough's chief inspectors, tells me he'd like to see more joint projects between the police and faith communities: «I would say that a key player in helping us are churches because there is a huge amount of good will, support and people who genuinely want to help out.»
The comments came after City Council Speaker Christine Quinn, the leading Democratic mayoral candidate and a usual ally of the mayor, last week threw her support behind a bill that would create a new inspector general for the NYPD, who would be charged with overseeing police policies, like the controversial stop - and - frisk practice.
The final mystery is how Liam and the rescued Maggie emerge back home from an Air France terminal grinning like idiots after he has broken more laws than bones — OK, the French are a very forgiving people and yeah, the police were a tad corrupt, and maybe they were grateful that he single - handedly took care of that nasty sex - trade problem... Oh while I'm thinking about it, how stupid are these Albanians believing the old guy with the Irish accent is a French police inspector?
Bleeding Steel stars Jackie Chan as a Hong Kong police inspector named Lin, but what's crazy is that the enemy he's facing is some kind of technologically enhanced man who looks like one of the Borg crossed with Batman & Robin «s Mr. Freeze and employs an army that looks like they're from the grid in TRON Legacy.
The director considered Bellamy to be like a novel that Georges Simenon never wrote, a film in which Gérard Depardieu's titular police inspector finds himself drawn into a case while holidaying with his wife.
This is not a metaphor, it is a simile, which means that it really did look like there were two very small mice hiding in his nostrils, and if you make a picture in your head of a man with two very small mice hiding in his nostrils you will know what the police inspector looked like.
It is clear from his correspondence that Napoleon was envisaging some sort of genteel retirement like that of his brother Lucien, who was living in a country house under the supervision of a single police inspector; but this was never realistic, and the captain of the Bellerophon wrote specifically «I have no authority to agree to any such arrangement... I can not enter into any promise as to the reception he may meet with» [from the British Government]; Napoleon decided to surrender nevertheless.
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