Misplaced Pages

Royal Anguilla Police Force

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Law enforcement agency
Royal Anguilla Police Force
RAPPF
Shoulder patch of the Royal Anguilla Police ForceShoulder patch of the Royal Anguilla Police Force
The crest of the Royal Anguilla Police ForceThe crest of the Royal Anguilla Police Force
Flag of AnguillaFlag of Anguilla
Agency overview
Formed28 January 1972
Jurisdictional structure
National agency
Size91 square kilometres (35 sq mi)
Population15,753 (2021 est.)
Governing bodyGovernment of Anguilla
General nature
Operational structure
Constables116 (of which 8 are Special Constables)
Agency executive
  • Mr Paul Morrisson, Commissioner of Police
Website
Official Website Facebook Page

The Royal Anguilla Police Force (RAPF), known as the Anguilla Police Force until 1990, is the national police force of the Anguilla, a British Overseas Territory in the Caribbean.

History

The Anguilla Police Force was formed on 28 January 1990, after Anguilla separated from Saint Christopher and Nevis. It received the "Royal" prefix in 1990.

Structure

The Royal Anguilla Police Force is based in The Valley, Anguilla. From 2015, the force was led by Commissioner Paul C. Morrison, who transferred from Sussex Police in England. As of January 2021, the force is being led by David Lynch.

As of December 2022, the RAPF had a strength of 111 officers.

Duties

The RAPF carries out police duties, keeping law and order on the islands.

Training

Recruits to the RAPF carry out training at RAPF Anguilla Recruit Training Center which includes:

  • Physical Training (PT)
  • Drill (marching)
  • Motor Vehicle Collisions

The recruits wear a uniform similar to RAPF constables, but they wear a baseball cap in training, until they pass the training when they get their normal headdress. This training is carried out internally by RAPF officers.

Uniform

Royal Anguilla Police Force shoulder patch

Like most police forces, the RAPF wear a uniform when on duty and different types for different duties.

Formal uniform

The formal uniform is for ceremonial, public duties and formal occasions (such as the arrival/departure of the Governor).

This consists of:

Males

  • Black tunic with closed collar, silver buttons and whistle on chain
  • Black trousers with silver piping
  • Black socks and black shoes
  • White pith helmet with RAPF capbadge, chinstrap and spike in silver
  • White belt with central clasp

Male officers with the rank of inspector and above, wear the tunic open at the collar, with a white shirt and black tie underneath. A Sam Browne belt in black is worn over the top and a swagger stick is carried underneath the arm. Peaked caps are worn by senior officers and may replace the pith helmet for junior officers.

Females

  • Black tunic with closed collar, silver buttons and whistle on chain
  • Black skirt with silver piping
  • Black socks and black shoes
  • White-topped bowler hats with RAPF capbadge
  • White belt with central clasp

Insignia

All ranks wear rank insignia on their tunics and medal ribbons are worn on the left of the tunic, with full-sized medals for parades.

Arms

When on certain parades, No.4 Lee Enfield rifles are carried by junior ranks, with senior officers carrying a police sword.

Everyday uniform

The everyday uniform is worn for when the formal or operations uniform is not suitable. It consists of:

Males

  • White shirt, with silver buttons and whistle
  • Black trousers with silver piping
  • Black belt & shoes

Females

  • White shirt, with silver buttons and whistle
  • Black skirt with silver piping and stockings
  • Black belt and shoes

Equipment

RAPF officers including the ones outsider and inside have a wide variety of equipment used for police purposes, such as:

References

  1. Anguilla, Government of. "Royal Anguilla Police Service". GOV.AI. Retrieved 27 September 2022.
  2. "Royal Anguilla Police Force" (PDF). Retrieved 28 July 2020. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. "NEW POLICE COMMISSIONER TO ASSUME DUTIES OCTOBER 7". The Anguillian Newspaper. 14 September 2015. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  4. Police Force, Royal Anguilla. "Anguilla Recruit Training Center". facebook.com. Retrieved 27 September 2022.
  5. https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?vanity=1544774132458879&set=a.2904199176516361
  6. "Royal Anguilla Police Force on Facebook". Facebook. Archived from the original on 2022-04-30.
  7. "Royal Anguilla Police Force on Facebook". Facebook. Archived from the original on 2022-04-30.
  8. "RFA Mounts Bay visits Anguilla".
  9. "RAPF REPORTS: RAPF Receives Three More New Vehicles". 17 April 2015.

See also

Police forces of the Crown Dependencies and British Overseas Territories
Crown Dependencies
British Overseas Territories
Law enforcement in the Americas
Sovereign
states
Dependencies
and territories
Categories: