NYPD.

Houston PD had a somewhat similar situation.

Decades ago, one of their officers had an auto accident while on duty. He sustained a severe head injury and ended up in a nursing home.

For years afterwards (I can remember up to maybe 15 years ago), every Saturday morning the day watch from his old station (I think South Central Patrol) would send a unit to the nursing home. He would be carried out to the car (the good old baby blue one) and handed the radio mic. With heart rending difficulty he would report "Single Officer 10-8". The dispatcher would acknowledge his status and ask how he was doing. Other units from all over the city would jump on the South Central frequency with words of encouragement. After a few minutes it was over till the next Saturday.

Everybody was just making the best of a tough place. I wonder if this kind of activity would be allowed now days?
 
“People thinking they can take off on us — those days are over,” he said on Thursday. “The days of driving around this city, lawless, doing what you think you’re going to do — those days are over.”
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NY Post-Rampant ‘ghost cars’ to blame for uptick in dangerous police pursuits: NYPD official
By
Amanda Woods
July 10, 2023 3:36pm

NYPD officials say they’re seeing an increase in vehicles with bogus paper plates — blaming a crackdown on so-called ghost cars for a citywide uptick in dangerous police chases.
Chief of Patrol John Chell was asked during an appearance on NY1 Monday about a report by THE CITY that found a nearly 600% jump in the number of police pursuits so far this year, compared to the same period in 2022.
“Every morning, I wake up to something involving one of these illegal bikes or cars and paper plates,” Chell said, attributing the increase in chases to the NYPD’s efforts to crack down on “ghost car” drivers.
A review of NYPD 911 data, conducted by THE CITY last week, shows that cops gave chase 304 times in the first three months of 2023 — far surpassing the 214 vehicle pursuits tallied in all of last year.
Sources told the outlet that the boost is part of an enforcement push overseen by Chell, who became chief of patrol in December 2022.
Chell pointed a finger at “ghost vehicles” — which are equipped with illegal paper license plates — and called the NYPD pursuits part of the solution to the rampant problem.
NYPD Chief of Patrol John Chell blamed a citywide uptick in dangerous police pursuits on an increase in so-called “ghost cars” on the streets.NY1
“The main complaint everywhere I go is about illegal bikes and illegal cars,” Chell said. “They cause traffic violence, they’re uninsured, they’re unregistered, they cause street violence — robberies and shootings.”
Chell’s statements build on the comments the chief made during a press conference last week — where he told reporters that the NYPD is ramping up its efforts to apprehend criminal suspects fleeing from police.
“People thinking they can take off on us — those days are over,” he said on Thursday. “The days of driving around this city, lawless, doing what you think you’re going to do — those days are over.”
“Every morning I wake up to something involving one of these illegal bikes or cars and paper plates,” Chell said during a NY1 interview.Christopher Sadowski
“We think we’re headed in the right direction for everything we’re doing,” Chell added on NY1. “We’re certainly not satisfied, but we feel good.”
Just last month, four NYPD officers were hurt after a police chase at Remsen and Seaview avenues in Canarsie, Brooklyn, ended in a car crash, according to police and a witness.
In April, a man driving a stolen car sparked a series of crashes while trying to flee cops in the Bronx, cops said. The wild chase ended with him ramming into a semi-truck and the officers getting into an accident of their own, according to police.
A review of NYPD 911 data, conducted by THE CITY, reveals the uptick in car chases since Chief of Patrol John Chell took office.

Chell’s comments come days after newly released NYPD crime statistics showed that major crimes dropped by 4% in the five boroughs last month compared to June 2022 — despite a 23% leap in citywide car thefts and with felony assaults for the month on par with June last year.
 
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