A Sergeant in the police force would be a first line supervisor of those below them, yes.
A police chief is an administrator. he/she is above the supervisors who are above the managers.
Usually the Chief of Police reports to a Police Commission, the City Council, the Mayor or a city or town Administrator
police sergeant.
Memoirs of a Police Sergeant was created in 1852.
report it to your manager or your supervisor, if they take no notice, the police or human rights. :)
A detective is a first-line investigator, analogous to a police officer. A sergeant is a first-line supervisor, charged with overseeing the work of police officers, detectives, or other employees. A detective sergeant is one who oversees detectives. Most law enforcement agencies don't have a rank of "detective sergeant." A sergeant is a first-line supervisor who can be assigned anywhere in the department. A sergeant might refer to him/herself as a "detective sergeant" when assigned to the detective division (because being a detective generally carries greater status), but could find him/herself working in uniformed patrol six months later, simply because their detective tour was for a fixed term of months that had run its course.
For City Police it can vary city to city, but generally it's this: Chief of Police Deputy Chief of Police Staff Superintendent Superintendent Inspector Staff Sergeant Sergeant/Detective Constable RCMP Chain of Command: Commissioner Deputy Commissioner Assistant Commissioner Chief Superintendent Superintendent Inspector Corps Sergeant Major Sergeant Major Staff Sergeant Major Staff Sergeant Sergeant Corporal Police Constable 1st Class Police Constable 2nd Class Police Constable 3rd Class Police Constable 4th Class Cadet
It is spelled sergeant (a non-commissioned military rank, or senior policeman).
Uniformed law enforcement organizations are usually modeled on the military, as they wear military-style uniforms. American policing is modeled on the English Police of the Metropolis (the forerunner of the London Metropolitan Police), who were organized on a military model, but given blue uniforms to distinguish them from the military, which wore red. Some law enforcement agencies, particularly in the northeast, assign military ranks to all sworn personnel. Non-supervisors are addressed as "officer" or "trooper," but may have an actual rank of "private" or "private first class." Some agencies hold more closely to Army ranks than others, with multiple grades of sergeant (sergeant, staff sergeant, sergeant first class, master sergeant, etc.) and "officer" ranks of first and second lieutenant, captain, major, lieutenant colonel, and colonel. More commonly, the ranks are officer, sergeant, lieutenant, captain, and beyond that vary considerably with the agency.
not enough
At your local police station or police headquarters. Ask to speak to a supervisor, or the shift commander.
fidel ramos (i think)