Darj looks nice in the police uniform! It looks like she is trying to be kinky or something though.
I do some volunteering with law enforcement, and once I was looking at a training brief in regards to the 4th Amendment protections in the US. Because of the authority of a police officer, if a police officer tells you "come over here" it technically counts as a detention, and probable cause is required. Without probable cause of a crime, the most they can legally do is something on the level of asking "may I speak to you?", and there is no legal requirement for the subject to comply.
I am in Japan on a work assignment, and everyone has to watch a bunch of briefs on various stuff mainly to help people stay out of trouble. It seems like the consequences for breaking the law in Japan are in some ways much more severe than in the US. People can be incarcerated for weeks over infractions that would be considered fairly minor in the American legal system. Apparently (on paper at least) there are protections similar to 4th and 5th amendment ones in the US, but in the legal brief I was given by the unit JAG they warned that not confessing to a crime is often considered being "uncooperative" by the Japanese police. If something happens on base, US people are handled under US military justice system, but out in town if US servicemembers go to Japanese jail, the US military can't take them back into US custody like they can in some other countries.
You over there.Can you accompany me to the station?*RATTLE*