Tessa, thank you for explaining in such a beautiful way how to become a police officer. Your dream came true and you became a wonderful policewoman. I wish you a happy life.👍🌹
The interviewer needs to stop saying "wow" every minute or so. Yes, very interesting to see the inside of a police station etc. Need to control these reactions
There are teams like that but that are extremely difficult to progress to. I don't know what WAs version is but for Victoria it's called SOG or Special Operations Group. If ou wanna sit in a van and do laps around the city all day then there is another subsquad called CIRT. Critical Incident Response Team
@@iisgamer6997 so far, entrance evaluation went good. I did my Psychological test 1.5 weeks ago and still waiting to hear back on it at the moment. Will keep you updated.
The arm patch... The centerpiece of the hat... Why is their emblem an upside-down pentagram..? 🧐 How very baphomet of them... How long has that been their symbol..? 🤔
If I'm going to be honest, when I saw WA, I actually pictured it as Washington State USA (in other words, I thought it was Washington State Police) since it's where I live. Nope. Lol.
How did this guy get so lucky to have a day full of private experiences with a hot female cop? There was nobody else around! Was this a real police station or a movie studio?
@@mahmoudzreik535do you work there? My daughter from the UK is moving to Perth and taking a position as a police officer. She thinks she maybe working in the bush area. Can you give me any idea what it would be like, please.
there is one for NSW Police if you’re actually interested - there’s different commands, but if you’re looking at entry stuff, the GD one is great :) Good luck!
Student paramedic here! Usually cops and paramedics do similar type of shift work. We do 12 hour shifts 4 days on with 2 day/2 night shifts here. By here I mean most stations in NSW - the issue is that some stations do different rosters. So ours works as a 0700-1900 2 days then we rest for that day (which is usually nap to stay awake at night) to start a 1900-0700 shift for 2 days. Then you are 5 days off. Some stations do different, like I know a rural station that does 2 12 hour days followed by a 24 hour on call shift. You usually back it up with a few days off. For paramedics those days are often spent studying and doing extra curricular’s but yea… Sorry for the life story if you weren’t interested ahahaha.
Your Sergeant assigns you to a partner and a vehicle before you start your shift. Or if you're really lucky you get neither of those, and you get assigned station duty and get to sit in a chair for 12 hours.
The first time you were able and you had to do something about the situation you had in your mind and I think that was the first thing you said you had done to make sure you had the time and energy and you had to make it through. 👍🏽🤙🏽