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police power

noun

  1. the power of a nation, within the limits of its constitution, to regulate the conduct of its citizens in the interest of the common good.


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Word History and Origins

Origin of police power1

An Americanism dating back to 1820–30
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Example Sentences

"People need to feel like they can observe and record the state exercising its police power, whether that's on Bourbon Street or the side of the road," Scott Sternberg, a lawyer for the plaintiffs told the Times-Picayune.

From Salon

Ravin agreed, calling the defendant “extensively trained” and saying the five-minute chase through Newark that ended in the death of 46-year-old driver Gregory Griffin and left his passenger critically wounded was “an abhorrent abuse of police power.”

What’s at stake, they argue, is “the fundamental police power that all states possess to preserve public sidewalks, parks, school grounds, and other spaces for the use and enjoyment of the general public, free from obstruction, harassment, and inconvenience.”

Apart from a few outlier decisions in the slave-era South, courts routinely upheld these statutes as a legitimate exercise of state police power, the authority of the people acting through their legislatures to pass laws to promote public health and safety.

From Slate

The officers, whose names have not been released, still have “full police power” and the assignments are “absolutely non-punitive,” Aaron said.

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