Top 1 Apps Similar to Radio Patrulha Jau

Police Simulator 1.1
MTSWare
Listen the Police Radio sounds from alloverthe world. Car pursuits, gun cars, police conversations,announces,police catching thieves, criminals, speed makers,robbers, thugs,billing modified cars and more...Police radio scanner lets you listen to Police and Radioscannersfrom around the world. USA, Russia, Germany, Turkey,Algeria,Arabic, Canada, UK, Germany, Japan, Italy, Chile, Austriawith morescanners added all the time.Listen to police radio in your area any time, day or night!These are live streams, feeds from real scanners.More countries will be added.Police radio is a communications radio system used bylawenforcement agencies all over the world.Many such systems are encrypted to prevent eavesdroppersfromlistening in.Portable radios:The vast majority of economically developed countriespoliceservices have access to such equipment; also, in mostcountries,police cars have sets which are designed to receive callsfrom thecontrol room, and respond. Also, small personal radiosexist thatallow each officer to carry one easily, as well as alarge centralroom at the Police station which directs personnel tothe locationof emergency incidents. Portable police radios firstappearedwithin the British police in 1969.By Country:Norway:In Norway, it is legal for private citizens to listen to thepoliceradio, There are even streams available online.United Kingdom:It is an offence under the Wireless Telegraphy Act 2006 to listentopolice radio in the UK. The move from open analogue to theencrypteddigital Airwave system in the UK has made it practicallyimpossibleto just listen in to police radio.United States:U.S. state patrols, county sheriffs' offices, and municipalpolicedepartments often run their own systems in parallel,presentinginteroperability problems. The FCC assigns licenses totheseentities in the public safety (PP and PX) allotments ofthespectrum. These include allocations in the lower portion of theVHFspectrum (around 39 - 45 MHz), highly susceptible to"skip"interference but still used by state highway patrols; theVHF"hi-band", from 150 to 160 MHz; and various UHF bands. Manysystemsstill use conventional FM transmissions for most traffic;othersare trunked analog or digital systems. Recently, there hasbeen amove towards digital trunked systems, especially those basedaroundthe public-safety standard Project 25 format set by theAssociationof Public-Safety Communications Officials-International.A minorityof other police radio systems, the largest examples beingtheMilwaukee Police Department and Pennsylvania State Police usetheincompatible OpenSky format. TETRA, the standard in manyEuropeancountries as well as other places in the world, isvirtually unusedin the United States.Recently, some states have begun to operate statewideradionetworks with varying levels of participation from police onthecounty and city levels. Some of them are:Illinois: StarCom21Louisiana: LWIN Louisiana Wireless Information NetworkMichigan: MPSCS Michigan Public Safety Communications SystemMinnesota: ARMERMontana: Montana Statewide Interoperable Public SafetyRadioSystemNorth Carolina: VIPEROhio: MARCS - Multi-agency communications systemWisconsin: WISCOMIt is generally not illegal in the United States to listentounencrypted police communications. However some statesprohibitsuch listening within vehicles.Country list:- The United States of America- The United Kingdom- Germany- Italia- Canada (French)- The Netherlands (Holland)- Republic of Turkey- Algeria- Morocco