0:49 4:03 6:10 See the solid blue light so to make sure any speed cameras pick up that the unmarked is on a emergency blue call out, as blue strobe may not be picked up.
@@jeffreygoth1303 They are all exempt, but if the speed traffic light camera takes a shot then they have to proof they were on a authorised emergency shout. Digital cameras may not pickup the flashing lights, hence the solid blue light, as the shutter speed is too fast. So for the police speed ticket unit hey can just do reg plate check, time & date directly on the police system to see if they were on a shout. Also big note, police do not have to have blues and twos on to speed, reason they say they don't want criminals knowing they are coming (the police state). Its more difficult to prove for the NHS and Fire that they are in a emergency shout. New NHS ambulances if you look closely they have a solid centre white and blue in the light cluster. NHS has to spend huge amount of money for each area Trust to have a speed ticket checking admin team that checks all the police speed tickets, and the case law challange that blood cars can not speed, hence all of them now have NHS logos and Ambulance (+emergency) witten on them so its harder for the police to challange the NHS. Now toll bridge and London charge taxes, most of the emergency vehicles have Dart tags, and now the digital ANPR camera types just exempt by the reg plate. But if the police have leased a car / van and unmarked it may not be on the DVLA system as a emergency vehicle hence a solid blue light to help the speed ticket team locate it is a emergency car/ van and find which Police Force its for, as these interceptor or ARV cars generally go up and down Motorways or anywhere throu other police force area. Very complicated for emergency staff to prove in a defence they are on a blue shout and its was authorised. Hence the solid blue light near / on the reg plates. Note if a non police / fire / NHS put blue light on there, you be committing a road traffic offence and posing as a emergency staff which is a criminal offence. You can not even bling your car with blue lights ( and no white lights on the rear).
@@jeffreygoth1303 Lots of them do get speed tickets, fine and points. Even if they used blue lights. As it was not logged or authorised by control. They have to challange it in Court to have the ticket nulled.
Not only unmarked too, majority of all police vehicles have a running blue light, to ensure they are actually recognized as responding to an emergency, and not just breaking the law by going through a red/speed etc.
ARV? Armed Response Vehicles? Is Bermuda like the UK where not every officer has a firearm? We have SERT in Australia, which is Special Emergency Response Teams. They use M4 carbines and get around in either Bearcats or Landcruiser 200s. Regular police here are issued with Glocks.
@@DreamChaser1366 Welcome to the world of law enforcement, I spent 11 years with Australian Federal Police, then became a paramedic. Stay safe out there. Best wishes.
Remember when the uk police had cool cars? Yeah that was a long time ago. V8 rovers, triumph 2.5’s, Subaru STI’s, Mitsubishi Evo’s… even the escort cosworth.
Good vid mate!!Our local Waterlooville police station has Ford Fiesta Diesel,no criminal gonna outrun that beast!!!& over 600 miles on a tank full....😁😁Seriously our police dont bother leaving the station out of embarrassment, dual carriageway racetrack for local modified cars racing in the evening 100 yards from station with straight through exhausts.🤪🤪
As a NHS community first responder (CFR) (responding to 999 emergency's like cardiac arrests and other life threating emergencies), I would have to sit at all those traffic lights and drive like nothing was happening to scene. Strange world we live in!
Is the NHS community first responder nationwide? I think it's a great idea and something lacking in most parts of Australia. As an Australian paramedic, I doubt I'd like to use my own private vehicle for emergency responses. Even though I've been trained in priority driving and had 23 years experience, Insurance would be horrendous, plus I don't have a visually eye catching car with emergency vehicle markings.
My opinion is that CFR's should be allowed the use of blue light vehicles (Scheme vehicles, not personal). The sad reality and reason why i believe most schemes/services no longer allow this is the few bad apples that abused the privilege of the use of emergency response driving as well as trusts not wanting to invest in providing the relevant course to do so.
@@iainv4092 It used to be 3 weeks when it was an IHCD qualification, now it's Futurequals (?others) it's a 4 week course. All emergency ambulance staff undertake this course (apart from WMAS who have delayed some staff courses). I agree, it's mostly the cost. From my experience, It's also a few that have abused the qualification that locally have allowed it to be used as a justification. We all know it's money.
My dad's an Enhanced CFR so I know the world of it very well! He's in Cumbria with NWAS. I actually have to disagree with the idea of CFRs using blues. The point of the CFR model is that local people are always "next door" as oppossed to an Ambulance which in Cumbria can be upwards of 40 minutes away at any time. Even without using blues to jump lights, a CFR will arrive faster than an Ambulance if the call is in their own neighbourhood. Over Christmas for example, my dad went to a call on the street literally behind his house, so his response time was like 20 seconds to a cardiac arrest. THAT is the point of CFRs really. This said, though, my opinion is that CFRs should be allowed use of Green flashing lights. Like they always tell us responding Doctors can use but in practise they never actually do. Green lights to raise awareness in other motorists to maybe allow priority if safe would be a great idea and wouldn't require CFRs to take expensive blue light courses.
3:10 it's incredible how well they hide the strobes now, there's absolutely no way you could guess that is a unmarked police vehicle if it was a normal dressed bloke in there
The sides of the Tesla are a bit ugly with that big black & white 'police' label, it feels very American in design That being said however the rest of the car looks stunning in blue and yellow
@@albertzazuki556 No different to an ICE running out of petrol mid-chase. It's unlikely any chase is going to last anywhere near the range of a Tesla, and they'll probably sit on charge at the station.
No need for the unmarked Merc Vito to mount the kerb and drive over the grass. Also couldn’t see any lights on the side (to give 360 degree visibility) on that 08 plate unmarked Astra. Good video as usual.
8:44 Can someone explain why is the astra so old? What is the purpose of that car? I heard somewhere that undercover police don't use old cars like that. Usually 4 years and not older?? Or am i being stupid?
My guess is that the person driving is a detective as they can be eligible for a car allowance where they can use their personal vehicles for work. A detective in this situation wouldn't be regularly responding to an incident with blue lights hence the leeway for an older car.
Police will be catching the baddies in a Tesla with its superior acceleration... Forget speed. If you can overtake before they can even start to accelerate you will be saying got you
I’m pretty sure that Hart don’t have any unmarked trucks. When I was with them last, its was 4 vitos for everyday stuff, plus 2 specialised merc trucks
Ive seen 2 vw transporter one with markings the other with out i think they use them like a response car and the other are mercedes ano other manufacturers
@@youking4861 Each state has their own police force, and each police force have police vehicles not seen in other states. Add to that some states have Highway Patrol. Most common patrol cars, used by general duties police in Queensland include the Camry, Hyundai iLoad and Landcruiser 200, plus the Kia Stinger, while NSW have the Camry, Ford Ranger and Hyundai iLoad for GD and the Chrysler 300SRT, BMW 530d and Landcruiser 200 for Highway Patrol. Victoria use VW Tiguans, Toyota Kluger and Ford Ranger with the BMW 530d for Highway Patrol. South Australia have a lot of Holden Commodore ZB and Kia Sorrentos.
@@roversnolan1 Up until recently, just about every Highway Patrol unit was either a Holden Commodore SS V8 or the Ford Falcon with a turbo 6 or supercharged V8. The last Commodores had the 304kw 6.2L motor, and the supercharged V8 Fords have a 345kw 5.0L motor. just about all are retired from police work and are extremely popular at the auctions. Chrysler has announced they'll stop making right hand drive SRT 300s, so they'll soon disappear. Not my video, but I found this. th-cam.com/video/-SRlDHwJhE4/w-d-xo.html
If police vehicles are in convoy, the most professional of police drivers will turn off their rear flashing lights so they don’t dazzle the next following vehicle. The steady blue is probably to indicate to people or cameras that the car is travelling on blues.
lets be honest thoughy that wont happen, they can install chargers at the police stations and when they arent out patrolling they can be charging, its a really smart idea using teslas, that and a tesla can catch pretty much any a-hole driver on uk roads, its fast as hell, seriously.
Just like gas powered cars can run out of gas too? Please let's be intelligent here. You charge up when low of electrons or fuel up when low on gas. It's petty common sense
American undercover police cars are so easy to spot here, especially because they only use certain brands and models. Apparently in the UK, you’re just screwed.
The Tesla 3 in first clip is quite awesome
Wow bad ass TESLA Police Cruiser
Love the black layout on the side POLICE 🚔
Love the dual responses, especially the double unmarked BMW's
0:49
4:03
6:10
See the solid blue light so to make sure any speed cameras pick up that the unmarked is on a emergency blue call out, as blue strobe may not be picked up.
Interesting I always just assumed they all be exempted, learn something everyday
@@jeffreygoth1303 They are all exempt, but if the speed traffic light camera takes a shot then they have to proof they were on a authorised emergency shout. Digital cameras may not pickup the flashing lights, hence the solid blue light, as the shutter speed is too fast.
So for the police speed ticket unit hey can just do reg plate check, time & date directly on the police system to see if they were on a shout. Also big note, police do not have to have blues and twos on to speed, reason they say they don't want criminals knowing they are coming (the police state).
Its more difficult to prove for the NHS and Fire that they are in a emergency shout. New NHS ambulances if you look closely they have a solid centre white and blue in the light cluster.
NHS has to spend huge amount of money for each area Trust to have a speed ticket checking admin team that checks all the police speed tickets, and the case law challange that blood cars can not speed, hence all of them now have NHS logos and Ambulance (+emergency) witten on them so its harder for the police to challange the NHS.
Now toll bridge and London charge taxes, most of the emergency vehicles have Dart tags, and now the digital ANPR camera types just exempt by the reg plate. But if the police have leased a car / van and unmarked it may not be on the DVLA system as a emergency vehicle hence a solid blue light to help the speed ticket team locate it is a emergency car/ van and find which Police Force its for, as these interceptor or ARV cars generally go up and down Motorways or anywhere throu other police force area.
Very complicated for emergency staff to prove in a defence they are on a blue shout and its was authorised.
Hence the solid blue light near / on the reg plates.
Note if a non police / fire / NHS put blue light on there, you be committing a road traffic offence and posing as a emergency staff which is a criminal offence. You can not even bling your car with blue lights ( and no white lights on the rear).
@@jeffreygoth1303 Lots of them do get speed tickets, fine and points. Even if they used blue lights. As it was not logged or authorised by control. They have to challange it in Court to have the ticket nulled.
I asked my friend this question and she said the same. She’s in the ambulance service
Not only unmarked too, majority of all police vehicles have a running blue light, to ensure they are actually recognized as responding to an emergency, and not just breaking the law by going through a red/speed etc.
That Seat Leon cupra is going to be hard to scape. 310 Hp 4wd, such a cool car and those bmw too.
Wow a Tesla now as police car
What a joy ! Me being a BMW lover is just blissing out on this ! Some nice Volvos there as well ! Greetings from Munich
UK police really love their estate cars 😂
3:18 unmarked cupra looks sick
Skoda looks unreal, my favourite for sure
which one?
@@dragonemergencyvideos I like all of em but that Tesla tho it’s 🔥
The one at 3:26 was my personal fav
@@lx3469 I agree !
Tesla Rocks!
Woaw good luck escaping a model 3 performance!
Police Tesla is so nice 😊
Thanks for watching!
Yep when it running .....what will be when battries flat😅👍
@@twojpan9774 same thing if u run out of petrol
@@ThisaraGamalath really🤣but distance on diesel is 6 times more than that electric rubish bin😆👍
@@twojpan9774 so ur diesel car can travel 3000+km on a tank of fuel? Ur just ignorant mate.
That silver XC90 is sick! Those LEDs are amazing! (I think I was a moth in a past life)
Terrible light setup, not synched at all.
@@koga1330 That's why I like it, they are all over the place! 😂
Thanks for watching!😂
Упал намоченный
Same it's great
That proves that London loves BMWs and Volvos
Those x5’s where flying!
4:50
Those new Tesla police vehicles are sick ive seen a yt video of an unmarked one being tested
In Bermuda we have about 7 Kia Sorentos which are ARVs, they are beasts
ARV? Armed Response Vehicles? Is Bermuda like the UK where not every officer has a firearm? We have SERT in Australia, which is Special Emergency Response Teams. They use M4 carbines and get around in either Bearcats or Landcruiser 200s. Regular police here are issued with Glocks.
@@coover65 Yes correct, Armed Response. I'm actually a new officer so I dont carry firearms. Only the ARV officers can.
@@DreamChaser1366 Welcome to the world of law enforcement, I spent 11 years with Australian Federal Police, then became a paramedic. Stay safe out there. Best wishes.
4:39, Now that's what I call a great catch. Amazing vid
the best one for sure
@@Karminx Yessir
Three Beamers in one, just superb
@@tharchinsonam2056 Exactly
Nice a Tesla UK police car 😎
BTP's K9 Transporter has an interesting Hi-Lo, I wonder what do they use
Tesla Police car looks nice ngl
I agree 😍
The Cupra at 3:06 🔥
lol when u have to honk to turn on the siren
Great stuff! Cool to see agencies from other countries this was dope!
thanks for watching
Awsome video keep up the great work 👍👍👍👍🇬🇧🇬🇧🏴🏴
Great video! There seems to be a lot more unmarked police responding nowadays
4 mins 50 sec is awesome 🚔🚔🚔
Thanks for watching!
X5s are crazy speedy 😅
Thanks for watching!
4:50 proves this 🙌🏼🤣
@@SkorpzOfficial it's true
Doubt they are fast round corners compared to little sporty hatchbacks
Remember when the uk police had cool cars? Yeah that was a long time ago.
V8 rovers, triumph 2.5’s, Subaru STI’s, Mitsubishi Evo’s… even the escort cosworth.
Decades ago in my country they had Golf GTI's and Porsche's
I know one department used to have a Lotus. Coolest vehicles they have today are Audi S models and maybe a Golf R.
Does the Tesla get less range with all that stuff?...
Good vid mate!!Our local Waterlooville police station has Ford Fiesta Diesel,no criminal gonna outrun that beast!!!& over 600 miles on a tank full....😁😁Seriously our police dont bother leaving the station out of embarrassment, dual carriageway racetrack for local modified cars racing in the evening 100 yards from station with straight through exhausts.🤪🤪
tesla looks the business 😍
10:57 what brand does the bmw x5 use for its dash police light? it is bright and clear.
New York Tesla Texi!!! 👍👌!!!
Seems to be a lack of indicators on these police vehicles, that said most are bmws so shouldn't really be surprised
As a NHS community first responder (CFR) (responding to 999 emergency's like cardiac arrests and other life threating emergencies), I would have to sit at all those traffic lights and drive like nothing was happening to scene. Strange world we live in!
Is the NHS community first responder nationwide? I think it's a great idea and something lacking in most parts of Australia. As an Australian paramedic, I doubt I'd like to use my own private vehicle for emergency responses. Even though I've been trained in priority driving and had 23 years experience, Insurance would be horrendous, plus I don't have a visually eye catching car with emergency vehicle markings.
My opinion is that CFR's should be allowed the use of blue light vehicles (Scheme vehicles, not personal). The sad reality and reason why i believe most schemes/services no longer allow this is the few bad apples that abused the privilege of the use of emergency response driving as well as trusts not wanting to invest in providing the relevant course to do so.
its cost, The blue light course is three weeks long. NHS will spend it on ambulance crews to be trained.
@@iainv4092 It used to be 3 weeks when it was an IHCD qualification, now it's Futurequals (?others) it's a 4 week course. All emergency ambulance staff undertake this course (apart from WMAS who have delayed some staff courses). I agree, it's mostly the cost. From my experience, It's also a few that have abused the qualification that locally have allowed it to be used as a justification. We all know it's money.
My dad's an Enhanced CFR so I know the world of it very well! He's in Cumbria with NWAS. I actually have to disagree with the idea of CFRs using blues. The point of the CFR model is that local people are always "next door" as oppossed to an Ambulance which in Cumbria can be upwards of 40 minutes away at any time. Even without using blues to jump lights, a CFR will arrive faster than an Ambulance if the call is in their own neighbourhood. Over Christmas for example, my dad went to a call on the street literally behind his house, so his response time was like 20 seconds to a cardiac arrest. THAT is the point of CFRs really.
This said, though, my opinion is that CFRs should be allowed use of Green flashing lights. Like they always tell us responding Doctors can use but in practise they never actually do. Green lights to raise awareness in other motorists to maybe allow priority if safe would be a great idea and wouldn't require CFRs to take expensive blue light courses.
Won't they be so expensive to put in place
3:10 it's incredible how well they hide the strobes now, there's absolutely no way you could guess that is a unmarked police vehicle if it was a normal dressed bloke in there
Keep it up police amazing cars 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
The sides of the Tesla are a bit ugly with that big black & white 'police' label, it feels very American in design
That being said however the rest of the car looks stunning in blue and yellow
thanks for watching 👍
Nice, hope the Tesla gets introduced in Greater Manchester
it's a demonstrator car from tesla so it most likely will reach Greater Manchester
I dont. GM Police will get even worse trying to chase and RS3 around Salford in that.
Thanks for watching!
Naa this is good lol just keep outrunning them until they run out of charge hahaha
Great video mate happy new year 🎉
Woah these are amazing!
Have a good day to the people who are reading this.
Cool to see brits using american police cars
Do you have any videos on the new multi role cars ?
Police and NHS Paramedic
Police and Fire-rescue
Damn that’s neat
Awesome catches!
Thanks for watching!
The white X5 ARV is getting on a bit! Great to see a Tesla on the fleet, are they being trialled?
yea for roads policing
Yep, apparently the light bar is a major range hog - suspect we will see an integrated one in the roofline for a production model.
that x5 is a spare usually used by firearms training
yeah tesla is a demo on loan, beleive it's left South Wales now
We’re the Sweeny son and your knicked!
Love watching the boys n girls in blue love seeing new police cars keep filming
Seeing all these police racing round probably late for tea break or going to the pub.
Nice Vid, Will u be doing more outside Taff’s Well?
When the new law to only allow new cars to be electric, the police can't afford all of them teslas, so we will be getting chased by renualt zoes
Elon Musk must be like ''The police made my Teslas into stealth police cars?''
Im sure he was actually thinking "My car is so awesome even the police want them, im a genius, a rich genius, mwwahahahahaha".
0:38 That Volvo XC90 looked sexy.
Few Ford Crown Victoria police cars wouldn't bother
Great catch’s mate! What do you think about the Teslas
Imagine if they were to run out of battery mid-chase.
@@albertzazuki556 No different to an ICE running out of petrol mid-chase. It's unlikely any chase is going to last anywhere near the range of a Tesla, and they'll probably sit on charge at the station.
@@UnstableVoltage Exactly, that is why I had “Imagine” in the beginning of my sentence.
Spending that sort of money for a police car is ludicrous. A waste of tax payers money
@@aljack1979 This is also pretty true.
wow great idea
Fantastic, but what does it cost the public to fix them when they break down. A hell of lot more then a normal petrol or diesel engine.
Dosent break down, electric engines are simple, batteries are expensvive
Actually they are way cheaper to maintain then a ice car. And the batteries have i think a 8 year warranty
UHH THE X5😮💨🥵
I find the teslas odd I’m used to Vauxhalls
No need for the unmarked Merc Vito to mount the kerb and drive over the grass. Also couldn’t see any lights on the side (to give 360 degree visibility) on that 08 plate unmarked Astra.
Good video as usual.
Thanks for watching. the only other option for the Vito driver was to sit at that notoriously red traffic light which would've wasted crucial time
@@dragonemergencyvideos It’s what I would have done. I was never trained to drive like that!
Nice!
Thanks for watching!
8:44 Can someone explain why is the astra so old? What is the purpose of that car? I heard somewhere that undercover police don't use old cars like that. Usually 4 years and not older?? Or am i being stupid?
My guess is that the person driving is a detective as they can be eligible for a car allowance where they can use their personal vehicles for work. A detective in this situation wouldn't be regularly responding to an incident with blue lights hence the leeway for an older car.
I couldn't see Tesla using them as british highway patrol vechiles !!
What's a highway
Awesome video!!
Thanks for watching!
Nice video!
Thanks for watching!
You guys need to see America🇺🇸😎
At 9:45 did he tell you to leave? Bit of a powertrip moment or what?
These on the streets of Cardiff
I should know I've been chased on enough times 😁
Police will be catching the baddies in a Tesla with its superior acceleration... Forget speed. If you can overtake before they can even start to accelerate you will be saying got you
Yo, Tesla? A supercar electric... COOL
Which Town is that mate 🤔 looks like Cardiff 👍 anyone knows 🤔
Tesla?!
Lmao it will overheat in a chase within 2 minutes and then the suspect is gone!
Was that a police Tesla???? 😯
Yes, It was being trialed among police forces if I’m not mistaken
It was! Thanks for watching!
Hi question have you seen welsh ambulance hart unmarked van i do have an image when the delt with a crash
I’m pretty sure that Hart don’t have any unmarked trucks. When I was with them last, its was 4 vitos for everyday stuff, plus 2 specialised merc trucks
Ive seen 2 vw transporter one with markings the other with out i think they use them like a response car and the other are mercedes ano other manufacturers
I think they have at least one unmarked silver one
I think they have at least one unmarked silver one
@@pysgodfish WAST HART do have atleast one unmarked vw transporter
i wonder why, don't use england brand land rover
That light bar on the first car is cool. Shame about the siren
what’s wrong with it?
we couldn't attend your assault call we didn't have the money or resources, also did you check out our new tesla's
Very interesting video. Very different police vehicles to what we use in Australia.
Thanks for watching!
What is most common in Australia
But you guys do get some nice V8's, my particular favourite being the SRT 300's.
@@youking4861 Each state has their own police force, and each police force have police vehicles not seen in other states. Add to that some states have Highway Patrol. Most common patrol cars, used by general duties police in Queensland include the Camry, Hyundai iLoad and Landcruiser 200, plus the Kia Stinger, while NSW have the Camry, Ford Ranger and Hyundai iLoad for GD and the Chrysler 300SRT, BMW 530d and Landcruiser 200 for Highway Patrol. Victoria use VW Tiguans, Toyota Kluger and Ford Ranger with the BMW 530d for Highway Patrol. South Australia have a lot of Holden Commodore ZB and Kia Sorrentos.
@@roversnolan1 Up until recently, just about every Highway Patrol unit was either a Holden Commodore SS V8 or the Ford Falcon with a turbo 6 or supercharged V8. The last Commodores had the 304kw 6.2L motor, and the supercharged V8 Fords have a 345kw 5.0L motor. just about all are retired from police work and are extremely popular at the auctions. Chrysler has announced they'll stop making right hand drive SRT 300s, so they'll soon disappear. Not my video, but I found this. th-cam.com/video/-SRlDHwJhE4/w-d-xo.html
They have some good undercover vehicles apart from the bloke in the Ford Galaxy! 🤣🤣🤣
was surprised too see that one
Is that unmarked and no beacons Mercedes (RK13 EGY) a police vehicle or just tailgating?
haha I noticed that too! Likely to be tailgater.
where abouts in the video was this?
@@dragonemergencyvideos 1:38
New home for dogs:)
I SAW THAT! :D
Is the steady blue light at the rear a new thing? Or have I not been paying enough attention 😓
fairly new I believe?
It's to prove they where on 999 calls to speed camera ambulance not also have them
There was a bit about in the channel 5 shop cop car garage
If police vehicles are in convoy, the most professional of police drivers will turn off their rear flashing lights so they don’t dazzle the next following vehicle. The steady blue is probably to indicate to people or cameras that the car is travelling on blues.
I try to avoid them whenever possible, as an old school trucker it was them and us, and I outsmarted them most of the time..
Imagine being in a police chase and the Tesla runs out of electricity.
lets be honest thoughy that wont happen, they can install chargers at the police stations and when they arent out patrolling they can be charging, its a really smart idea using teslas, that and a tesla can catch pretty much any a-hole driver on uk roads, its fast as hell, seriously.
Just like gas powered cars can run out of gas too? Please let's be intelligent here. You charge up when low of electrons or fuel up when low on gas. It's petty common sense
Imagine thinking theres only 1 car involved in a chase, they would radio ahead and get others involved, most evs do multiple 100s of ks
Yeah but stupid how they spend there money on cars but not on the prisons to put rapists away 😮
The tesla would be so good at catching up to speeding drivers etc..
In lithuania is driving red police tesla
Law & Order in the 21st Century.
Nice Tesla
2.58 getting sideways 😁
they got xc90? wow
make sure you turn off the siren when in pursuit so you dont drain the battery and lose the criminals.
Yeah just like turn the head lights off to save petrol
What next the Police Prius LOL 😆😂
Unmarked Tesla?!!
You couldn’t find a more marked police car if you tried. 🤣🤣🤣🤣💂♂️🇬🇧
Suppose you have to get through the traffic lights somehow 😡
American undercover police cars are so easy to spot here, especially because they only use certain brands and models. Apparently in the UK, you’re just screwed.
Okk
Omm
*
9k
sometimes they even wear normal clothing to make them even harder to spot
How do you know where they’re gonna come from
i don’t