Reputation Activity
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CG Blaze reacted to jumperman09 for a gallery image, Sandy Shore Township PD!Pack coming soooooooon.
MORE PICTURES!:
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CG Blaze reacted to The Map for a gallery image, Triple Doubleeeyaaa
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CG Blaze reacted to t0y for a gallery image, Cali Style... Again(My other LSPD pack is finished, keep your eye out for the release!)
Logo by @Slendis
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CG Blaze got a reaction from gfxle for a gallery image, SOMETHING DIFFERENT!Good lord am I tired of 2011 CVPI's with LED bars.
Thankfully, @flwpheonix masterfully created a set of 98-99 Vics with rotators to play with, and I'm absolutely in love with them!
You can tell he put a lot of care and effort into making this pack, so I'm gonna shout him out here and give him a lil more exposure because I think he deserves it.
I tend to envision Blaine County's Sheriff Dept. as a low budget agency that couldn't afford fancy graphics and would use equipment until it was completely destroyed by the desert. These cars, combined with this skin by @iansonwheels and a little weathering by yours truly really sells that idea, in my opinion.
What do you think?
EDIT: I should probably include a link to the pack, huh?
and LSPDFR staff: this would make a great featured file. Just sayin'!
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Two SAHP units watching over morning traffic heading into Los Santos. Pack is coming together quite nicely. Have Chargers, FPIS's and now Caprices done. Hmm what next?
AWESOME models by the talented @Kane104 and @Mr. Kindness757
(I just wish the Caprice had mapped license plates! lol)
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CG Blaze reacted toDeactivated Memberfor a gallery image, Affordable Luxury -
CG Blaze reacted toDeactivated Memberfor a gallery image, "Not the most expensive luxury car......but the most preferred."
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CG Blaze reacted to t0y for a gallery image, Emergency ServicesLogos by @Slendis go give him a high five or something.
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One of the LSPD's newest acquisitions, a 2015 FPI, seen here on a routine traffic stop. This unmarked car is assigned to a sergeant in the LSPD's Traffic Division in the Western District, though he often chooses to drive a marked unit as he thinks the surf blue FPI looks like Thomas the Tank Engine.
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Until the early 1980's, law enforcement agencies in the state of San Andreas primarily used red for their emergency lighting, with few exceptions. By the early to mid 1990's, all but one agency had made the switch to red and blue lighting. That one agency was the Blaine County Sheriff's Office.
Sheriff H.R. Jakowski served Blaine County from 1979 to 2013, and he believed in a conservative approach to policing. As such, the vehicles used by the department during that time reflected that idea, and remained tradition based. For the entirety of Jakowski's tenure, the paint scheme on BCSO vehicles had remained fundamentally unchanged. It was a minimalist, but effective scheme without any frills that took cues from Blaine County's flag. As well, the traditional solid red lighting remained a staple of BCSO patrol cars well into the 2010's.
However, the days of the old school cool are numbered in Blaine County. With the election of Sheriff J.T. Philips in 2013, the department has taken a more modern, progressive stance, employing new tactics and restructuring many parts of the department from the ground up. The red, white and blue cars of the Jakowski era are beginning to fade into history as new cars, equipped with modern red and blue LED lighting are ushered in. This Crown Victoria pictured above is closing in on 110,000 miles on its odometer, and will likely be retired by the end of the year. And while the iconic red lighting of the Jakowski years will go with it, Blaine County residents are sure to remember the many hours it served them well.
Livery by @iansonwheels, model by @t0y. Both currently unreleased.
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Two SAHP units watching over morning traffic heading into Los Santos. Pack is coming together quite nicely. Have Chargers, FPIS's and now Caprices done. Hmm what next?
AWESOME models by the talented @Kane104 and @Mr. Kindness757
(I just wish the Caprice had mapped license plates! lol)
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CG Blaze got a reaction from Mikofiticus for a gallery image, REDUntil the early 1980's, law enforcement agencies in the state of San Andreas primarily used red for their emergency lighting, with few exceptions. By the early to mid 1990's, all but one agency had made the switch to red and blue lighting. That one agency was the Blaine County Sheriff's Office.
Sheriff H.R. Jakowski served Blaine County from 1979 to 2013, and he believed in a conservative approach to policing. As such, the vehicles used by the department during that time reflected that idea, and remained tradition based. For the entirety of Jakowski's tenure, the paint scheme on BCSO vehicles had remained fundamentally unchanged. It was a minimalist, but effective scheme without any frills that took cues from Blaine County's flag. As well, the traditional solid red lighting remained a staple of BCSO patrol cars well into the 2010's.
However, the days of the old school cool are numbered in Blaine County. With the election of Sheriff J.T. Philips in 2013, the department has taken a more modern, progressive stance, employing new tactics and restructuring many parts of the department from the ground up. The red, white and blue cars of the Jakowski era are beginning to fade into history as new cars, equipped with modern red and blue LED lighting are ushered in. This Crown Victoria pictured above is closing in on 110,000 miles on its odometer, and will likely be retired by the end of the year. And while the iconic red lighting of the Jakowski years will go with it, Blaine County residents are sure to remember the many hours it served them well.
Livery by @iansonwheels, model by @t0y. Both currently unreleased.
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Until the early 1980's, law enforcement agencies in the state of San Andreas primarily used red for their emergency lighting, with few exceptions. By the early to mid 1990's, all but one agency had made the switch to red and blue lighting. That one agency was the Blaine County Sheriff's Office.
Sheriff H.R. Jakowski served Blaine County from 1979 to 2013, and he believed in a conservative approach to policing. As such, the vehicles used by the department during that time reflected that idea, and remained tradition based. For the entirety of Jakowski's tenure, the paint scheme on BCSO vehicles had remained fundamentally unchanged. It was a minimalist, but effective scheme without any frills that took cues from Blaine County's flag. As well, the traditional solid red lighting remained a staple of BCSO patrol cars well into the 2010's.
However, the days of the old school cool are numbered in Blaine County. With the election of Sheriff J.T. Philips in 2013, the department has taken a more modern, progressive stance, employing new tactics and restructuring many parts of the department from the ground up. The red, white and blue cars of the Jakowski era are beginning to fade into history as new cars, equipped with modern red and blue LED lighting are ushered in. This Crown Victoria pictured above is closing in on 110,000 miles on its odometer, and will likely be retired by the end of the year. And while the iconic red lighting of the Jakowski years will go with it, Blaine County residents are sure to remember the many hours it served them well.
Livery by @iansonwheels, model by @t0y. Both currently unreleased.
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Until the early 1980's, law enforcement agencies in the state of San Andreas primarily used red for their emergency lighting, with few exceptions. By the early to mid 1990's, all but one agency had made the switch to red and blue lighting. That one agency was the Blaine County Sheriff's Office.
Sheriff H.R. Jakowski served Blaine County from 1979 to 2013, and he believed in a conservative approach to policing. As such, the vehicles used by the department during that time reflected that idea, and remained tradition based. For the entirety of Jakowski's tenure, the paint scheme on BCSO vehicles had remained fundamentally unchanged. It was a minimalist, but effective scheme without any frills that took cues from Blaine County's flag. As well, the traditional solid red lighting remained a staple of BCSO patrol cars well into the 2010's.
However, the days of the old school cool are numbered in Blaine County. With the election of Sheriff J.T. Philips in 2013, the department has taken a more modern, progressive stance, employing new tactics and restructuring many parts of the department from the ground up. The red, white and blue cars of the Jakowski era are beginning to fade into history as new cars, equipped with modern red and blue LED lighting are ushered in. This Crown Victoria pictured above is closing in on 110,000 miles on its odometer, and will likely be retired by the end of the year. And while the iconic red lighting of the Jakowski years will go with it, Blaine County residents are sure to remember the many hours it served them well.
Livery by @iansonwheels, model by @t0y. Both currently unreleased.
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Until the early 1980's, law enforcement agencies in the state of San Andreas primarily used red for their emergency lighting, with few exceptions. By the early to mid 1990's, all but one agency had made the switch to red and blue lighting. That one agency was the Blaine County Sheriff's Office.
Sheriff H.R. Jakowski served Blaine County from 1979 to 2013, and he believed in a conservative approach to policing. As such, the vehicles used by the department during that time reflected that idea, and remained tradition based. For the entirety of Jakowski's tenure, the paint scheme on BCSO vehicles had remained fundamentally unchanged. It was a minimalist, but effective scheme without any frills that took cues from Blaine County's flag. As well, the traditional solid red lighting remained a staple of BCSO patrol cars well into the 2010's.
However, the days of the old school cool are numbered in Blaine County. With the election of Sheriff J.T. Philips in 2013, the department has taken a more modern, progressive stance, employing new tactics and restructuring many parts of the department from the ground up. The red, white and blue cars of the Jakowski era are beginning to fade into history as new cars, equipped with modern red and blue LED lighting are ushered in. This Crown Victoria pictured above is closing in on 110,000 miles on its odometer, and will likely be retired by the end of the year. And while the iconic red lighting of the Jakowski years will go with it, Blaine County residents are sure to remember the many hours it served them well.
Livery by @iansonwheels, model by @t0y. Both currently unreleased.
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Until the early 1980's, law enforcement agencies in the state of San Andreas primarily used red for their emergency lighting, with few exceptions. By the early to mid 1990's, all but one agency had made the switch to red and blue lighting. That one agency was the Blaine County Sheriff's Office.
Sheriff H.R. Jakowski served Blaine County from 1979 to 2013, and he believed in a conservative approach to policing. As such, the vehicles used by the department during that time reflected that idea, and remained tradition based. For the entirety of Jakowski's tenure, the paint scheme on BCSO vehicles had remained fundamentally unchanged. It was a minimalist, but effective scheme without any frills that took cues from Blaine County's flag. As well, the traditional solid red lighting remained a staple of BCSO patrol cars well into the 2010's.
However, the days of the old school cool are numbered in Blaine County. With the election of Sheriff J.T. Philips in 2013, the department has taken a more modern, progressive stance, employing new tactics and restructuring many parts of the department from the ground up. The red, white and blue cars of the Jakowski era are beginning to fade into history as new cars, equipped with modern red and blue LED lighting are ushered in. This Crown Victoria pictured above is closing in on 110,000 miles on its odometer, and will likely be retired by the end of the year. And while the iconic red lighting of the Jakowski years will go with it, Blaine County residents are sure to remember the many hours it served them well.
Livery by @iansonwheels, model by @t0y. Both currently unreleased.
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CG Blaze got a reaction from Skin Works for a gallery image, REDUntil the early 1980's, law enforcement agencies in the state of San Andreas primarily used red for their emergency lighting, with few exceptions. By the early to mid 1990's, all but one agency had made the switch to red and blue lighting. That one agency was the Blaine County Sheriff's Office.
Sheriff H.R. Jakowski served Blaine County from 1979 to 2013, and he believed in a conservative approach to policing. As such, the vehicles used by the department during that time reflected that idea, and remained tradition based. For the entirety of Jakowski's tenure, the paint scheme on BCSO vehicles had remained fundamentally unchanged. It was a minimalist, but effective scheme without any frills that took cues from Blaine County's flag. As well, the traditional solid red lighting remained a staple of BCSO patrol cars well into the 2010's.
However, the days of the old school cool are numbered in Blaine County. With the election of Sheriff J.T. Philips in 2013, the department has taken a more modern, progressive stance, employing new tactics and restructuring many parts of the department from the ground up. The red, white and blue cars of the Jakowski era are beginning to fade into history as new cars, equipped with modern red and blue LED lighting are ushered in. This Crown Victoria pictured above is closing in on 110,000 miles on its odometer, and will likely be retired by the end of the year. And while the iconic red lighting of the Jakowski years will go with it, Blaine County residents are sure to remember the many hours it served them well.
Livery by @iansonwheels, model by @t0y. Both currently unreleased.
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CG Blaze got a reaction from Black Jesus for a gallery image, REDUntil the early 1980's, law enforcement agencies in the state of San Andreas primarily used red for their emergency lighting, with few exceptions. By the early to mid 1990's, all but one agency had made the switch to red and blue lighting. That one agency was the Blaine County Sheriff's Office.
Sheriff H.R. Jakowski served Blaine County from 1979 to 2013, and he believed in a conservative approach to policing. As such, the vehicles used by the department during that time reflected that idea, and remained tradition based. For the entirety of Jakowski's tenure, the paint scheme on BCSO vehicles had remained fundamentally unchanged. It was a minimalist, but effective scheme without any frills that took cues from Blaine County's flag. As well, the traditional solid red lighting remained a staple of BCSO patrol cars well into the 2010's.
However, the days of the old school cool are numbered in Blaine County. With the election of Sheriff J.T. Philips in 2013, the department has taken a more modern, progressive stance, employing new tactics and restructuring many parts of the department from the ground up. The red, white and blue cars of the Jakowski era are beginning to fade into history as new cars, equipped with modern red and blue LED lighting are ushered in. This Crown Victoria pictured above is closing in on 110,000 miles on its odometer, and will likely be retired by the end of the year. And while the iconic red lighting of the Jakowski years will go with it, Blaine County residents are sure to remember the many hours it served them well.
Livery by @iansonwheels, model by @t0y. Both currently unreleased.
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CG Blaze got a reaction from thegreathah for a gallery image, REDUntil the early 1980's, law enforcement agencies in the state of San Andreas primarily used red for their emergency lighting, with few exceptions. By the early to mid 1990's, all but one agency had made the switch to red and blue lighting. That one agency was the Blaine County Sheriff's Office.
Sheriff H.R. Jakowski served Blaine County from 1979 to 2013, and he believed in a conservative approach to policing. As such, the vehicles used by the department during that time reflected that idea, and remained tradition based. For the entirety of Jakowski's tenure, the paint scheme on BCSO vehicles had remained fundamentally unchanged. It was a minimalist, but effective scheme without any frills that took cues from Blaine County's flag. As well, the traditional solid red lighting remained a staple of BCSO patrol cars well into the 2010's.
However, the days of the old school cool are numbered in Blaine County. With the election of Sheriff J.T. Philips in 2013, the department has taken a more modern, progressive stance, employing new tactics and restructuring many parts of the department from the ground up. The red, white and blue cars of the Jakowski era are beginning to fade into history as new cars, equipped with modern red and blue LED lighting are ushered in. This Crown Victoria pictured above is closing in on 110,000 miles on its odometer, and will likely be retired by the end of the year. And while the iconic red lighting of the Jakowski years will go with it, Blaine County residents are sure to remember the many hours it served them well.
Livery by @iansonwheels, model by @t0y. Both currently unreleased.
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CG Blaze got a reaction from OfficerFive0 for a gallery image, REDUntil the early 1980's, law enforcement agencies in the state of San Andreas primarily used red for their emergency lighting, with few exceptions. By the early to mid 1990's, all but one agency had made the switch to red and blue lighting. That one agency was the Blaine County Sheriff's Office.
Sheriff H.R. Jakowski served Blaine County from 1979 to 2013, and he believed in a conservative approach to policing. As such, the vehicles used by the department during that time reflected that idea, and remained tradition based. For the entirety of Jakowski's tenure, the paint scheme on BCSO vehicles had remained fundamentally unchanged. It was a minimalist, but effective scheme without any frills that took cues from Blaine County's flag. As well, the traditional solid red lighting remained a staple of BCSO patrol cars well into the 2010's.
However, the days of the old school cool are numbered in Blaine County. With the election of Sheriff J.T. Philips in 2013, the department has taken a more modern, progressive stance, employing new tactics and restructuring many parts of the department from the ground up. The red, white and blue cars of the Jakowski era are beginning to fade into history as new cars, equipped with modern red and blue LED lighting are ushered in. This Crown Victoria pictured above is closing in on 110,000 miles on its odometer, and will likely be retired by the end of the year. And while the iconic red lighting of the Jakowski years will go with it, Blaine County residents are sure to remember the many hours it served them well.
Livery by @iansonwheels, model by @t0y. Both currently unreleased.
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CG Blaze got a reaction from Reddington for a gallery image, REDUntil the early 1980's, law enforcement agencies in the state of San Andreas primarily used red for their emergency lighting, with few exceptions. By the early to mid 1990's, all but one agency had made the switch to red and blue lighting. That one agency was the Blaine County Sheriff's Office.
Sheriff H.R. Jakowski served Blaine County from 1979 to 2013, and he believed in a conservative approach to policing. As such, the vehicles used by the department during that time reflected that idea, and remained tradition based. For the entirety of Jakowski's tenure, the paint scheme on BCSO vehicles had remained fundamentally unchanged. It was a minimalist, but effective scheme without any frills that took cues from Blaine County's flag. As well, the traditional solid red lighting remained a staple of BCSO patrol cars well into the 2010's.
However, the days of the old school cool are numbered in Blaine County. With the election of Sheriff J.T. Philips in 2013, the department has taken a more modern, progressive stance, employing new tactics and restructuring many parts of the department from the ground up. The red, white and blue cars of the Jakowski era are beginning to fade into history as new cars, equipped with modern red and blue LED lighting are ushered in. This Crown Victoria pictured above is closing in on 110,000 miles on its odometer, and will likely be retired by the end of the year. And while the iconic red lighting of the Jakowski years will go with it, Blaine County residents are sure to remember the many hours it served them well.
Livery by @iansonwheels, model by @t0y. Both currently unreleased.
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Until the early 1980's, law enforcement agencies in the state of San Andreas primarily used red for their emergency lighting, with few exceptions. By the early to mid 1990's, all but one agency had made the switch to red and blue lighting. That one agency was the Blaine County Sheriff's Office.
Sheriff H.R. Jakowski served Blaine County from 1979 to 2013, and he believed in a conservative approach to policing. As such, the vehicles used by the department during that time reflected that idea, and remained tradition based. For the entirety of Jakowski's tenure, the paint scheme on BCSO vehicles had remained fundamentally unchanged. It was a minimalist, but effective scheme without any frills that took cues from Blaine County's flag. As well, the traditional solid red lighting remained a staple of BCSO patrol cars well into the 2010's.
However, the days of the old school cool are numbered in Blaine County. With the election of Sheriff J.T. Philips in 2013, the department has taken a more modern, progressive stance, employing new tactics and restructuring many parts of the department from the ground up. The red, white and blue cars of the Jakowski era are beginning to fade into history as new cars, equipped with modern red and blue LED lighting are ushered in. This Crown Victoria pictured above is closing in on 110,000 miles on its odometer, and will likely be retired by the end of the year. And while the iconic red lighting of the Jakowski years will go with it, Blaine County residents are sure to remember the many hours it served them well.
Livery by @iansonwheels, model by @t0y. Both currently unreleased.
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Until the early 1980's, law enforcement agencies in the state of San Andreas primarily used red for their emergency lighting, with few exceptions. By the early to mid 1990's, all but one agency had made the switch to red and blue lighting. That one agency was the Blaine County Sheriff's Office.
Sheriff H.R. Jakowski served Blaine County from 1979 to 2013, and he believed in a conservative approach to policing. As such, the vehicles used by the department during that time reflected that idea, and remained tradition based. For the entirety of Jakowski's tenure, the paint scheme on BCSO vehicles had remained fundamentally unchanged. It was a minimalist, but effective scheme without any frills that took cues from Blaine County's flag. As well, the traditional solid red lighting remained a staple of BCSO patrol cars well into the 2010's.
However, the days of the old school cool are numbered in Blaine County. With the election of Sheriff J.T. Philips in 2013, the department has taken a more modern, progressive stance, employing new tactics and restructuring many parts of the department from the ground up. The red, white and blue cars of the Jakowski era are beginning to fade into history as new cars, equipped with modern red and blue LED lighting are ushered in. This Crown Victoria pictured above is closing in on 110,000 miles on its odometer, and will likely be retired by the end of the year. And while the iconic red lighting of the Jakowski years will go with it, Blaine County residents are sure to remember the many hours it served them well.
Livery by @iansonwheels, model by @t0y. Both currently unreleased.
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Until the early 1980's, law enforcement agencies in the state of San Andreas primarily used red for their emergency lighting, with few exceptions. By the early to mid 1990's, all but one agency had made the switch to red and blue lighting. That one agency was the Blaine County Sheriff's Office.
Sheriff H.R. Jakowski served Blaine County from 1979 to 2013, and he believed in a conservative approach to policing. As such, the vehicles used by the department during that time reflected that idea, and remained tradition based. For the entirety of Jakowski's tenure, the paint scheme on BCSO vehicles had remained fundamentally unchanged. It was a minimalist, but effective scheme without any frills that took cues from Blaine County's flag. As well, the traditional solid red lighting remained a staple of BCSO patrol cars well into the 2010's.
However, the days of the old school cool are numbered in Blaine County. With the election of Sheriff J.T. Philips in 2013, the department has taken a more modern, progressive stance, employing new tactics and restructuring many parts of the department from the ground up. The red, white and blue cars of the Jakowski era are beginning to fade into history as new cars, equipped with modern red and blue LED lighting are ushered in. This Crown Victoria pictured above is closing in on 110,000 miles on its odometer, and will likely be retired by the end of the year. And while the iconic red lighting of the Jakowski years will go with it, Blaine County residents are sure to remember the many hours it served them well.
Livery by @iansonwheels, model by @t0y. Both currently unreleased.
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CG Blaze reacted to thegreathah for a gallery image, What is love?