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Text and/or other creative content from this version of Immediate pursuit was copied or moved into Hot pursuit with this edit on 24 April 2013. The former page's history now serves to provide attribution for that content in the latter page, and it must not be deleted as long as the latter page exists. |
Merger of immediate pursuit
editImmediate pursuit and hot pursuit clearly refer to the exact same legal concept, so they need to be merged. Hot pursuit should be the destination since it's definitely the more common term (for example, hot pursuit gets 7 300 hits in legal documents on Google Scholar, compared with 1 300 for fresh pursuit and 500 for immediate pursuit).
In fact, I think this whole case is so cut-and-dried that I'm going to be bold and skip the merge process entirely. —Neil 01:22, 25 April 2013 (UTC)
Schengen countries
editShould a mention of Shengen not be made in this article? The European countries which participate in Schengen and have fully-open border between them allow the Police of other countries to cross borders in pursuit of suspects and make arrests. Austrian Police are able to chase suspects into Czech Republic or other neighbouring countries, for example. This wouldn't be allowed from non-Schengen countries like the UK, Ireland or Cyprus.--XANIA - ЗAНИAWikipedia talk | Wikibooks talk 21:38, 29 November 2014 (UTC)