In 1946 the white soldiers are replaced by Indian policemen.
On December 15, 1890, 40 Indian policemen arrived at Chief Sitting Bull's house to arrest him.
On 27 March, an explosion blamed on Maoists killed 15 Indian policemen in Maharashtra.
The uprising in the north ended with the death of Sitting Bull, who was shot and killed by an Indian policeman.
However, he escaped (or was freed by sympathetic Indian policemen) and returned to the reservation, then fled to the Powder River.
The attack killed seven Indian policemen.
Vann, who had three other Indian policemen with him, called to Sam to Surrender.
The two Indian policemen sent to seize him immediately kill the Chief.
Before the war MI5 employed mostly former Indian policemen, for it was in India that the British Empire faced security threats.
His father was an Indian policeman.