Bucks Co. Sheriff - Warrant Service Unit - new condition - Arrest warrants can be issued by local or Bucks County law enforcement and are signed by a judge. A warrant lockup checks Bucks County public records to determine if there is an active warrant for a particular person's arrest.
Butler Co. Sheriffs Dept. - new condition
Butler Co. Sheriffs Office - worn during the 1990s - used condition
Butler Co. Sheriff - new condition
Butler Co. Sheriff - new condition
Cambria Co. Sheriffs Dept. - new condition
Cambria Co. Sheriff Dept. - worn during thr 1990s - new condition
Cambria Co. Sheriff - new condition
Cameron Co. Sheriffs Dept. - used condition
Cameron Co. Sheriffs Dept. - worn during the 1990s - new condition - The county is known as the "Land of the Endless Mountains" because of its dramatic and continuous mountainous landscape, which is part of the Allegheny Plateau region of the Appalachian Mountains. The county is surrounded by vast, rugged hills and forested ridges that stretch for miles without major interruption, giving a sense of “endless” mountains.
Carbon Co. Sheriff Dept. - worn during the 1990s - used condition
Carbon Co. Sheriffs Office - new condition - The patch features an Indian head on its official patch as a tribute to the 2nd Infantry Division of the U.S. Army, commonly known as the "Indianhead" Division. The "Indianhead" insignia was created during World War I in March 1918 when the 2nd Infantry Division entered the Verdun sector. Lieutenant Colonel William F. Herringshaw ordered trucks from the Twenty-sixth Division to be marked with symbols, and the distinctive Indian head design was adopted as the division's official insignia.
Carbon Co. Sheriffs Auxiliary - new condition - The patch features an Indian head on its official patch as a tribute to the 2nd Infantry Division of the U.S. Army, commonly known as the "Indianhead" Division. The "Indianhead" insignia was created during World War I in March 1918 when the 2nd Infantry Division entered the Verdun sector. Lieutenant Colonel William F. Herringshaw ordered trucks from the Twenty-sixth Division to be marked with symbols, and the distinctive Indian head design was adopted as the division's official insignia.