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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/C_O_P_S__8451.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:350:''"It's Crime Fighting Time."'']]

->''"C.O.P.S. Central Organization of Police Specialists. Fighting crime in a future time. Protecting Empire City from Big Boss and his gang of crooks."''
-->--'''Bulletproof''''s OpeningNarration

''C.O.P.S.'', which stands for '''C'''entral '''O'''rganization of '''P'''olice '''S'''pecialists, was an animated series produced by Creator/DiCEntertainment that premiered in 1988 as one of the many MerchandiseDriven [[SixtyFiveEpisodeCartoon 65-Episode Cartoons]] made for FirstRunSyndication. A few years later, it was re-run on Creator/{{CBS}}' Saturday morning schedule, this time under the name ''Cyber COPS'' [[Series/{{Cops}} for obvious reasons]]. The show was based on a toy line called ''C.O.P.S 'n' Crooks'', which were futuristic police and criminal based action figures produced by Creator/{{Hasbro}}.

Set in the year 2020, the show took place in the metropolis Empire City. The main story revolved around Agent Baldwin P. Vess, codename "Bulletproof", who has been sent out to stop Big Boss ([[Franchise/MetalGear no relation]]), a criminal mastermind who has taken over the city. However, after being attacked by the henchmen of Big Boss and suffering a near-fatal wound, Vess is taken to the hospital and given a new bullet-resistant torso. While he is recovering, he contacts Officer P.J. O'Malley (aka [=LongArm=]) and rookie Donny Brooks ([=HardTop=]) to find the best law enforcement officers around. They are able to recruit several people. Among them are David E. "Highway" Harlson, Colt "Mace" Howards, Stan "Barricade" Hyde, Tina "Mainframe" Cassidy, Walker "Sundown" Calhoun, Suzie "Mirage" Young, Hugh S. "Bullseye" Forward, and Rex "Bowser" Pointer and his robot dog, Blitz. Together these people make up C.O.P.S., using their combined power to stop Big Boss.

At the very same time as the cartoon, there was also a [[ComicBookAdaptation C.O.P.S. comic book]] by Creator/DCComics, which had a much different storyline that was DarkerAndEdgier.

Compare with ''Manga/YoureUnderArrest'', an {{anime}} with a similar (if not more realistic & relatively modern) perspective.
----
!!Central Organization of Trope Specialists:
* TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture: A cartoon from the 1980's that takes place in 2020.
* ActionFigureFileCard: The toys had them; they were written by Creator/LarryHama, who also wrote the ''WesternAnimation/GIJoeARealAmericanHero'' cards. This may explain the Checkpoint/Beach Head connection noted in AllThereInTheManual.
* AdultsDressedAsChildren: Small Guy and his gang do this as each member is around two-foot tall and pass themselves off as children, despite having the heads of middle aged men.
* AIIsACrapshoot: One episode centered around prototype robots that served as both police and judges. The project was an abysmal failure because Big Boss bribed one of the project leads into altering the judgement algorithms so they would always find his people innocent, even when they were caught red-handed. As a side effect, they also tended to sentence random civilians to multi-decade prison sentences for petty misdemeanors, making it a wonder that the program lasted as long as it did.
* AllThereInTheManual:
** Clues in the action figure profiles reveal that a member of C.O.P.S. (Checkpoint) is the descendant of a G.I. Joe member (Beach Head).
** Likewise for the setting date of 2020. They never once mention this in the series proper; only supplemental materials set an exact year.
* ActionHoggingOpening: The fast paced TitleSequence.
* TheAggressiveDrugDealer: One-off villain Addictum from "The Case of the Lowest Crime" operated this way, trying to sell his drug, "Crystal Twist" to a pair of girls, who promptly told the C.O.P.S.
* AndImTheQueenOfSheba: Berserko makes such a remark in "The Case of the Midas Touch".
-->'''Berserko''': If he's an innocent bystander, then I'm the tooth fairy!
* AndKnowingIsHalfTheBattle: Occasionally, with live-action segments!
* ArtisticLicenseLaw: Every Crook, regardless of their sentence, was out by the next episode and Big Boss roamed free despite everyone knowing he was a criminal, to maintain the status quo, although this can be explained by the fact that this show didn't really have any kind of direct continuity other than the file numbers given at the beginning and end of each episode. In any case, Empire City barely has more crime than Mayberry because one crime lord runs all the crime in the city and barely does more than bank robberies or technology thefts.[[note]]It's not entirely inaccurate, however. It's really less artistic license, and more a brief summary that [[LawOfConservationOfDetail doesn't go into details]].[[/note]]
** Perhaps the worst case is the two-parter "The Case of Big Boss' Master Plan" where Big Boss kidnaps the President of the United States, forces the C.O.P.S. into prison, and runs Empire City as his own personal domain. In the episode he's merely beaten and humiliated, with the incident eventually forgotten. In real life, he'd have had the Secret Service and the U.S. military on him so fast his head would spin, and AT BEST he'd have ended up in prison for life on multiple charges of terrorism and treason (among a pile of other charges) for even trying it.
*** This episode overall is so full of mistakes regarding real-life law enforcement and the security of the US president that it may be the reason later episodes (in production order, anyway) seem to ignore it happened. The Secret Service isn't present at all and the president takes her trip on a train with practically NO security as well as public knowledge of the trip. In real life she would have taken Air Force One and been surrounded by security.
* AxCrazy: Buttons [=McBoomBoom=] really loves to shoot things. His EstablishingCharacterMoment is right there on the opening credits when he ruins a robbery by wrecking a room with gunfire just because he didn't liked a butterfly that was flying around.
* BadassCrew: The Central Organization of Police Specialists fit this to a T.
* BagOfKidnapping: In "The Case of the Big Boss' Master Plan" Berserko kidnaps the United States President (who is an African American woman) with this method.
* {{Balloonacy}}: As a birthday present for Big Boss, Berserko tried to steal the Cornucopia Bridge, by inflating the world's largest balloon and blowing up the supports. The C.O.P.S. stop him before he can fire the explosives so we don't see the bridge fly, but their reaction upon seeing the huge balloon inflated inside the bridge says that it wouldn't work.
* BananaPeel: Buttons [=McBoomBoom=] slips on a banana peel in "The Case of the Bad Luck Burglar".
* BeautyContest: Big Boss send Nightshade and Ms. Demeanor in a beauty pageant to get his hands on the prizes. He also had the judges replaced with his goons. The C.O.P.S. had Mainframe enter the contest to stop the ploy. [[spoiler:In the aftermath, the real judges declared Nightshade the winner. [[DickDastardlyStopsToCheat Unfortunately, because her accomplices tampered with the process, she was disqualified.]]]]
* BedsheetLadder: Small Guy and his henchmen sneak out of the Lopsided Orphanage by climbing a ladder of bed sheets out the window in "The Case of the Baby Bad Guy".
* BerserkButton: Buttons ''really'' hated insects, to the point of sending out his double machine-guns at the mere sight of one.
** At the beginning of one episode, he's trying to kill a fly with a Tommy gun, and almost shoots Rock Krusher numerous times.
* BigBad: Big Boss is the main villain.
* BoundAndGagged: Seemed to happen on a fairly regular basis to the C.O.P.S. members. Both female C.O.P.S. got this on at least one occasion.
* BreathHoldingBrat: Prince Baddin, the spoiled son of the King of Rashiland, uses this technique to blackmail Longarm and Hardtop into taking him shopping for toys in "The Case of the Ransomed Rascal".
* ButtBiter: In "The Case of the Crook with a Thousand Faces", Blitz bites into a man's rear to prevent him from falling down an elevator shaft.
* ByTheLightsOfTheirEyes: "The Case of Mukluk's Luck" has a scene where Mukluk, Bullet and Rock Krusher enter a dark cave and are only seen by their eyes.
* CanadaEh: Inspector Yukon of the Mounties shows up in "The Case of Mukluk's Luck" to track down a short Canadian thief named Mukluk.
* CaptivityHarmonica: Sundown plays a harmonica while waiting in a cell in "The Case of the Disappearing Dough".
* CasanovaWannabe: Highway, although mostly in the comic.
* TheCaseOf: The episode titles all began with "The Case of...", for example "The Case of Big Boss' Master Plan".
* CatchPhrase:
** '"It's Crime Fighting Time!" and "Crime's a Wastin!"
** Bulletproof also has "Here's how the caper came down..." and "Case closed".
** Buzzbomb's beeping often becomes a robotic version of "Nya-nya-nya-nya-nya!", a common children's taunt.
** At the climax of almost every episode: "Freeze! We're C.O.P.S., and you're under arrest!"
* ClassyCatBurglar: Nightshade. She actually came from a rich family.
* ClothesMakeTheSuperman: In "The Case of the Blur Bandits" Dr. [=BadVibes=] makes custom speed suits for the Crooks that give them SuperSpeed, making them so fast that not even Highway can't keep up with them [[spoiler: until he gets his hand on Turbo Tu-Tone's suit that happens to be his size.]]
* CodeName: Each COP and Crook has one.
* CommunicationsOfficer: Airwave.
* ContemporaryCaveman: "The Case of the Cool Caveman" features a caveman thawing out and befriending Longarm's son.
* DatingCatwoman: The affair between Sgt. Mace and Nightshade.
* DaysOfFuturePast: A mild example. While the series takes place TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture, the setting takes some of its cues from the gangster films of TheThirties.
* DestroyTheSecurityCamera: In "The Case of the Criminal Mall", Dr. Badvibes shoots goo at the lens of the security camera of a mall that he is breaking into.
* DickDastardlyStopsToCheat: Nightshade entering, then ripping off, a beauty pageant (which she would've won fairly, had she held off for five minutes).
* DonutMessWithACop:
** Mace is shown taking a bite out of a donut and tossing it aside before apprehending a pair of crooks in the first part of the two-part episode "The Case of C.O.P.S. File #1".
** In "The Case of the Baby Bad Guy", Longarm remarks that he needs to cut back on the donuts when Small Guy eludes Longarm by going through an opening he's too big to follow him through.
* DrugsAreBad: "The Case of the Lowest Crime". Slightly more ballsy than your usual 80's anti-drug episode, portraying the addiction as truly life-wrecking, even going so far as to say some of the victims never fully recovered.
* DumbassHasAPoint: The final issue of the comics had the C.O.P.S. take down Big Boss through a BatmanGambit centered around Big Boss overreacting to the police showing up to talk to him about his gang's unpaid parking tickets. At one point Berserko suggests to his uncle that they get the police to go away by [[StatingTheSimpleSolution paying the fines]]. He is promptly glared into silence - apparently hardened criminals aren't supposed to pass up the opportunity to commit a crime, even when doing so gains them nothing.
* DumbMuscle: Rock Krusher and Berserko are both muscular brutes and not very bright.
* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness:
** In the initial episodes, Big Boss was a known criminal to the general public and would make open threats against the entire city using public broadcast monitors. Later on, he was regarded as a legit businessman with merely suspected but unproven criminal ties, and his own mother was unaware of any of this--which even Big Boss begged the C.O.P.S. to keep quiet because the knowledge could've upset or even killed her.
** The initial character concept artwork, used on the toy packages, gives Bulletproof a purple coat and black pants, and Dr. Badvibes has a normal-sized brain with a small dome over it. The Larry Hama file cards also have a superficial connection with the cartoon at best.
* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes: Berzerko may be dumb as a rock and a liability to his operations, but being his nephew, Big Boss keeps him around and even allies with the C.O.P.S. when he's almost killed by an accidental drug overdose. He also goes out of his way to keep his own mother from finding out that he's a criminal. because he doesn't want her hurt by the knowledge of it.
** There's also Nightshade, who has a little sister who doesn't know she's a crook.
* EvenEvilHasStandards:
** Big Boss refusing to help sell a designer drug because "Drugs kill!" His nephew Berserko nearly dying from an accidental overdose of the drug didn't help, although he'd already turned the dealer down before then. Berserko's near-death led to a [[EnemyMine temporary truce]] between the C.O.P.S. team and Big Boss' gang until they caught the drug dealer.
--->'''Big Boss:''' Shut up! In my time, I’ve committed many crimes, I want to earn money in the worst possible way, but selling drugs is where I draw the line, creep! DRUGS KILL!
** In "The Case of the Bogus Bride", Berserko states that polygamy is illegal in Empire City and is apparently unwilling to violate that law.
--->'''Berserko:''' I can't marry both of them. It ain't legal!!
** Nightshade is implied to be an example. She may not even really be evil at all, even if she is a Crook.
* [[EveryCarIsAPinto Every Skateboard Is a Pinto]]: "The Case of The Bogus Justice Machines" has two kids fall off their skateboards which run into a stack of boxes ''and explode.'' Seriously.
* EveryEpisodeEnding: Bulletproof gives the lowdown on how everything ultimately turned out and repeats both the file number and episode name followed by "Case Closed".
* EverythingIsBigInTexas: Sundown specifically points this out when he can't fit into Turbo Tu-Tone's SuperSpeed suit. "Shoot, this thing's plum too small! Sorry, but we're grown big down in Texas."
* EverythingsSparklyWithJewelry: Nightshade's favorite target.
* FairCop: Pretty much all of them, seeing as in most cases here, BeautyEqualsGoodness.
** While it's not her defining trait, Mainframe is beautiful (and talented) enough to enter a beauty pageant as an UndercoverModel to counter the Crooks' own entries of Nightshade and Ms. Demeanor since the latter two will undoubtedly cheat (and do.) [[spoiler: Nightshade wins fairly, surprisingly, but then gets disqualified for the cheating. See DickDastardlyStopsToCheat above.]]
* FantasticDrug: Crystal Twist, a hexagon-shaped crystal that glows when absorbed through the skin. In "The Case of the Lowest Crime," Berserko falls into a crate full of the stuff and goes into a coma.
* FamilyFriendlyFirearms: Averted. While a bit more hi-tech, given the setting, all the guns shown shoot real bullets. Mace's laser bazooka is the exception. However, the cops don't actually shoot the bullets at ''crooks'', preferring to use ImprobableAimingSkills to trigger environmental effects to trip them up, like bursting pipes.
* FlowersForAlgernonSyndrome: In "The Case of The Brilliant Berserko", Berserko steals a "chess crown" meant to augment intelligence and becomes a well-mannered (if still criminal) supergenius. In the middle of the episode, the battery momentarily fails, setting up the common "it's just temporary" plot - but subverting it when he gets it working again almost immediately.
* FunTShirt: In the toy line, Berserko's shirt said "[[BadIsGoodAndGoodIsBad BAAAD is Good!]]"
* FunWithAcronyms: C.O.P.S. stands for '''C'''entral '''O'''rganization of '''P'''olice '''S'''pecialists.
* FrothyMugsOfWater: Lampshaded in "The Case of the Lawless Lady", where a waiter asks Mace if he wants a cocktail, and Mace says he doesn't drink. The waiter says, "Very good, sir!", walks off, and promptly says, "[[BreakingTheFourthWall Normally I wouldn't have said that, but this is television...]]"
* {{Gonk}} Pretty much all the bad guys except Nightshade aren't too good-looking. Ms. Demeanor is a rare example of a female character in such a cartoon who fits.
** This could be pinned to Peter Chung's work on the series -- while the C.O.P.S. and Nightshade all look normal, everyone else clearly shows signs of his art style. Several characters could be stuck into episodes of ''WesternAnimation/Phantom2040'' or ''WesternAnimation/AeonFlux'' and not be out of place.
* TheGreatWhodini: One of the characters from the unreleased third series of action figures was an evil StageMagician named "[[PunnyName The Great Felloni]]".
* HelicopterPack: Airwave uses one. Vowels, a character from the unreleased third wave of the action figure line, would have had one as well.
* HeroesWantRedheads: Again, Mace and Nightshade.
* HollywoodCyborg: Bulletproof and Buttons [=McBoomBoom=]. Also Blitz, in ''Franchise/{{Robocop}}'' fashion.
* HumongousMecha: We see that in the future ''pro sports'' incorporate these in "Case of the Big Bad Boxoids": there's no such thing as regular boxing anymore, instead they have two guys in twenty-foot mechsuits punching each other.
* TheHyena: The member of Big Boss' gang actually named Hyena. His ActionFigureFileCard notes that he's been "laughing continuously since childhood" and failed as a stand-up comic since he never stopped laughing at his own jokes -- while the audience never ''started'' laughing at them.
* IdiosyncraticEpisodeNaming: Each episode is titled "The Case of..."
* ImperialStormtrooperMarksmanshipAcademy: One toy-only villain has dozens of weapons related crimes on his rap sheet, but no violent crimes, thanks entirely to the fact that he's such a terrible shot that he's never actually managed to ''hit'' anything.
* InitialismTitle: The title is an acronym standing for '''C'''entral '''O'''rganization of '''P'''olice '''S'''pecialists.
* KlingonPromotion: In "The Case of the Crime Convention", Big Boss implies that he wasn't the first Big Boss and that he supplanted his predecessor after eliminating him.
* LampshadeHanging: In the final issue of the comic, the team went after Big Boss for an unpaid parking ticket, knowing that his gang would try to stop them--and [[JusticeByOtherLegalMeans racking up tons of charges they could pin on the previously untouchable Big Boss]]. As he was being put in the paddy wagon, he proclaimed that they'd never be able to make the charges stick, and that sort of thing happened only in comic books. Bulletproof [[BreakingTheFourthWall turned to the reader]] and said, "That's good enough for me."
* LastEpisodeNewCharacter: Airwave in "The Case of The Invisible Crime". He's one of the few characters from the second wave of the toy line to appear on the show.
* LawfulStupid: When Ms. Demeanor is arrested and sentenced to an experimental rehabilitation program, she is made to wear a [[RestrainingBolt mind-altering tiara]] that forces her to abide to the law. All laws. ''By the book.'' She finds a car parked three inches out of a space into a red zone and lifts it out by hand, destroying its tires (and presumably its suspension) when she drops it back down. The judge decides to pull the plug on the project when she arrests him [[AllCrimesAreEqual for littering.]]
* LeaveHimToMe: When Sundown's crooked former partner comes calling, he's taken off the case because it's too close to him - but he just can't let Johnny Yuma get away without a word.
* LetsGetDangerous: You know the C.O.P.S. are about to start thwarting the criminal scheme of the week when someone (usually Bulletproof) says "It's crime fighting time!"
* MadScientist: Dr. Badvibes of Big Boss' gang.
* MeaningfulName: BP "Bulletproof" Vess.
** Prince Baddin of Rashiland is in fact a naughty boy. In the epilogue to the episode in which he appears ("The Case of the Ransomed Rascal"), Bulletproof mentions that due to him keeping his resolve to change his behavior, [[MeaningfulRename the King officially changed his name to "Goodin".]]
* MerchandiseDriven: Like a lot of cartoons at the time, this one was made to promote a toyline.
* MonsterClown: The unreleased third series of the action figure line would have featured a whole gang of them called the Pranksters, led by an evil StageMagician called [[PunnyName The Great Felloni.]]
* MonumentalTheft: As a birthday present for Big Boss, Berserko tried to steal the Cornucopia Bridge.
* MotorMouth: Airwave in "The Case of The Invisible Crime".
* MundaneSolution: In one episode, Barricade and Mainframe find themselves trapped in a room with a rampaging robot bull. Barricade makes a plan to try to disable it by hitting its control panel with his battering ram. Mainframe simply unplugs its power cord.
* NiceJobFixingItVillain: In "The Case of Big Boss' Bye-Bye", Mainframe figures out that Big Boss and his gang are going to come out of retirement to do a big surprise heist when Buttons [=McBoomBoom=] goes to her new place of employment (a computer dating service) and mentions to her that he's going to become rich in the near future while she's setting up his profile. She takes that information to Bulletproof, who quickly figures out how he's planning to become rich overnight and then they take action to stop it.
* NotEvenBotheringWithTheAccent: While his father, the King of Rashiland, speaks in a decidedly foreign accent, young Prince Baddin speaks with a generic General American/TV accent.
* TheNudifier: In "The Case of the Spotless Kingpin", Big Boss has a suit made of a material that repels dirt, but ends up with a suit that attracts dirt instead because his suit got chemicals spilled on it during a skirmish with the C.O.P.S. At the end of the episode, Big Boss's assistant Squeeky Kleen uses an antidote that succeeds in getting rid of the dirt covering Big Boss, but has the side effect of destroying Big Boss's clothes, leaving him in an undershirt and boxer shorts with pigs on them.
* OffStageWaitingRoom: In "The Case of Big Boss' Bye Bye", Mayor Davis disbands the C.O.P.S. team as redundant while Big Boss' gang feigns retirement. The plot then shifts to only four of the ex-members, Bulletproof, Highway, Mace, and Mainframe and only their fates are shown[[note]]Bulletproof becomes a private eye, Highway remains a police officer as an ordinary patrolman, Mace becomes a garbage collector, and Mainframe gets work at a computer dating agency[[/note]] until [[spoiler: Big Boss and his gang come out of "retirement", the four ex-C.O.P.S. thwart their plans to rob a train carrying federal funds meant for relieving Empire City's financial crisis, and Mayor Davis [[StatusQuoIsGod re-forms]] the C.O.P.S. team.]] What the other members of the team were doing during [[spoiler: the period of the team's disbandment]] is never shown; [[spoiler: other C.O.P.S ''are'' shown returning to work at the end, though.]]
* OhCrap: All of the Crooks have a shocked/horrified expression as they're caught in the TitleSequence.
* OnceAnEpisode: At some point in most episodes, when the C.O.P.S. have the Crooks cornered, they will say "C.O.P.S.! You're under arrest!"[[note]]Or in some episodes, "We're C.O.P.S., and you're under arrest!"[[/note]]
* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: Virtually all of the C.O.P.S. and Crooks, to the point that Longarm is exclusively referred to by his codename by both his father and his son.
* OriginsEpisode: The two-part episode "The Case of C.O.P.S. File #1" reveals the circumstances of Bulletproof [[WeCanRebuildHim becoming a cyborg]] in addition to the founding of C.O.P.S. and their first confrontation with Big Boss and his goons.
* ParkingPayback: When Ms. Demeanour is made to wear a [[RestrainingBolt mind-altering tiara]] that forces her to abide to the law, she finds a car parked three inches out of a space into a red zone and lifts it out by hand, destroying its tires (and presumably its suspension) when she drops it back down.
* PityTheKidnapper: "The Case of the Ransomed Rascal" has Big Boss and his goons kidnap Prince Baddin, the bratty prince of Rashiland, in hopes of holding him for ransom. They quickly get so tired of his antics that they immediately send him to the C.O.P.S. in a crate. The C.O.P.S. open the crate to see that Baddin is wearing a shirt reading "Take Him Back" on the front and "Please" on the back.
* PoliceAreUseless: Defied. The C.O.P.S. are anything but incompetent and always prevail in thwarting the schemes of Big Boss and his lackeys.
* PoliticiansKissBabies: "The Case of the Sinister Spa" has a plot that involves the mayor of Empire City being hypnotized into making Berserko deputy mayor. One scene has Berserko as deputy mayor kissing a baby, who reacts by crying.
* PowerFist: Big Boss has a cybernetic right hand that gets a workout whenever he gets ''really'' steamed.
* PracticallyJoker: Hyena has quite a few similarities to ComicBook/TheJoker. His ActionFigureFileCard notes that he's "a criminal mastermind, capable of concocting and planning [the] most elaborate heists between fits of uncontrolled hilarity", his weapons include an ElectricJoyBuzzer and {{Explosive Cigar}}s, and one of his aliases is "Joe Kerr". Also, his past as a failed stand-up comic recalls ''ComicBook/TheKillingJoke''.
* PsychopathicManchild:
** Big Boss's flunkies Berserko and Rock Krusher are both essentially giant children.
** The Baby Badguys are this to the point that they mess up their own plans fighting over a rattle.
* PrettyInMink: A few, such as a huge white fox coat among the prizes Nightshade tried to steal from a BeautyContest. It turns out she could have even kept it if she hadn't tried to steal them.
* PublicServiceAnnouncement[=/=]AndKnowingIsHalfTheBattle: After every episode.
* PunnyName: Many of the names, including "Ms. Demeanor".
* TheQuietOne: Buttons [=McBoomBoom=] has speaking roles in very few episodes. Adding on to this, he has a low, sinister voice.
* ReadingTheStageDirectionsOutLoud: Big Boss does this while working on his keynote speech for the crime convention. "The hotel management would like me to inform you that someone has been stealing towels. Pause for laugh..."
* RestrainingBolt: When Ms. Demeanor is arrested and sentenced to an experimental rehabilitation program, she is made to wear a mind-altering tiara.
* RightHandCat: Big Boss' pet Scratch is actually a ''weasel'', because subtlety is for chumps.
* RobotBuddy: Buzzbomb, Dr. Badvibes' assistant.
* RoguesGallery: Fittingly enough, given that this is a police show. The recurring enemies are: Big Boss, Berserko, Dr. Badvibes, Nightshade, Buttons [=McBoomBoom=], Rock Krusher, Ms. Demeanor, and Turbo Tu-Tone.
* {{Ruritania}}: "The Case of the Ransomed Rascal" centers on an official visit to Empire City by the King of "Rashiland" (sp?), who brings along his naughty son Prince Baddin. The King looks a lot like a 19th-century monarch, complete with facial hair a la Emperor Franz Josef, but the Prince looks like an average North American kid.
* ShapeshifterSwanSong: "The Case of the Crook with a Thousand Faces" ends with Dr. Badvibes' shape-shifting robot Shifty overloading and falling over after assuming various forms.
* SharedUniverse[=/=]{{Rewrite}}[=/=]PlotHole: Hasbro recently decided that ALL of their 1980s cartoon franchises took place on the same planet. That may be fine for the ''G.I. Joe'' side of things (as noted, Checkpoint is stated to be the descendant of Beach Head, at least in the file cards -- though the cartoon never explicitly states it, it never denies it, either), but it does create a problem with ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers'', namely that one episode where the Crooks dress up as aliens and try to claim to be alien invaders. That episode states in no uncertain terms that Earth has never had any contact with aliens prior to that event (and since it was just the Crooks, they still had not). One could take that to mean that giant robots from another planet had also never stepped foot on the Earth in this series. Not that this recent retcon by Hasbro didn't have numerous issues between the other shows as-is (''G.I. Joe'' and ''Transformers'' had some connections established even in the 80's thanks to Season 3 of Transformers, but even that had certain plot problems, too), but this one pretty blatantly goes against prior established canon in a big way.
* ShoutOut:
** In the episode where Longarm's father tries to rejoin the force, the board of directors that signs the rejection form include Music/PaulMcCartney and UsefulNotes/MichaelJordan. When the C.O.P.S. computers list any sort of information, they are actually listing the supply inventory for the cartoon.
** The character Checkpoint's name is Wayne Sneeden III. According to his filecard, his father was a member of a top-secret military team that operated in the '80s and '90s. The ''Franchise/GIJoe'' member Beach Head happens to be named Wayne R. Sneeden.
** The ending of every episode may be an homage to ''Franchise/{{Dragnet}}'', and Bulletproof's tan overcoat may be a reference to ''Series/{{Columbo}}''.
** In the flashback origin episode "The Case of C.O.P.S. File #1", Berzerko and Turbo are driving a van labeled "Laughing Fish Movers" (the series predates ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheAnimatedSeries'' by several years, meaning it's a reference to the original Detective Comics story).
* SixthRanger: In the second year of the toy line, both the C.O.P.S. and Big Boss' gang got several new members. (Atypically for this trope, the new characters got very little exposure in the cartoon.) The canceled third year would have introduced even more new recruits.
* SixtyFiveEpisodeCartoon
* TheSmurfettePrinciple: ''C.O.P.S.'' had four major female characters, [[TwoGirlsToATeam two each]] for the C.O.P.S. and Big Boss' gang. None of them was [[ToylessToylineCharacter ever made as an action figure]], nor were they even planned for the unreleased third series. And to make matters worse, most of them had very few appearances (Mirage had a measly FOUR).
* TheStarscream: Ms. Demeanor in the comics. (Even in the cartoon, when she asks Big Boss if he trusts her, [[BrutalHonesty he specifically says no]].)
* StatusQuoIsGod: Despite the crooks usually being arrested at the end of any episode where they make a significant appearance and Bulletproof's closing narration that they went up the river for a long time, they're always back out by the next episode.
* StealTheSurroundings: What the Ultimate Crime Machine does in "The Case of C.O.P.S. File #1"; the bad guys use it to steal the City Mint, although the heroes predicted it. (Criminals go after loot, what building has the most of that?)
* ThemeMusicPowerUp: As was typical for 80's cartoons the theme usually played during the big action set piece that wrapped up the episode.
* TomboyAndGirlyGirl: Ms. Demeanor and Nightshade.
** Mainframe and Mirage surprisingly avert this, both being relatively even handed in design. Neither is overtly "girly" (with Mainframe only investigating a beauty pageant after the surprise suggestion that she should enter) and both have shown a few tomboyish traits (Mainframe directly picking up a dead mouse and Mirage carrying Mainframe on her shoulders while running uphill on a treadmill).
** While Ms. Demeanor is pretty blatantly a tomboy, she still gets offended if not treated like a lady.
* TreasureMap: One episode centered around Big Boss trying to find the hidden loot stash of a now deceased crime boss once arrested by Longarm's father, with the only clue to its location being a carving he made in a bar of soap. When the carving is lost due to the soap getting wet, the gang kidnaps Longarm's dad, as he's the only person who's studied the soap enough to remember what the carving looked like exactly.
* TrenchCoatWarfare: Buttons [=McBoomBoom=]
* TurnInYourBadge: In "The Case of Big Boss' Bye-Bye", Big Boss does a TenMinuteRetirement so that a cash-strapped Empire City will lay off all of the C.O.P.S.. Bulletproof becomes a P.I., figures out Big Boss' plan, and gets everyone back on the job.
-->'''Bulletproof:''' I'm placing you both under arrest!\\
'''Ms. Demeanor:''' You can't do that, you're not a cop anymore!\\
'''Bulletproof:''' ''Citizen's'' arrest.
* VerySpecialEpisode: The DrugsAreBad episode "The Case of The Lowest Crime", where the C.O.P.S. and Crooks team up to fight the distributors of [[FantasticDrug Crystal Twist]]. Big Boss agrees to help because "DRUGS KILL!" [[FridgeLogic Apparently he forgot that he was quite willing to attempt to kill the C.O.P.S. when they foiled his own crime schemes]].
** There actually is valid logic for it, because you can't make money off of dead people, so from a business perspective drugs kill off people he could continue making money off of (one can consider his exclaiming 'drugs kill' just leaves off the 'the suckers I make money off of' due to moral watchdog requirements, something many old-school real life crime bosses held to).
** On the other hand, he may just have a moral code. Killing police officers may have been an acceptable act if they got in the way (though more than often, he was content to capture and detain them), killing random people seemed beyond him... for that matter, why'd he let Addictem go rather than just having [=McBoomBoom=] shoot him?
*** Not that he ever actually killed ''anyone'' in the cartoon, the closest to the Crooks coming was Bulletproof's initial injury, which was an accident.
* VideoPhone: Video phones are the norm to the point that even public phone booths have screens; they are, after all, fighting crime in a future time. And yes, cell phones pretty much don't exist.
* VillainExclusivityClause: The Boss as the BigBad of every episode.
* WeaselMascot: Big Boss' pet weasel, Scratch.
* WeCanRebuildHim: How Bulletproof and Buttons become {{Hollywood Cyborg}}s.
** Blitz, too, seeing as he's largely an {{Expy}} of Max from ''Series/TheBionicWoman.''
*** Or, more likely of [[IncrediblyLamePun Robocop]].
* WhereDidTheyGetLasers: Averted - only Mace carries one (a laser ''bazooka'' no less) as the team's SWAT officer. Surprising, considering it ran during the same period as ''WesternAnimation/GIJoeARealAmericanHero'', and may have even been in the same continuity, and would have had more excuse due to being TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture.
** One noteworthy aspect of the laser bazooka was that it worked like a proper laser, with a coherent cutting beam. The norm for lasers in fiction at the time was to shoot an independent energy pulse.
* WhereTheHellIsSpringfield: Zig-zagged. Empire City's location is never stated outright, though it is a coastal city with an open harbor, which would place it on the east or west coast. However, the episode with Nightshade entering the beauty pageant featured her trying to escape by crossing state lines, by driving over the bridge spanning Empire City's main river- the sign at the state border read UsefulNotes/NewJersey, which makes the most likely location somewhere in Delaware, either the Dover or Lewes region.
** C'mon, ''Empire City?'' It's fairly obvious that's it's a futuristic UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity; New York State's nickname is the ''Empire State''.
** Actually, the aforementioned sign has "NEWER Jersey" written on it. Empire City would appear to be a thinly-veiled New York City or imitation/parody thereof.
* WorkOffTheDebt: In "The Case of the Disappearing Dough", Sundown, Bowser and Highway have to wash dishes at the restaurant they eat at because they're unable to pay as a result of the ink on their dollars disappearing.
* YouDontLookLikeYou: Small Guy and his two henchmen look '''drastically''' different between the two episodes that they appear in.
* [[YouKilledMyFather You Killed My Brother]]: In issue #1 of the comic, Big Boss blames Bulletproof for the imprisonment and death of his identical twin brother.
** This plot is never mentioned in the cartoon, although while it's implied that Berzerko's father is dead, he says his mother is still alive.
* YourTomcatIsPregnant: In "The Case of the Kangaroo Caper", Rock Krusher discovers that the boxing kangaroo Bruce is actually female when he sees that she has a joey in her pouch.
* {{Zeerust}}: Having been made 30 years before the show was actually set, this happens in spades.
** Video phones are on every street corner and in every home and business, but portable phones do not exist. Modern cell phones and iPhone types aren't even close, even 80s/90s style portable phones aren't used.
** Every computer seems to be running DOS and mice aren't ever used.
** VHS and audio cassette tapes are still used by everyone, as are floppy disks.
** Flying personal speeder craft and cars exist, although typical 4-wheeled cars are still used by the majority.
** The electrical connectors Bulletproof uses to interface with computers would likely be USB or Ethernet connectors these days. Or he'd be Bluetooth-compatible.
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to:

[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/C_O_P_S__8451.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:350:''"It's Crime Fighting Time."'']]

->''"C.O.P.S. Central Organization of Police Specialists. Fighting crime in a future time. Protecting Empire City from Big Boss and his gang of crooks."''
-->--'''Bulletproof''''s OpeningNarration

''C.O.P.S.'', which stands for '''C'''entral '''O'''rganization of '''P'''olice '''S'''pecialists, was an animated series produced by Creator/DiCEntertainment that premiered in 1988 as one of the many MerchandiseDriven [[SixtyFiveEpisodeCartoon 65-Episode Cartoons]] made for FirstRunSyndication. A few years later, it was re-run on Creator/{{CBS}}' Saturday morning schedule, this time under the name ''Cyber COPS'' [[Series/{{Cops}} for obvious reasons]]. The show was based on a toy line called ''C.O.P.S 'n' Crooks'', which were futuristic police and criminal based action figures produced by Creator/{{Hasbro}}.

Set in the year 2020, the show took place in the metropolis Empire City. The main story revolved around Agent Baldwin P. Vess, codename "Bulletproof", who has been sent out to stop Big Boss ([[Franchise/MetalGear no relation]]), a criminal mastermind who has taken over the city. However, after being attacked by the henchmen of Big Boss and suffering a near-fatal wound, Vess is taken to the hospital and given a new bullet-resistant torso. While he is recovering, he contacts Officer P.J. O'Malley (aka [=LongArm=]) and rookie Donny Brooks ([=HardTop=]) to find the best law enforcement officers around. They are able to recruit several people. Among them are David E. "Highway" Harlson, Colt "Mace" Howards, Stan "Barricade" Hyde, Tina "Mainframe" Cassidy, Walker "Sundown" Calhoun, Suzie "Mirage" Young, Hugh S. "Bullseye" Forward, and Rex "Bowser" Pointer and his robot dog, Blitz. Together these people make up C.O.P.S., using their combined power to stop Big Boss.

At the very same time as the cartoon, there was also a [[ComicBookAdaptation C.O.P.S. comic book]] by Creator/DCComics, which had a much different storyline that was DarkerAndEdgier.

Compare with ''Manga/YoureUnderArrest'', an {{anime}} with a similar (if not more realistic & relatively modern) perspective.
----
!!Central Organization of Trope Specialists:
* TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture: A cartoon from the 1980's that takes place in 2020.
* ActionFigureFileCard: The toys had them; they were written by Creator/LarryHama, who also wrote the ''WesternAnimation/GIJoeARealAmericanHero'' cards. This may explain the Checkpoint/Beach Head connection noted in AllThereInTheManual.
* AdultsDressedAsChildren: Small Guy and his gang do this as each member is around two-foot tall and pass themselves off as children, despite having the heads of middle aged men.
* AIIsACrapshoot: One episode centered around prototype robots that served as both police and judges. The project was an abysmal failure because Big Boss bribed one of the project leads into altering the judgement algorithms so they would always find his people innocent, even when they were caught red-handed. As a side effect, they also tended to sentence random civilians to multi-decade prison sentences for petty misdemeanors, making it a wonder that the program lasted as long as it did.
* AllThereInTheManual:
** Clues in the action figure profiles reveal that a member of C.O.P.S. (Checkpoint) is the descendant of a G.I. Joe member (Beach Head).
** Likewise for the setting date of 2020. They never once mention this in the series proper; only supplemental materials set an exact year.
* ActionHoggingOpening: The fast paced TitleSequence.
* TheAggressiveDrugDealer: One-off villain Addictum from "The Case of the Lowest Crime" operated this way, trying to sell his drug, "Crystal Twist" to a pair of girls, who promptly told the C.O.P.S.
* AndImTheQueenOfSheba: Berserko makes such a remark in "The Case of the Midas Touch".
-->'''Berserko''': If he's an innocent bystander, then I'm the tooth fairy!
* AndKnowingIsHalfTheBattle: Occasionally, with live-action segments!
* ArtisticLicenseLaw: Every Crook, regardless of their sentence, was out by the next episode and Big Boss roamed free despite everyone knowing he was a criminal, to maintain the status quo, although this can be explained by the fact that this show didn't really have any kind of direct continuity other than the file numbers given at the beginning and end of each episode. In any case, Empire City barely has more crime than Mayberry because one crime lord runs all the crime in the city and barely does more than bank robberies or technology thefts.[[note]]It's not entirely inaccurate, however. It's really less artistic license, and more a brief summary that [[LawOfConservationOfDetail doesn't go into details]].[[/note]]
** Perhaps the worst case is the two-parter "The Case of Big Boss' Master Plan" where Big Boss kidnaps the President of the United States, forces the C.O.P.S. into prison, and runs Empire City as his own personal domain. In the episode he's merely beaten and humiliated, with the incident eventually forgotten. In real life, he'd have had the Secret Service and the U.S. military on him so fast his head would spin, and AT BEST he'd have ended up in prison for life on multiple charges of terrorism and treason (among a pile of other charges) for even trying it.
*** This episode overall is so full of mistakes regarding real-life law enforcement and the security of the US president that it may be the reason later episodes (in production order, anyway) seem to ignore it happened. The Secret Service isn't present at all and the president takes her trip on a train with practically NO security as well as public knowledge of the trip. In real life she would have taken Air Force One and been surrounded by security.
* AxCrazy: Buttons [=McBoomBoom=] really loves to shoot things. His EstablishingCharacterMoment is right there on the opening credits when he ruins a robbery by wrecking a room with gunfire just because he didn't liked a butterfly that was flying around.
* BadassCrew: The Central Organization of Police Specialists fit this to a T.
* BagOfKidnapping: In "The Case of the Big Boss' Master Plan" Berserko kidnaps the United States President (who is an African American woman) with this method.
* {{Balloonacy}}: As a birthday present for Big Boss, Berserko tried to steal the Cornucopia Bridge, by inflating the world's largest balloon and blowing up the supports. The C.O.P.S. stop him before he can fire the explosives so we don't see the bridge fly, but their reaction upon seeing the huge balloon inflated inside the bridge says that it wouldn't work.
* BananaPeel: Buttons [=McBoomBoom=] slips on a banana peel in "The Case of the Bad Luck Burglar".
* BeautyContest: Big Boss send Nightshade and Ms. Demeanor in a beauty pageant to get his hands on the prizes. He also had the judges replaced with his goons. The C.O.P.S. had Mainframe enter the contest to stop the ploy. [[spoiler:In the aftermath, the real judges declared Nightshade the winner. [[DickDastardlyStopsToCheat Unfortunately, because her accomplices tampered with the process, she was disqualified.]]]]
* BedsheetLadder: Small Guy and his henchmen sneak out of the Lopsided Orphanage by climbing a ladder of bed sheets out the window in "The Case of the Baby Bad Guy".
* BerserkButton: Buttons ''really'' hated insects, to the point of sending out his double machine-guns at the mere sight of one.
** At the beginning of one episode, he's trying to kill a fly with a Tommy gun, and almost shoots Rock Krusher numerous times.
* BigBad: Big Boss is the main villain.
* BoundAndGagged: Seemed to happen on a fairly regular basis to the C.O.P.S. members. Both female C.O.P.S. got this on at least one occasion.
* BreathHoldingBrat: Prince Baddin, the spoiled son of the King of Rashiland, uses this technique to blackmail Longarm and Hardtop into taking him shopping for toys in "The Case of the Ransomed Rascal".
* ButtBiter: In "The Case of the Crook with a Thousand Faces", Blitz bites into a man's rear to prevent him from falling down an elevator shaft.
* ByTheLightsOfTheirEyes: "The Case of Mukluk's Luck" has a scene where Mukluk, Bullet and Rock Krusher enter a dark cave and are only seen by their eyes.
* CanadaEh: Inspector Yukon of the Mounties shows up in "The Case of Mukluk's Luck" to track down a short Canadian thief named Mukluk.
* CaptivityHarmonica: Sundown plays a harmonica while waiting in a cell in "The Case of the Disappearing Dough".
* CasanovaWannabe: Highway, although mostly in the comic.
* TheCaseOf: The episode titles all began with "The Case of...", for example "The Case of Big Boss' Master Plan".
* CatchPhrase:
** '"It's Crime Fighting Time!" and "Crime's a Wastin!"
** Bulletproof also has "Here's how the caper came down..." and "Case closed".
** Buzzbomb's beeping often becomes a robotic version of "Nya-nya-nya-nya-nya!", a common children's taunt.
** At the climax of almost every episode: "Freeze! We're C.O.P.S., and you're under arrest!"
* ClassyCatBurglar: Nightshade. She actually came from a rich family.
* ClothesMakeTheSuperman: In "The Case of the Blur Bandits" Dr. [=BadVibes=] makes custom speed suits for the Crooks that give them SuperSpeed, making them so fast that not even Highway can't keep up with them [[spoiler: until he gets his hand on Turbo Tu-Tone's suit that happens to be his size.]]
* CodeName: Each COP and Crook has one.
* CommunicationsOfficer: Airwave.
* ContemporaryCaveman: "The Case of the Cool Caveman" features a caveman thawing out and befriending Longarm's son.
* DatingCatwoman: The affair between Sgt. Mace and Nightshade.
* DaysOfFuturePast: A mild example. While the series takes place TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture, the setting takes some of its cues from the gangster films of TheThirties.
* DestroyTheSecurityCamera: In "The Case of the Criminal Mall", Dr. Badvibes shoots goo at the lens of the security camera of a mall that he is breaking into.
* DickDastardlyStopsToCheat: Nightshade entering, then ripping off, a beauty pageant (which she would've won fairly, had she held off for five minutes).
* DonutMessWithACop:
** Mace is shown taking a bite out of a donut and tossing it aside before apprehending a pair of crooks in the first part of the two-part episode "The Case of C.O.P.S. File #1".
** In "The Case of the Baby Bad Guy", Longarm remarks that he needs to cut back on the donuts when Small Guy eludes Longarm by going through an opening he's too big to follow him through.
* DrugsAreBad: "The Case of the Lowest Crime". Slightly more ballsy than your usual 80's anti-drug episode, portraying the addiction as truly life-wrecking, even going so far as to say some of the victims never fully recovered.
* DumbassHasAPoint: The final issue of the comics had the C.O.P.S. take down Big Boss through a BatmanGambit centered around Big Boss overreacting to the police showing up to talk to him about his gang's unpaid parking tickets. At one point Berserko suggests to his uncle that they get the police to go away by [[StatingTheSimpleSolution paying the fines]]. He is promptly glared into silence - apparently hardened criminals aren't supposed to pass up the opportunity to commit a crime, even when doing so gains them nothing.
* DumbMuscle: Rock Krusher and Berserko are both muscular brutes and not very bright.
* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness:
** In the initial episodes, Big Boss was a known criminal to the general public and would make open threats against the entire city using public broadcast monitors. Later on, he was regarded as a legit businessman with merely suspected but unproven criminal ties, and his own mother was unaware of any of this--which even Big Boss begged the C.O.P.S. to keep quiet because the knowledge could've upset or even killed her.
** The initial character concept artwork, used on the toy packages, gives Bulletproof a purple coat and black pants, and Dr. Badvibes has a normal-sized brain with a small dome over it. The Larry Hama file cards also have a superficial connection with the cartoon at best.
* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes: Berzerko may be dumb as a rock and a liability to his operations, but being his nephew, Big Boss keeps him around and even allies with the C.O.P.S. when he's almost killed by an accidental drug overdose. He also goes out of his way to keep his own mother from finding out that he's a criminal. because he doesn't want her hurt by the knowledge of it.
** There's also Nightshade, who has a little sister who doesn't know she's a crook.
* EvenEvilHasStandards:
** Big Boss refusing to help sell a designer drug because "Drugs kill!" His nephew Berserko nearly dying from an accidental overdose of the drug didn't help, although he'd already turned the dealer down before then. Berserko's near-death led to a [[EnemyMine temporary truce]] between the C.O.P.S. team and Big Boss' gang until they caught the drug dealer.
--->'''Big Boss:''' Shut up! In my time, I’ve committed many crimes, I want to earn money in the worst possible way, but selling drugs is where I draw the line, creep! DRUGS KILL!
** In "The Case of the Bogus Bride", Berserko states that polygamy is illegal in Empire City and is apparently unwilling to violate that law.
--->'''Berserko:''' I can't marry both of them. It ain't legal!!
** Nightshade is implied to be an example. She may not even really be evil at all, even if she is a Crook.
* [[EveryCarIsAPinto Every Skateboard Is a Pinto]]: "The Case of The Bogus Justice Machines" has two kids fall off their skateboards which run into a stack of boxes ''and explode.'' Seriously.
* EveryEpisodeEnding: Bulletproof gives the lowdown on how everything ultimately turned out and repeats both the file number and episode name followed by "Case Closed".
* EverythingIsBigInTexas: Sundown specifically points this out when he can't fit into Turbo Tu-Tone's SuperSpeed suit. "Shoot, this thing's plum too small! Sorry, but we're grown big down in Texas."
* EverythingsSparklyWithJewelry: Nightshade's favorite target.
* FairCop: Pretty much all of them, seeing as in most cases here, BeautyEqualsGoodness.
** While it's not her defining trait, Mainframe is beautiful (and talented) enough to enter a beauty pageant as an UndercoverModel to counter the Crooks' own entries of Nightshade and Ms. Demeanor since the latter two will undoubtedly cheat (and do.) [[spoiler: Nightshade wins fairly, surprisingly, but then gets disqualified for the cheating. See DickDastardlyStopsToCheat above.]]
* FantasticDrug: Crystal Twist, a hexagon-shaped crystal that glows when absorbed through the skin. In "The Case of the Lowest Crime," Berserko falls into a crate full of the stuff and goes into a coma.
* FamilyFriendlyFirearms: Averted. While a bit more hi-tech, given the setting, all the guns shown shoot real bullets. Mace's laser bazooka is the exception. However, the cops don't actually shoot the bullets at ''crooks'', preferring to use ImprobableAimingSkills to trigger environmental effects to trip them up, like bursting pipes.
* FlowersForAlgernonSyndrome: In "The Case of The Brilliant Berserko", Berserko steals a "chess crown" meant to augment intelligence and becomes a well-mannered (if still criminal) supergenius. In the middle of the episode, the battery momentarily fails, setting up the common "it's just temporary" plot - but subverting it when he gets it working again almost immediately.
* FunTShirt: In the toy line, Berserko's shirt said "[[BadIsGoodAndGoodIsBad BAAAD is Good!]]"
* FunWithAcronyms: C.O.P.S. stands for '''C'''entral '''O'''rganization of '''P'''olice '''S'''pecialists.
* FrothyMugsOfWater: Lampshaded in "The Case of the Lawless Lady", where a waiter asks Mace if he wants a cocktail, and Mace says he doesn't drink. The waiter says, "Very good, sir!", walks off, and promptly says, "[[BreakingTheFourthWall Normally I wouldn't have said that, but this is television...]]"
* {{Gonk}} Pretty much all the bad guys except Nightshade aren't too good-looking. Ms. Demeanor is a rare example of a female character in such a cartoon who fits.
** This could be pinned to Peter Chung's work on the series -- while the C.O.P.S. and Nightshade all look normal, everyone else clearly shows signs of his art style. Several characters could be stuck into episodes of ''WesternAnimation/Phantom2040'' or ''WesternAnimation/AeonFlux'' and not be out of place.
* TheGreatWhodini: One of the characters from the unreleased third series of action figures was an evil StageMagician named "[[PunnyName The Great Felloni]]".
* HelicopterPack: Airwave uses one. Vowels, a character from the unreleased third wave of the action figure line, would have had one as well.
* HeroesWantRedheads: Again, Mace and Nightshade.
* HollywoodCyborg: Bulletproof and Buttons [=McBoomBoom=]. Also Blitz, in ''Franchise/{{Robocop}}'' fashion.
* HumongousMecha: We see that in the future ''pro sports'' incorporate these in "Case of the Big Bad Boxoids": there's no such thing as regular boxing anymore, instead they have two guys in twenty-foot mechsuits punching each other.
* TheHyena: The member of Big Boss' gang actually named Hyena. His ActionFigureFileCard notes that he's been "laughing continuously since childhood" and failed as a stand-up comic since he never stopped laughing at his own jokes -- while the audience never ''started'' laughing at them.
* IdiosyncraticEpisodeNaming: Each episode is titled "The Case of..."
* ImperialStormtrooperMarksmanshipAcademy: One toy-only villain has dozens of weapons related crimes on his rap sheet, but no violent crimes, thanks entirely to the fact that he's such a terrible shot that he's never actually managed to ''hit'' anything.
* InitialismTitle: The title is an acronym standing for '''C'''entral '''O'''rganization of '''P'''olice '''S'''pecialists.
* KlingonPromotion: In "The Case of the Crime Convention", Big Boss implies that he wasn't the first Big Boss and that he supplanted his predecessor after eliminating him.
* LampshadeHanging: In the final issue of the comic, the team went after Big Boss for an unpaid parking ticket, knowing that his gang would try to stop them--and [[JusticeByOtherLegalMeans racking up tons of charges they could pin on the previously untouchable Big Boss]]. As he was being put in the paddy wagon, he proclaimed that they'd never be able to make the charges stick, and that sort of thing happened only in comic books. Bulletproof [[BreakingTheFourthWall turned to the reader]] and said, "That's good enough for me."
* LastEpisodeNewCharacter: Airwave in "The Case of The Invisible Crime". He's one of the few characters from the second wave of the toy line to appear on the show.
* LawfulStupid: When Ms. Demeanor is arrested and sentenced to an experimental rehabilitation program, she is made to wear a [[RestrainingBolt mind-altering tiara]] that forces her to abide to the law. All laws. ''By the book.'' She finds a car parked three inches out of a space into a red zone and lifts it out by hand, destroying its tires (and presumably its suspension) when she drops it back down. The judge decides to pull the plug on the project when she arrests him [[AllCrimesAreEqual for littering.]]
* LeaveHimToMe: When Sundown's crooked former partner comes calling, he's taken off the case because it's too close to him - but he just can't let Johnny Yuma get away without a word.
* LetsGetDangerous: You know the C.O.P.S. are about to start thwarting the criminal scheme of the week when someone (usually Bulletproof) says "It's crime fighting time!"
* MadScientist: Dr. Badvibes of Big Boss' gang.
* MeaningfulName: BP "Bulletproof" Vess.
** Prince Baddin of Rashiland is in fact a naughty boy. In the epilogue to the episode in which he appears ("The Case of the Ransomed Rascal"), Bulletproof mentions that due to him keeping his resolve to change his behavior, [[MeaningfulRename the King officially changed his name to "Goodin".]]
* MerchandiseDriven: Like a lot of cartoons at the time, this one was made to promote a toyline.
* MonsterClown: The unreleased third series of the action figure line would have featured a whole gang of them called the Pranksters, led by an evil StageMagician called [[PunnyName The Great Felloni.]]
* MonumentalTheft: As a birthday present for Big Boss, Berserko tried to steal the Cornucopia Bridge.
* MotorMouth: Airwave in "The Case of The Invisible Crime".
* MundaneSolution: In one episode, Barricade and Mainframe find themselves trapped in a room with a rampaging robot bull. Barricade makes a plan to try to disable it by hitting its control panel with his battering ram. Mainframe simply unplugs its power cord.
* NiceJobFixingItVillain: In "The Case of Big Boss' Bye-Bye", Mainframe figures out that Big Boss and his gang are going to come out of retirement to do a big surprise heist when Buttons [=McBoomBoom=] goes to her new place of employment (a computer dating service) and mentions to her that he's going to become rich in the near future while she's setting up his profile. She takes that information to Bulletproof, who quickly figures out how he's planning to become rich overnight and then they take action to stop it.
* NotEvenBotheringWithTheAccent: While his father, the King of Rashiland, speaks in a decidedly foreign accent, young Prince Baddin speaks with a generic General American/TV accent.
* TheNudifier: In "The Case of the Spotless Kingpin", Big Boss has a suit made of a material that repels dirt, but ends up with a suit that attracts dirt instead because his suit got chemicals spilled on it during a skirmish with the C.O.P.S. At the end of the episode, Big Boss's assistant Squeeky Kleen uses an antidote that succeeds in getting rid of the dirt covering Big Boss, but has the side effect of destroying Big Boss's clothes, leaving him in an undershirt and boxer shorts with pigs on them.
* OffStageWaitingRoom: In "The Case of Big Boss' Bye Bye", Mayor Davis disbands the C.O.P.S. team as redundant while Big Boss' gang feigns retirement. The plot then shifts to only four of the ex-members, Bulletproof, Highway, Mace, and Mainframe and only their fates are shown[[note]]Bulletproof becomes a private eye, Highway remains a police officer as an ordinary patrolman, Mace becomes a garbage collector, and Mainframe gets work at a computer dating agency[[/note]] until [[spoiler: Big Boss and his gang come out of "retirement", the four ex-C.O.P.S. thwart their plans to rob a train carrying federal funds meant for relieving Empire City's financial crisis, and Mayor Davis [[StatusQuoIsGod re-forms]] the C.O.P.S. team.]] What the other members of the team were doing during [[spoiler: the period of the team's disbandment]] is never shown; [[spoiler: other C.O.P.S ''are'' shown returning to work at the end, though.]]
* OhCrap: All of the Crooks have a shocked/horrified expression as they're caught in the TitleSequence.
* OnceAnEpisode: At some point in most episodes, when the C.O.P.S. have the Crooks cornered, they will say "C.O.P.S.! You're under arrest!"[[note]]Or in some episodes, "We're C.O.P.S., and you're under arrest!"[[/note]]
* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: Virtually all of the C.O.P.S. and Crooks, to the point that Longarm is exclusively referred to by his codename by both his father and his son.
* OriginsEpisode: The two-part episode "The Case of C.O.P.S. File #1" reveals the circumstances of Bulletproof [[WeCanRebuildHim becoming a cyborg]] in addition to the founding of C.O.P.S. and their first confrontation with Big Boss and his goons.
* ParkingPayback: When Ms. Demeanour is made to wear a [[RestrainingBolt mind-altering tiara]] that forces her to abide to the law, she finds a car parked three inches out of a space into a red zone and lifts it out by hand, destroying its tires (and presumably its suspension) when she drops it back down.
* PityTheKidnapper: "The Case of the Ransomed Rascal" has Big Boss and his goons kidnap Prince Baddin, the bratty prince of Rashiland, in hopes of holding him for ransom. They quickly get so tired of his antics that they immediately send him to the C.O.P.S. in a crate. The C.O.P.S. open the crate to see that Baddin is wearing a shirt reading "Take Him Back" on the front and "Please" on the back.
* PoliceAreUseless: Defied. The C.O.P.S. are anything but incompetent and always prevail in thwarting the schemes of Big Boss and his lackeys.
* PoliticiansKissBabies: "The Case of the Sinister Spa" has a plot that involves the mayor of Empire City being hypnotized into making Berserko deputy mayor. One scene has Berserko as deputy mayor kissing a baby, who reacts by crying.
* PowerFist: Big Boss has a cybernetic right hand that gets a workout whenever he gets ''really'' steamed.
* PracticallyJoker: Hyena has quite a few similarities to ComicBook/TheJoker. His ActionFigureFileCard notes that he's "a criminal mastermind, capable of concocting and planning [the] most elaborate heists between fits of uncontrolled hilarity", his weapons include an ElectricJoyBuzzer and {{Explosive Cigar}}s, and one of his aliases is "Joe Kerr". Also, his past as a failed stand-up comic recalls ''ComicBook/TheKillingJoke''.
* PsychopathicManchild:
** Big Boss's flunkies Berserko and Rock Krusher are both essentially giant children.
** The Baby Badguys are this to the point that they mess up their own plans fighting over a rattle.
* PrettyInMink: A few, such as a huge white fox coat among the prizes Nightshade tried to steal from a BeautyContest. It turns out she could have even kept it if she hadn't tried to steal them.
* PublicServiceAnnouncement[=/=]AndKnowingIsHalfTheBattle: After every episode.
* PunnyName: Many of the names, including "Ms. Demeanor".
* TheQuietOne: Buttons [=McBoomBoom=] has speaking roles in very few episodes. Adding on to this, he has a low, sinister voice.
* ReadingTheStageDirectionsOutLoud: Big Boss does this while working on his keynote speech for the crime convention. "The hotel management would like me to inform you that someone has been stealing towels. Pause for laugh..."
* RestrainingBolt: When Ms. Demeanor is arrested and sentenced to an experimental rehabilitation program, she is made to wear a mind-altering tiara.
* RightHandCat: Big Boss' pet Scratch is actually a ''weasel'', because subtlety is for chumps.
* RobotBuddy: Buzzbomb, Dr. Badvibes' assistant.
* RoguesGallery: Fittingly enough, given that this is a police show. The recurring enemies are: Big Boss, Berserko, Dr. Badvibes, Nightshade, Buttons [=McBoomBoom=], Rock Krusher, Ms. Demeanor, and Turbo Tu-Tone.
* {{Ruritania}}: "The Case of the Ransomed Rascal" centers on an official visit to Empire City by the King of "Rashiland" (sp?), who brings along his naughty son Prince Baddin. The King looks a lot like a 19th-century monarch, complete with facial hair a la Emperor Franz Josef, but the Prince looks like an average North American kid.
* ShapeshifterSwanSong: "The Case of the Crook with a Thousand Faces" ends with Dr. Badvibes' shape-shifting robot Shifty overloading and falling over after assuming various forms.
* SharedUniverse[=/=]{{Rewrite}}[=/=]PlotHole: Hasbro recently decided that ALL of their 1980s cartoon franchises took place on the same planet. That may be fine for the ''G.I. Joe'' side of things (as noted, Checkpoint is stated to be the descendant of Beach Head, at least in the file cards -- though the cartoon never explicitly states it, it never denies it, either), but it does create a problem with ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers'', namely that one episode where the Crooks dress up as aliens and try to claim to be alien invaders. That episode states in no uncertain terms that Earth has never had any contact with aliens prior to that event (and since it was just the Crooks, they still had not). One could take that to mean that giant robots from another planet had also never stepped foot on the Earth in this series. Not that this recent retcon by Hasbro didn't have numerous issues between the other shows as-is (''G.I. Joe'' and ''Transformers'' had some connections established even in the 80's thanks to Season 3 of Transformers, but even that had certain plot problems, too), but this one pretty blatantly goes against prior established canon in a big way.
* ShoutOut:
** In the episode where Longarm's father tries to rejoin the force, the board of directors that signs the rejection form include Music/PaulMcCartney and UsefulNotes/MichaelJordan. When the C.O.P.S. computers list any sort of information, they are actually listing the supply inventory for the cartoon.
** The character Checkpoint's name is Wayne Sneeden III. According to his filecard, his father was a member of a top-secret military team that operated in the '80s and '90s. The ''Franchise/GIJoe'' member Beach Head happens to be named Wayne R. Sneeden.
** The ending of every episode may be an homage to ''Franchise/{{Dragnet}}'', and Bulletproof's tan overcoat may be a reference to ''Series/{{Columbo}}''.
** In the flashback origin episode "The Case of C.O.P.S. File #1", Berzerko and Turbo are driving a van labeled "Laughing Fish Movers" (the series predates ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheAnimatedSeries'' by several years, meaning it's a reference to the original Detective Comics story).
* SixthRanger: In the second year of the toy line, both the C.O.P.S. and Big Boss' gang got several new members. (Atypically for this trope, the new characters got very little exposure in the cartoon.) The canceled third year would have introduced even more new recruits.
* SixtyFiveEpisodeCartoon
* TheSmurfettePrinciple: ''C.O.P.S.'' had four major female characters, [[TwoGirlsToATeam two each]] for the C.O.P.S. and Big Boss' gang. None of them was [[ToylessToylineCharacter ever made as an action figure]], nor were they even planned for the unreleased third series. And to make matters worse, most of them had very few appearances (Mirage had a measly FOUR).
* TheStarscream: Ms. Demeanor in the comics. (Even in the cartoon, when she asks Big Boss if he trusts her, [[BrutalHonesty he specifically says no]].)
* StatusQuoIsGod: Despite the crooks usually being arrested at the end of any episode where they make a significant appearance and Bulletproof's closing narration that they went up the river for a long time, they're always back out by the next episode.
* StealTheSurroundings: What the Ultimate Crime Machine does in "The Case of C.O.P.S. File #1"; the bad guys use it to steal the City Mint, although the heroes predicted it. (Criminals go after loot, what building has the most of that?)
* ThemeMusicPowerUp: As was typical for 80's cartoons the theme usually played during the big action set piece that wrapped up the episode.
* TomboyAndGirlyGirl: Ms. Demeanor and Nightshade.
** Mainframe and Mirage surprisingly avert this, both being relatively even handed in design. Neither is overtly "girly" (with Mainframe only investigating a beauty pageant after the surprise suggestion that she should enter) and both have shown a few tomboyish traits (Mainframe directly picking up a dead mouse and Mirage carrying Mainframe on her shoulders while running uphill on a treadmill).
** While Ms. Demeanor is pretty blatantly a tomboy, she still gets offended if not treated like a lady.
* TreasureMap: One episode centered around Big Boss trying to find the hidden loot stash of a now deceased crime boss once arrested by Longarm's father, with the only clue to its location being a carving he made in a bar of soap. When the carving is lost due to the soap getting wet, the gang kidnaps Longarm's dad, as he's the only person who's studied the soap enough to remember what the carving looked like exactly.
* TrenchCoatWarfare: Buttons [=McBoomBoom=]
* TurnInYourBadge: In "The Case of Big Boss' Bye-Bye", Big Boss does a TenMinuteRetirement so that a cash-strapped Empire City will lay off all of the C.O.P.S.. Bulletproof becomes a P.I., figures out Big Boss' plan, and gets everyone back on the job.
-->'''Bulletproof:''' I'm placing you both under arrest!\\
'''Ms. Demeanor:''' You can't do that, you're not a cop anymore!\\
'''Bulletproof:''' ''Citizen's'' arrest.
* VerySpecialEpisode: The DrugsAreBad episode "The Case of The Lowest Crime", where the C.O.P.S. and Crooks team up to fight the distributors of [[FantasticDrug Crystal Twist]]. Big Boss agrees to help because "DRUGS KILL!" [[FridgeLogic Apparently he forgot that he was quite willing to attempt to kill the C.O.P.S. when they foiled his own crime schemes]].
** There actually is valid logic for it, because you can't make money off of dead people, so from a business perspective drugs kill off people he could continue making money off of (one can consider his exclaiming 'drugs kill' just leaves off the 'the suckers I make money off of' due to moral watchdog requirements, something many old-school real life crime bosses held to).
** On the other hand, he may just have a moral code. Killing police officers may have been an acceptable act if they got in the way (though more than often, he was content to capture and detain them), killing random people seemed beyond him... for that matter, why'd he let Addictem go rather than just having [=McBoomBoom=] shoot him?
*** Not that he ever actually killed ''anyone'' in the cartoon, the closest to the Crooks coming was Bulletproof's initial injury, which was an accident.
* VideoPhone: Video phones are the norm to the point that even public phone booths have screens; they are, after all, fighting crime in a future time. And yes, cell phones pretty much don't exist.
* VillainExclusivityClause: The Boss as the BigBad of every episode.
* WeaselMascot: Big Boss' pet weasel, Scratch.
* WeCanRebuildHim: How Bulletproof and Buttons become {{Hollywood Cyborg}}s.
** Blitz, too, seeing as he's largely an {{Expy}} of Max from ''Series/TheBionicWoman.''
*** Or, more likely of [[IncrediblyLamePun Robocop]].
* WhereDidTheyGetLasers: Averted - only Mace carries one (a laser ''bazooka'' no less) as the team's SWAT officer. Surprising, considering it ran during the same period as ''WesternAnimation/GIJoeARealAmericanHero'', and may have even been in the same continuity, and would have had more excuse due to being TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture.
** One noteworthy aspect of the laser bazooka was that it worked like a proper laser, with a coherent cutting beam. The norm for lasers in fiction at the time was to shoot an independent energy pulse.
* WhereTheHellIsSpringfield: Zig-zagged. Empire City's location is never stated outright, though it is a coastal city with an open harbor, which would place it on the east or west coast. However, the episode with Nightshade entering the beauty pageant featured her trying to escape by crossing state lines, by driving over the bridge spanning Empire City's main river- the sign at the state border read UsefulNotes/NewJersey, which makes the most likely location somewhere in Delaware, either the Dover or Lewes region.
** C'mon, ''Empire City?'' It's fairly obvious that's it's a futuristic UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity; New York State's nickname is the ''Empire State''.
** Actually, the aforementioned sign has "NEWER Jersey" written on it. Empire City would appear to be a thinly-veiled New York City or imitation/parody thereof.
* WorkOffTheDebt: In "The Case of the Disappearing Dough", Sundown, Bowser and Highway have to wash dishes at the restaurant they eat at because they're unable to pay as a result of the ink on their dollars disappearing.
* YouDontLookLikeYou: Small Guy and his two henchmen look '''drastically''' different between the two episodes that they appear in.
* [[YouKilledMyFather You Killed My Brother]]: In issue #1 of the comic, Big Boss blames Bulletproof for the imprisonment and death of his identical twin brother.
** This plot is never mentioned in the cartoon, although while it's implied that Berzerko's father is dead, he says his mother is still alive.
* YourTomcatIsPregnant: In "The Case of the Kangaroo Caper", Rock Krusher discovers that the boxing kangaroo Bruce is actually female when he sees that she has a joey in her pouch.
* {{Zeerust}}: Having been made 30 years before the show was actually set, this happens in spades.
** Video phones are on every street corner and in every home and business, but portable phones do not exist. Modern cell phones and iPhone types aren't even close, even 80s/90s style portable phones aren't used.
** Every computer seems to be running DOS and mice aren't ever used.
** VHS and audio cassette tapes are still used by everyone, as are floppy disks.
** Flying personal speeder craft and cars exist, although typical 4-wheeled cars are still used by the majority.
** The electrical connectors Bulletproof uses to interface with computers would likely be USB or Ethernet connectors these days. Or he'd be Bluetooth-compatible.
----
[[redirect:WesternAnimation/COPS1988]]
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* {{Balloonacy}}: As a birthday present for Big Boss, Berserko tried to steal the Cornucopia Bridge, by inflating the world's largest balloon and blowing up the supports. The C.O.P.S. stop him before he can fire the explosives so we don't see the bridge fly, but their reaction upon seeing the huge balloon inflated inside the bridge says that [[RealityEnsues it wouldn't work]].

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* {{Balloonacy}}: As a birthday present for Big Boss, Berserko tried to steal the Cornucopia Bridge, by inflating the world's largest balloon and blowing up the supports. The C.O.P.S. stop him before he can fire the explosives so we don't see the bridge fly, but their reaction upon seeing the huge balloon inflated inside the bridge says that [[RealityEnsues it wouldn't work]].work.
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* DestroyTheSecurityCamera: In "The Case of the Criminal Mall", Dr. Badvibes shoots goo at the lens of the security camera of a mall that he is breaking into.
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* MundaneSolution: In one episode, Barricade and Mainframe find themselves trapped in a room with a rampaging robot bull. Barricade makes a plan to try to disable it by hitting its control panel with his battering ram. Mainframe simply unplugs its power cord.
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* DumbassHasAPoint: The final issue of the comics had the C.O.P.S. take down Big Boss through a BatmanGambit centered around Big Boss overreacting to the police showing up to talk to him about his gang's unpaid parking tickets. At one point Berserko suggests to his uncle that they get the police to go away by [[StatingTheSimpleSolution paying the fines]]. He is promptly glared into silence - apparently hardened criminals aren't supposed to pass up the opportunity to commit a crime, even when doing so gains them nothing.
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* TreasureMap: One episode centered around Big Boss trying to find the hidden loot stash of a now deceased crime boss once arrested by Longarm's father, with the only clue to its location being a carving he made in a bar of soap. When the carving is lost due to the soap getting wet, the gang kidnaps Longarm's dad, as he's the only person who's studied the soap enough to remember what the carving looked like exactly.

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* SharedUniverse[=/=]{{Rewrite}}[=/=]PlotHole: Hasbro recently decided that ALL of their 1980s cartoon franchises took place on the same planet. That may be fine for the ''G.I. Joe'' side of things (at least one character is stated to be the son of a G.I. Joe member, at least in the file cards- though the cartoon never explicitly states it, it never denies it, either), but it does create a problem with ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers'', namely that one episode where the Crooks dress up as aliens and try to claim to be alien invaders. That episode states in no uncertain terms that Earth has never had any contact with aliens prior to that event (and since it was just the Crooks, they still had not). One could take that to mean that giant robots from another planet had also never stepped foot on the Earth in this series. Not that this recent retcon by Hasbro didn't have numerous issues between the other shows as-is (''G.I. Joe'' and ''Transformers'' had some connections established even in the 80's thanks to Season 3 of Transformers, but even that had certain plot problems, too), but this one pretty blatantly goes against prior established canon in a big way.

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* SharedUniverse[=/=]{{Rewrite}}[=/=]PlotHole: Hasbro recently decided that ALL of their 1980s cartoon franchises took place on the same planet. That may be fine for the ''G.I. Joe'' side of things (at least one character (as noted, Checkpoint is stated to be the son descendant of a G.I. Joe member, Beach Head, at least in the file cards- cards -- though the cartoon never explicitly states it, it never denies it, either), but it does create a problem with ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers'', namely that one episode where the Crooks dress up as aliens and try to claim to be alien invaders. That episode states in no uncertain terms that Earth has never had any contact with aliens prior to that event (and since it was just the Crooks, they still had not). One could take that to mean that giant robots from another planet had also never stepped foot on the Earth in this series. Not that this recent retcon by Hasbro didn't have numerous issues between the other shows as-is (''G.I. Joe'' and ''Transformers'' had some connections established even in the 80's thanks to Season 3 of Transformers, but even that had certain plot problems, too), but this one pretty blatantly goes against prior established canon in a big way.


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* SixthRanger: In the second year of the toy line, both the C.O.P.S. and Big Boss' gang got several new members. (Atypically for this trope, the new characters got very little exposure in the cartoon.) The canceled third year would have introduced even more new recruits.
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* FamilyFriendlyFirearms: While a bit more hi-tech, given the setting, all the guns shown shoot real bullets. Mace's laser bazooka is the exception.

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* FamilyFriendlyFirearms: Averted. While a bit more hi-tech, given the setting, all the guns shown shoot real bullets. Mace's laser bazooka is the exception. However, the cops don't actually shoot the bullets at ''crooks'', preferring to use ImprobableAimingSkills to trigger environmental effects to trip them up, like bursting pipes.
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* NiceJobFixingItVillain: In "The Case of Big Boss' Bye-Bye", Mainframe figures out that Big Boss and his gang are going to come out of retirement to do a big surprise heist when Buttons [=McBoomBoom=] goes to her new place of employment (a computer dating service) and mentions to her that he's going to become rich in the near future while she's setting up his dating profile.

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* NiceJobFixingItVillain: In "The Case of Big Boss' Bye-Bye", Mainframe figures out that Big Boss and his gang are going to come out of retirement to do a big surprise heist when Buttons [=McBoomBoom=] goes to her new place of employment (a computer dating service) and mentions to her that he's going to become rich in the near future while she's setting up his dating profile.profile. She takes that information to Bulletproof, who quickly figures out how he's planning to become rich overnight and then they take action to stop it.
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* NiceJobFixingItVillain: In "The Case of Big Boss' Bye-Bye", Mainframe figures out that Big Boss and his gang are going to come out of retirement to do a big surprise heist when Buttons [=McBoomBoom=] goes to her new place of employment (a computer dating service) and mentions to her that he's going to become rich in the near future while she's setting up his dating profile.

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* AIIsACrapshoot: One episode centered around prototype robots that served as both police and judges. The project was an abysmal failure because Big Boss bribed one of the project leads into altering the judgement algorithms so they would always find his people innocent, even when they were caught red-handed. As a side effect, they also tended to sentence random civilians to multi-decade prison sentences for petty misdemeanors, making it a wonder that the program lasted as long as it did.



* LetsGetDangerous: You know the C.O.P.S. are about to start thwarting the criminal scheme of the week when Bulletproof says "It's crime fighting time!"

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* LetsGetDangerous: You know the C.O.P.S. are about to start thwarting the criminal scheme of the week when Bulletproof someone (usually Bulletproof) says "It's crime fighting time!"
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* BananaPeel: Buttons [=McBoomBoom=] slips on a banana peel in "The Case of the Bad Luck Burglar".
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* TheNudifier: In "The Case of the Spotless Kingpin", Big Boss has a suit made of a material that repels dirt, but ends up with a suit that attracts dirt instead because his suit got chemicals spilled on it during a skirmish with the C.O.P.S. At the end of the episode, Big Boss's assistant Squeeky Kleen uses an antidote that succeeds in getting rid of the dirt covering Big Boss, but has the side effect of destroying Big Boss's clothes, leaving him in an undershirt and boxer shorts with pigs on them.

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