VERY nice guns - both of them. Those are real "Golden Era" guns. Post more if you have them.
My regular Mod 81 (.35 Rem) is nice, but yours is a lot nicer. I have been going to gun shows for several decades but have only seen two of the police-types for sale, and they were both owned by the same person. (and not cheap)
If you reload, one fun thing you can do is load up a few rounds using .357 Magnum 125 gr JHP pistol bullets. (Modern manuals don't list loadings for such, but if you dig through the old manuals you can find loading data.)
At well over twice the velocity for which they are designed to expand, they cause *major* disruption of cabbages and watermelons. Put a cabbage on a stump or old 5-gallon bucket and when you hit it with with one of those 125 gr bullets you get a sphere of flying cabbage fragments about 20 feet in diameter. (Looks like a Star-Wars computer-graphic of a planet blowing up.)
One further interesting aspect of shooting those is that the recoil momentum is just enough to work the action and the fired brass is deposited right on the magazine follower. You don't even have to chase the brass.
My regular Mod 81 (.35 Rem) is nice, but yours is a lot nicer. I have been going to gun shows for several decades but have only seen two of the police-types for sale, and they were both owned by the same person. (and not cheap)
If you reload, one fun thing you can do is load up a few rounds using .357 Magnum 125 gr JHP pistol bullets. (Modern manuals don't list loadings for such, but if you dig through the old manuals you can find loading data.)
At well over twice the velocity for which they are designed to expand, they cause *major* disruption of cabbages and watermelons. Put a cabbage on a stump or old 5-gallon bucket and when you hit it with with one of those 125 gr bullets you get a sphere of flying cabbage fragments about 20 feet in diameter. (Looks like a Star-Wars computer-graphic of a planet blowing up.)
One further interesting aspect of shooting those is that the recoil momentum is just enough to work the action and the fired brass is deposited right on the magazine follower. You don't even have to chase the brass.