What does ‘Scotland Yard’ mean to you, if anything

I think British investigation in general. Used to think of it as more London-focused until the polonium-210 poisoning incident.

But the impression given by Arthur Conan Doyle in his books (yes, many many years ago,) was always that Scotland Yard was incompetent and more of a hindrance to justice than a help.

That’s more of what I think of it as, and also London-focused. I don’t really quite think of it as FBI, though–to me, I think more of MI5 for that, but, yeah, it’s not quite split up the same way.

An address linked to British Police, HQish types (it’s not just “a police station which happens to be famous”), not sure which specific body is it assigned to. Mystery writers tend to use the name either to mean “the police” or, if some of the characters are station cops, to mean “the brass”; specific powers and ability levels tend to be as variable as those attributed to vampires and werewolves.

When the name shows up in the news in Spain, it’s usually preceded by “un portavoz de” (a spokesperson from). The legal news in question are usually from London, but then, we get a lot more legal news from London than from, say, Manchester.

Heh

Like “Five-Oh” pretty much any cops above the level of local patrol but I believe its the British national investigative police force.

And of course Inspector Flying Fox of the Yard.

I think of Scotland Yard as the London-area police force, but in the context of investigations. The police walking down the street isn’t part of Scotland Yard.

MI-5, not Scotland Yard, is what I compare the FBI to in my head.

Scotland yard (or Old Scotland yard) was the building housing the Metropolitan Police headquarters in London.
They investigated many high profile cases and gained a reputation in the Victorian press.

What many people do not realise is that there are two police departments in London.
The “Met” cover the large area of greater London,
but the “City of London” police department only covers a very small area in the centre of the City which covers the royal palaces and the very rich peoples houses!

I figure it’s synonymous with London cops (bobbies?), or possibly all British police, depending on how absentminded I’m being.

London Police Headquarters. In my head, it’s where difficult cases get assigned, the upper ranks of police have offices, and paperwork goes to get stored.

A bit like 1 Police Plaza in NY (which I know from many, many, many episodes of Law & Order)

That’s pretty much what I think of it as also, but that’s because in movies/TV, it seems like the regular policemen are basically run of the mill London cops, but the detectives are always from Scotland Yard.

In reality, they’re all part of the Metropolitan Police- so there’s not much distinction there, and Scotland Yard just means the headquarters.

Kind of like if you had a regular old Dallas cop on the scene, and detectives from “Jack Evans” - all that means is that the detectives came from the headquarters building downtown.

New Scotland Yard is the police; Great Scotland Yard is where they used to be and before that was the site of the Scottish Embassy to England.

Exactly this. Did anyone else play the board game? That’s probably where my perception came from, it’s a detective game.

My very first thought upon hearing the phrase Scotland yard is of Sherlock Hemlock. My second thought would as others have said, the British equivalent of the FBI. All I know about the British legal system comes entirely from BBC (and apparently Jim Henson).

Without having given it much thought, I had always assumed that it was the National police force, where National might have meant English or possibly the whole UK. After reading this thread it would seem it is just the Metro London force.

I used to play a board game called Scotland Yard. I don’t think I’d had the name ‘Scotland Yard’ cross my mind in years, until you mentioned it. I remembered vaguely that it was some kind of police or investigative body in Britain (but not Scotland). I probably knew better what it was when I was a kid reading Sherlock Holmes stories.

It’s gota sign outside.

I’ve played chess against the Metropolitan Police team there…

Really?

I always thought MI5 was equivalent to the CIA and/or the NSA.

MI5 (formally the Security Service) handles the counter-espionage role of the FBI. The CIA equivalent is MI6 (formally the Secret Intelligence Service), and the NSA equivalent is GCHQ.

The original Metropolitan Police office in 3-5 Great Scotland Yard (which was subsequently the army’s Central London Recruiting Depot in 1914) is currently being refurbished for use as an upmarket hotel (went down there on business recently)

Me too.