Starts at 52 seconds in. The Officer has, what appears to be an old fashioned skeleton key hanging off his epaulet next to a handcuff key.
I keep my cuff key in my shirt pocket and another hidden in a belt keeper. But all our holding cells use electronic locks, we don’t walk around with cell keys on us.
Is this for real or just some kind of decorative wear?
Albuquerque PD isn’t really still using jail cells that are secured by skeleton key locks, are they?
I cannot answer about what APD is using as far as keys but you still see keys like this once in a while but I am a lot older I would imagine and these were common keys at one time. It does look like a key for our old lockups from back in the 70’s and 80’s but those were eventually phased out. This key could open a locker of some sort or something similar. But keys hanging off the uniform is not a very smart move in my opinion.
Keep in mind a lot of lock systems used by law enforcement even today are not very pick-resistant, many of them rely more on the fact you can’t easily get a chance to pick them. Most police knew that typical handcuffs were very easy to escape from for someone trained in it, and there are training techniques they’ve developed over time to mitigate that. For example, until the 1960s it was standard to cuff people in front instead of with their hands behind their back (the old media trope of someone putting both wrists together in front of them and dramatically saying “take me away officer!” seems out of place in modern times but that was actually how you were typically cuffed back in the day.) Another example is the keyhole is generally positioned up and away from the hands which makes it mechanically more difficult for someone to get a pick into the hole. They also have covers they can put over the chain, high security cuffs that don’t use the typical universal handcuff key and etc etc. But at core most of the security of a handcuff has been reliant on the fact that most people can’t pick locks and that with proper use you can make it so a prisoner has a much reduced chance to pick the cuffs even if they do know how.
Jail doors can have lockable observation windows or pass-through slots. The locks or keys for those don’t necessarily need to be high-security mechanisms, because you can’t escape through those openings. The officer’s old-fashioned key could be for something like that, or a locker or a property box. If he uses it a lot, he may just want to keep it where it is handy.
The key has a fairly long shank/shaft, and a diamond-shaped shoulder or bow. I googled a bunch vintage key images, but haven’t spotted anything quite like it yet.
I inherited two of them, exactly like the one in the video, from the 60’s/70’s. They were for a couple of old school style mail drop boxes, like the green one here,
all located near the usual places our towns police directed traffic.
I assume inside was just rain gear and the like.