Priyanka Mishra-Whom Fearless dacoits fear

Priyanka Mishra, first woman police officer to be posted in the Chambal range as Deputy Superintendent of Police, in India’s most notorious dacoit-infested region.
A Ph.D in Medieval History from Indore University in Madhya Pradesh, Priyanka joined the police force in 1995 after clearing the state civil services examinations.
Her courage and commitment to the job has earned her two letters of commendation from her seniors and the admiration of many people. Her proud father calls her "bahadur beti" (brave daughter). And, perhaps to prove her father right, she refuses to wear her bullet-proof jacket during operations.
Desperate to get rid of Priyanka, many dacoits even declared rewards on Priyanka’s head (even $10,000).

Yamin Hazarika-First Assamese woman IPS officer

Yamin Hazarika was selected in 1979 for the state police services DANIPS (Delhi Andaman Nicobar Islands Police Services) and made it to Indira Gandhi's security team. Later, she was promoted to IPS in 1996.
Hazarika was posted as  Assistant Commissioner of Police in Chanakyapuri, Delhi, in charge of three high profile police stations during that dark period of the anti-Sikh riots that rocked the national capital. And after some time she was promoted to the position of deputy commissioner of police (crimes against women cell) in the capital. She oversaw stringent measures to cut down sexual harassment of women on the capital’s streets. In 1998, she was sent to Bosnia as part of the UN peacekeeping force for three months. It was there that she was diagnosed with leukaemia and she had to return to India. Hazarika received treatment at the Tata Memorial Centre in Mumbai and at Delhi’s All India Institute of Medical Sciences, but she succumbed to cancer on July 25, 1999. She was only 43.

Sanjukta Parashar-IPS whom Bodo militants fear

Sanjukta Parashar, an IPS officer of the 2006 batch, was first posted as the Assistant Commandant of Makum in 2008. However, within hours, she was dispatched to Udalguri - to control ethnic clashes between Bodo and illegal Bangladeshi migrants.
Since then she has been leading the anti-Bodo militant operations in Sonitpur district of Assam. This mother of a 2-year-old boy who leads her team, a Kalashnikov in hand, through Assam's treacherous terrains in anti-insurgency operations.
She completed her graduation in Political Science from the Indraprastha College for Women in New Delhi and later went to the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) for her Masters, M.Phil and Ph.D. in International Relations. Parashar ranked 85th in the prestigious Union Public Service Commission (UPSC), the civil services examinations, and chose police service.