- Ollie Dyer: You worried?
- Al Sandy: Plenty worried. I think it might be a good idea to close down for a couple of weeks... just operate the restaurant.
- Ollie Dyer: It will cost a lot of money.
- Al Sandy: So do lawyers.
- Al Sandy: Barney is a sterling young officer and a twenty-carat nuisance, but we can live him. This raid tonight was Highway Patrol!
- Dan Mathews: What'll you guys bet the door is still there and workin'?
- Sheriff Bishop: Oh, I never gamble, Dan - not when I'm betting against a sure thing.
- [Dan forces the manager into the casino where the police raid is taking place]
- Dan Mathews: Shall we go inside and see if I can find a little action?
- [Sergeant Corey has just served as the inside man for the raid of Dyer's illegal casino]
- Dan Mathews: Nice goin', Sergeant.
- Sergeant Corey: Thank you.
- Ollie Dyer: Sergeant!
- Dan Mathews: Oh don't take it personally. You can't win 'em all.
- Ollie Dyer: We'll open again - that's a promise!
- Dan Mathews: And we'll close you again. That's a promise, too.
- [last lines]
- [Sheriff Bishop snaps handcuffs on Sandy's wrists]
- Al Sandy: Is this necessary, Sheriff? After all, we're not criminals.
- Dan Mathews: You're so wrong.
- [first lines]
- Narrator: Law enforcement agencies must constantly uphold all state laws. When an open violation occurs, with the community's tolerance, the operation eventually becomes bigger and more dangerous, with additional vices. When the Club Bahamas opened a gambling casino against the state law, the law enforcement agencies moved rapidly to close it, a move that called for extraordinary measures.