Boyle's background was in the
Women's Freedom League (WFL) and so for her the WPV was an opportunity for women to assist in catching criminals and to challenge male control of law enforcement, particularly in relation to sexual issues, ie, as an instrument to help and support women rather than to control their activities. However, Damer Dawson, who had previously campaigned against animal vivisection, was more concerned with policing public morality, particularly that of working-class women. The government agreed and from its foundation onwards the WPV's role was delimited to enforcing the public decency laws and supervising female workers such as
munitionettes. She also deplored the adoption of Regulation 40D, an anti-prostitution amendment to the
Defence of the Realm Act, that in many people's view revived some of the objectionable features of the nineteenth-century
Contagious Diseases Acts. She described Regulation 40D, which punished women for their sexual relations with members of the armed services, as 'besmirching' the good name of women. In February 1915, Boyle and Damer Dawson disagreed over the use of the WPV to enforce a
curfew on women of so-called 'loose character' near a service base in
Grantham, which proved unacceptable to Boyle and her beliefs. Boyle also denounced the use of the Defence of the Realm Act by the authorities in
Cardiff to impose a curfew on what were described as 'women of a certain class' between the hours of 7pm and 8am. In contrast, Damer Dawson took a more pragmatic line, with the support of most of the WPV's members. As a result of this dispute, Boyle asked for Dawson's resignation, but instead Dawson convened a meeting of 50 policewomen, all but two of whom agreed to follow Dawson's lead. ==Women's Police Service==