non-Met Police ****ery

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Imrael
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Re: non-Met Police ****ery

Post by Imrael » Tue Mar 05, 2024 2:54 pm

discovolante wrote:
Thu Feb 29, 2024 11:39 am
I've been reflecting on how differently the police treat me in different contexts. I wonder if anyone else has similar experiences. When I'm at court for work, looking vaguely professional and it's clear who (or rather what), the police are an absolute delight. Friendly and helpful and go out of their way to help if I need anything. Which is nice. Except they're totally different when I see them approaching or arresting people. And they are cold and slightly intimidating if I'm say, at a protest (I know much worse for others). When I did a brief stint of police station representation it was a bit variable, I would say largely professional but with a hint of 'I'm being this way because I have to'. When I was at a demo yesterday (in Scotland) they were fine because they knew we were no trouble as it was all nice middle class middle aged people.

Obviously the police across the UK consists of many many individuals, but the fact that I'm treated with much more respect (almost bordering on deference) in some contexts and borderline contempt in others, even though I'm not committing an offence, gives me the creeps a bit.

I'm not saying this for it to be about me though, I've never to date had any actual problems with them, just felt like commenting on it.

Also this is the Met so wrong thread but Señor von Laté is currently in London and on one street they have live facial recognition cameras set up. There is a sign saying you don't have to walk down the street if you don't want to...
I've never had any real issues either. Stop-and-searched a few times as a long haired student in the late 70's - I used to help with student theatre and often travel home late at night with something that looked like a tool bag, so probably looked like a burglar.

My guess is that police are worse to deal with the more of them are present, partly because of the situations when they are grouped together, and partly because it encourages an "us and them" mentality. Oddly, the few traffic stops I've had were extremel;y polite.

I do remember a random breath test of all members leaving a car club christmas dinner. Being a car club we were all very fond of our licences, which made for a very unproductive evening. Policeman was obviously a bit bored by my turn.

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Re: non-Met Police ****ery

Post by monkey » Tue Mar 05, 2024 4:48 pm

TopBadger wrote:
Tue Mar 05, 2024 2:21 pm
Police getting a drumming in the media today for forcefully stripping naked a female in a young offenders institute by a group of all male officers.

Apparently she was trying to kill herself with her clothing and so the decision was taken to remove her clothing. The group that oversaw this were all male because there were no female officer(s) available (reports are there was a female officer on the rosta but she wasn't available having been assaulted earlier by an offender). If they had respected the offenders modesty and she'd hanged herself wouldn't that be worse? I'm assuming they didn't have the staffing levels to keep her clothes on and have an officer stand watch on her cell.

Honestly I'm not sure what they could have done differently given the situation they were in. And we're certainly not going to get better quality of policing and care of offenders with the reported cut in NI and service provisions expected to happen in the budget.
Not police! Prison officers.

Still non-met and fuckery though. Seems adequate staffing of female officers is/was the problem to me.

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Re: non-Met Police ****ery

Post by jimbob » Wed Mar 06, 2024 10:18 am

TopBadger wrote:
Tue Mar 05, 2024 2:21 pm
Police getting a drumming in the media today for forcefully stripping naked a female in a young offenders institute by a group of all male officers.

Apparently she was trying to kill herself with her clothing and so the decision was taken to remove her clothing. The group that oversaw this were all male because there were no female officer(s) available (reports are there was a female officer on the rosta but she wasn't available having been assaulted earlier by an offender). If they had respected the offenders modesty and she'd hanged herself wouldn't that be worse? I'm assuming they didn't have the staffing levels to keep her clothes on and have an officer stand watch on her cell.

Honestly I'm not sure what they could have done differently given the situation they were in. And we're certainly not going to get better quality of policing and care of offenders with the reported cut in NI and service provisions expected to happen in the budget.
The chief inspector of prisons explained it in the Today programme yesterday.

It happened twice and was entirely predictable (his words).

Once would have been unfortunate (paraphrase of his words) but it was the fact they'd not done anything since the first time that was why he was so critical of it.
Have you considered stupidity as an explanation

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Re: non-Met Police ****ery

Post by TopBadger » Wed Mar 06, 2024 10:44 am

Thing is, even if you know its going to happen again that doesn't guarantee you can do anything differently next time.

I was speaking to a friend of a friend at a wedding last summer, he's a prison governor. The picture he painted was grim... they don't have the manpower to do the job properly because they don't have the funding. Telling the prison service to simply "do better" doesn't address the shortage of resources and so nothing will change.

It's the same thing with the ambulance service... repeatedly in the news we are told that someone in a critical condition passed away because an ambulance couldn't be dispatched, because there simply weren't enough of them.

Yet we're about to see a budget with f.cking tax cuts. It makes my blood boil.
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Re: non-Met Police ****ery

Post by Grumble » Wed Mar 06, 2024 9:22 pm

TopBadger wrote:
Wed Mar 06, 2024 10:44 am
Thing is, even if you know its going to happen again that doesn't guarantee you can do anything differently next time.

I was speaking to a friend of a friend at a wedding last summer, he's a prison governor. The picture he painted was grim... they don't have the manpower to do the job properly because they don't have the funding. Telling the prison service to simply "do better" doesn't address the shortage of resources and so nothing will change.

It's the same thing with the ambulance service... repeatedly in the news we are told that someone in a critical condition passed away because an ambulance couldn't be dispatched, because there simply weren't enough of them.

Yet we're about to see a budget with f.cking tax cuts. It makes my blood boil.
If we’re seeing a budget with tax cuts why are taxes at their highest since 1948? Is it all because of Kwasi Kwarteng f.cking the economy?
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Re: non-Met Police ****ery

Post by monkey » Thu Mar 07, 2024 3:31 am

Grumble wrote:
Wed Mar 06, 2024 9:22 pm
If we’re seeing a budget with tax cuts why are taxes at their highest since 1948? Is it all because of Kwasi Kwarteng f.cking the economy?
That'll happen when you've got high inflation and wages going up but GDP doesn't.

I'm not sure you can blame that on just Kwarteng, but I don't think he helped.

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Re: non-Met Police ****ery

Post by nekomatic » Thu Mar 07, 2024 2:50 pm

Grumble wrote:
Wed Mar 06, 2024 9:22 pm
If we’re seeing a budget with tax cuts why are taxes at their highest since 1948? Is it all because of Kwasi Kwarteng f.cking the economy?
https://mainlymacro.blogspot.com/2024/0 ... y.html?m=1 addresses this
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Re: non-Met Police ****ery

Post by jimbob » Fri Mar 08, 2024 5:20 pm

https://www.internationalskeptics.com/f ... st14274462
Nessie wrote:
Darat;14268810 wrote:Angiolini: "Good police officers work alongside those who abuse their powers, behave inappropriately with their colleagues and do a disservice to the profession of policing,.."

How can they be considered "good police officers"? Their entire justification is to prevent such behaviour - in everyone - not just non-police officers.
I was one of those good cops, who worked with bad cops. In retirement, I have talked with my cops friends, who were also good cops as to why we did not see those bad cop behaviours and the reason was that the bad cops behaved themselves when they were in the company of a majority of good cops. We all experienced situations where we knew we were being excluded from what was going on, which will have been the bad cops doing bad things. I remember being suddenly sent out of the office to go on patrol and I knew something was up, but I was happy to go as I did not want to be involved.

Whatsapp etc only came in at the end of my career, but I was never invited to join any private group.

I was told on numerous occasions by female cops how much they enjoyed working with me. I just thought they were being nice, I now know it was because I never hassled any of them. I was also told later in my career, when I bumped into a cop I had been a training college with, that at the time, I was singled out by the female cops as the only trustworthy male.

That is how good cops work alongside bad cops.
Interesting take on this
Have you considered stupidity as an explanation

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Re: non-Met Police ****ery

Post by discovolante » Fri Mar 08, 2024 8:39 pm

I'm not blaming that good cop, but I assume the female cops generally knew who the 'bad cops' were, even if they hadn't experienced their behaviour directly, but he didn't.
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Re: non-Met Police ****ery

Post by jimbob » Fri Mar 08, 2024 9:40 pm

discovolante wrote:
Fri Mar 08, 2024 8:39 pm
I'm not blaming that good cop, but I assume the female cops generally knew who the 'bad cops' were, even if they hadn't experienced their behaviour directly, but he didn't.
The first reply to that was also interesting
Have you considered stupidity as an explanation

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Re: non-Met Police ****ery

Post by shpalman » Fri Apr 26, 2024 12:47 pm

having that swing is a necessary but not sufficient condition for it meaning a thing
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Re: non-Met Police ****ery

Post by shpalman » Sun May 05, 2024 11:45 am

Matteo Falcinelli, an Italian student in Miami, asks police for help getting his phone back from a nightclub, but the police can't be bothered, and instead he's violently arrested, restrained, and detained for two days for his trouble.
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Re: non-Met Police ****ery

Post by Gfamily » Tue May 07, 2024 8:28 am

In this case, the ****ery was a completely inadequate response leading to the investigation running out of time for it to be investigated

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/ck7l8ey1v33o
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Re: non-Met Police ****ery

Post by jimbob » Tue May 07, 2024 11:37 am

Gfamily wrote:
Tue May 07, 2024 8:28 am
In this case, the ****ery was a completely inadequate response leading to the investigation running out of time for it to be investigated

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/ck7l8ey1v33o
Yup.

He's a danger
Have you considered stupidity as an explanation

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Re: non-Met Police ****ery

Post by jimbob » Tue May 07, 2024 2:59 pm

Beyond cosplay, there's no benign reason to impersonate a police officer. It's a crime to enable more serious crime
Have you considered stupidity as an explanation

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Re: non-Met Police ****ery

Post by Fishnut » Tue May 07, 2024 3:41 pm

A quick round-up of stories from the last few weeks:

Ex-PC stalker who tracked wife and lover avoids jail
He was found guilty of aggravated stalking which included secretly bugging Ms Glynn's car, listening to her conservations, tracking her whereabouts and taking her phone without her permission.
He was given a two-year suspended sentence and a seven-year restraining order to prevent him contacting his ex-wife.

Ex-police officer to face court accused of forming relationships with victims
Jason Catton, who worked for Sussex Police, faces eight counts of the charge after a police watchdog investigated allegations of abusing his position for a sexual purpose.
Former Nottinghamshire Police officer jailed for speeding with sirens on without proper reason
Ryan Lee was sacked by Nottinghamshire Police last month after reaching speeds of up to 101mph and having his blue lights on while travelling to Worksop police station last year - despite having no policing reason to do so... In the video the former police officer turned on his lights, reached speeds of 101mph in a 50mph zone... Judge Richardson observed that Lee had been driving on the wrong side of the road and overtaking on solid white lines.
Former police officer jailed after suspended sentence appealed
Matthew Longmate, 48, formerly of Derbyshire Constabulary, had been given a 12-month jail sentence, suspended for a year, after he was found guilty of a single count of misconduct in a public office in November, relating to sexual contact with a woman in his patrol car.

Following an appeal by the CPS, supported by the force, who deemed the sentence unduly lenient, the Judge removed the suspended aspect of his conviction, with Longmate subsequently being jailed for 11 months (12 months minus unpaid work served).
Bolton police officer who abused his position to share confidential
information jailed
Akeel Kadir, 54, accessed secure systems and confidential information as well as images of crime suspects and personal details of people investigated for sexual offences.

He was found guilty of one count of conspiracy to commit police corruption and one count of knowingly or recklessly obtaining or disclosing personal data without the consent of the data controller, at Liverpool Crown Court in March 2024.
Police officer stole dead man's phones and iPad
A Police Scotland officer stole a dead man’s phones and iPad when attending to investigate his death at his grieving family’s home.
Ex-police officer who shared photo of dead body he took while on duty jailed
Lewis Wood, 43, from Bridgwater, admitted sharing images and videos with family and friends on a number of occasions while serving with Avon and Somerset Police.

These included photos of the body of 39-year-old Paul Wells, who was killed in a homicide incident in Highbridge in 2020, Exeter Crown Court was told.
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Re: non-Met Police ****ery

Post by jimbob » Tue May 07, 2024 3:48 pm

Fishnut wrote:
Tue May 07, 2024 3:41 pm
A quick round-up of stories from the last few weeks:

Ex-PC stalker who tracked wife and lover avoids jail
He was found guilty of aggravated stalking which included secretly bugging Ms Glynn's car, listening to her conservations, tracking her whereabouts and taking her phone without her permission.
He was given a two-year suspended sentence and a seven-year restraining order to prevent him contacting his ex-wife.

Ex-police officer to face court accused of forming relationships with victims
Jason Catton, who worked for Sussex Police, faces eight counts of the charge after a police watchdog investigated allegations of abusing his position for a sexual purpose.
Former Nottinghamshire Police officer jailed for speeding with sirens on without proper reason
Ryan Lee was sacked by Nottinghamshire Police last month after reaching speeds of up to 101mph and having his blue lights on while travelling to Worksop police station last year - despite having no policing reason to do so... In the video the former police officer turned on his lights, reached speeds of 101mph in a 50mph zone... Judge Richardson observed that Lee had been driving on the wrong side of the road and overtaking on solid white lines.
Former police officer jailed after suspended sentence appealed
Matthew Longmate, 48, formerly of Derbyshire Constabulary, had been given a 12-month jail sentence, suspended for a year, after he was found guilty of a single count of misconduct in a public office in November, relating to sexual contact with a woman in his patrol car.

Following an appeal by the CPS, supported by the force, who deemed the sentence unduly lenient, the Judge removed the suspended aspect of his conviction, with Longmate subsequently being jailed for 11 months (12 months minus unpaid work served).
Bolton police officer who abused his position to share confidential
information jailed
Akeel Kadir, 54, accessed secure systems and confidential information as well as images of crime suspects and personal details of people investigated for sexual offences.

He was found guilty of one count of conspiracy to commit police corruption and one count of knowingly or recklessly obtaining or disclosing personal data without the consent of the data controller, at Liverpool Crown Court in March 2024.
Police officer stole dead man's phones and iPad
A Police Scotland officer stole a dead man’s phones and iPad when attending to investigate his death at his grieving family’s home.
Ex-police officer who shared photo of dead body he took while on duty jailed
Lewis Wood, 43, from Bridgwater, admitted sharing images and videos with family and friends on a number of occasions while serving with Avon and Somerset Police.

These included photos of the body of 39-year-old Paul Wells, who was killed in a homicide incident in Highbridge in 2020, Exeter Crown Court was told.
Amazing how many bad apples
Have you considered stupidity as an explanation

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Re: non-Met Police ****ery

Post by Fishnut » Tue May 07, 2024 3:49 pm

jimbob wrote:
Tue May 07, 2024 3:48 pm
Amazing how many bad apples
At this rate they're going to need a prison just for former police officers
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