Police - fit for pu...
 

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[Closed] Police - fit for purpose?

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I hate saying this.. but I really no longer think they are..

I've had probably half a dozen direct/indirect dealings with them this year, each and every one of them abysmal.. If you're interested I'll list them. the first very trivial but grates on me..

Two days ago riding legally along the road towards a pedestrianized area, stopped by a policeman 50 yards from area, who said.. 'You're old enough to know better so I hope you dont intend to ride down that pedestrian area.' wtf? I've been walking through that area every weekday for 24 years.

Two weeks ago caught on our works outdoor cctv a local well known thief kicking a shop door in opposite at 4am running off with the till. The Shops own internal cctv also clearly shows the mans face.. police response.. doesnt identify him clear enough. No further action.

Three weeks ago caught on same cctv. Another local prolific thief who we all recognized smash car window and steals handbag. Police response.. not clear enough. No further action.

Five weeks ago I caught red handed at 3am a thief inside my car. He'd forced the drivers window open with a bar. I handed him to the police who took him (and his two mates) away. response? there was none, and on my enquiry was simply told there would be no further action.

Couple of months ago a pals store was robbed in the middle of the night and a £4.5k bike stolen. All caught on cctv.. another well known thief. He sold the bike for £80.. court fined him £60. Easy £20 profit.

Few months ago my daughters ex abusive partner broke into her house and beat her up in front of her five year old daughter (she's pregnant). Police response.. No proof it was him other than a five year olds testimony. His word against hers. No further action.

Few weeks previous.. her car trashed.. all four tyres and windows by same person.. His junkie girlfriend admitted it was him but her word against his so police response.. No proof it was him.

Previous still, whilst she's staying at ours he goes to her house and smashes the doors in on her house and ransacks the place. neighbors identify him. Police response.. none.

Excluding the 6/8 police officers almost daily parked up around town at areas where the speed drops from a 40 to a 30 with their cameras catching motorists.. whats the point of them??


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 10:45 am
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Some Forces are better than others.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 10:53 am
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Sound so like you should move and disown your family and friends they all sound like liabilities!

What part of the world you in ?


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 10:54 am
 Drac
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You seem to live in a lovely area and know all the thieves.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 10:56 am
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can I claim my £5?

[img] ?itok=fYxYtjl-[/img]


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 10:59 am
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WOW.

Can only comment on the CCTV as i have had experience installing systems in the past and there are requirements that have to be met for the footage to be admissable. Ie, a car reg plate has to be one third of the width of the footage to be admissable (i may have the figure wrong but you get the idea, it was a while ago)


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 10:59 am
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You seem to live in a lovely area and know all the thieves.

The joys of living in the same small town your whole life.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 10:59 am
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Seems odd that they wouldn't act in an assault case where a child was involved. Obviously we only have your side of things, yet still seems bad.

As for theft etc; a lot of it is political; police will act when there is a good chance of prosecution and conviction, and when securing convictions makes police figures look good. Stuff like petty theft is quite hard to get good 'results' on (you can nick a thief, but invariably, stolen goods have disappeared by the time the police show up, and it then becomes notoriously difficult to secure any sort of conviction). Police response is directly proportionate to the wealth of an area; richer areas get better policing, as resources are concentrated to protect richer folk (who have more political clout, generaly), and the poorest generally get f-all.

Speed cameras: There's the obvious 'outrage' from folk who claim it's just revenue generation, but then, police can and do get some great figures for reducing accidents/speeding when they employ such tactics, so it looks good on end of year reports etc. It's all about those reports and figures...

TL;DR: Politics, basically.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 11:00 am
 Drac
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Police charge CPS prosecute if there's not enough evidence the CPS won't prosecute.

I lived in a small town all my life until my mid 20s and lived in the current one longer, can't say either is anything like that or I'd know the thieves even in the position I'm in.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 11:01 am
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elzorillo, it's no consolation, but your frustrations are shared by many in the police too. There are some good ones that care, some bad ones that don't care, and lots of frustrated ones who are too overstretched/underfunded to do anything meaningful to reflect how much they care. I don't know where you are but monkeysfeet is quite correct. Arguably the police service as a whole isn't fit for purpose. It is certainly at, if not past, breaking point in terms of resources being unable to meet demand. Sorry for your shit experiences.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 11:02 am
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good god, what a litany of crimes. I'd be making some complaints iiwy.

Can we have a go at guess at the town? my guess is Barrow in Furness. 🙂


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 11:02 am
 Kato
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so OP. What is your solution to this problem?


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 11:06 am
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Can we have a go at guess at the town?

I'm betting Earlstown.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 11:10 am
 scud
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I always used to have the utmost respect for the Police, even tried to join the police force when i left the army, but recently, like the OP, have lost faith in them, everything seems to be about the "quick fix" crime, can they catch you with a speed camera or breathalyser and if so, straight into Court system or straight fine.

I have been knocked off my bike on my commute home twice in the last year. The first time the lady simply pulled straight out of a side road into my path. I went over the bars and landed on her bonnet putting my heel through her windscreen. Passers by called the Police, they attended and she admitted she had seen my but mis-judged how quickly i was moving so pulled out. Despite being injured, they just gave me her insurance details and no further action was ever taken.

The second time, a white Transit knocked me clean off as he got so close, pushing me into roadworks, he knew he had hit me, stopped briefly and looked at me lying on ground, but then drove off, leaving me with back pain and two broken ribs, the driver behind took registration and phoned the Police and said exactly what had happened, 8 months later, they haven't so much as taken a statement from her.

i understand that their job can be a thankless task, that funding has cut and they are down in numbers, but you would hope that they would undertake the simpler tasks.

When my car was stolen near Guildford, the thieves broke the steering lock, so as they tried to drive off they crashed it into a wall. I called Surrey Police and they said that if they'd like the car to be finger-printed for them to investigate, i would have to pay for the vehicle to be uplifted to them, i did wander what i paid taxes for??


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 11:13 am
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I can only speak from personal experience, but in every case bar none the old bill have been completely useless, inept and incompetent. They blame all their shortcomings on 'cutbacks' but that's BS.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 11:13 am
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[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 11:14 am
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I live in Nottinghamshire and my town is no worse than any other (actually better than a lot).. I know the local thieves because I work in the town centre and come across them daily. Pretty much every town has crime every day.. the fact you dont know it's occurring is primarily due to you maybe not being in the town centre to witness it or more frustratingly, that the vast majority of crime doesnt lead to any kind of prosecution so they're never publicized.

We seem to live in an era where petty criminals and petty crimes are ignored. I know for certain that if half a dozen habitual petty criminals were locked up in my town, the reported crimes would drop 90%


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 11:16 am
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Apart from the thief in your car scenario, you seem to be confusing the Police with the CPS.

My Wife is in the Police & catching someone is one thing. Getting a concrete enough case to get the CPS to proceed with it is another thing entirely......and the Police are probably just as frustrated about it as you are.

You can't really expect much less with the amount of government cuts - some forces seem barely able to function as a skeleton crew....
If it concerns you that much, I would write a letter to your MP about it (seriously) expressing your concerns. Without public pressure, I reckon it's only going to get worse.

That aside - I genuinely hope the luck/fortune/circumstance of you & your friends improves, because you seem to have all had a lot of unfortunate run-ins.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 11:16 am
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I can't wholeheartedly condemn them, but they’ve been made ‘efficient’ which is the problem IMHO (one shared with a recently former Detective and her still serving Custody Sargent I know).

I know it’s a cliché to talk about “going after real criminals” but for the most part they don’t.

They’re pretty good at arresting otherwise law abiding people who break the law – punch someone in sight of a CCTV camera and if someone identifies you, you’ll likely be arrested and charged because they’ll turn up at your house and you’ll “come quietly” spill your side of the story about how you were provoked etc and they say “well that’s terrible, that’s understandable” and charge you with assault, the CPS will look at the open and closed case evidence – did he punch someone – CCTV says yes – charged.

But if you’re a professional wrong ‘un – you won’t have a fixed abode, so they’ll ask your Mum where you live and she’ll say “I don’t know” they might attempt to find you maybe once, possibly twice – then they’ll stop actively looking for you – there will be a warrant issued, but unless you’re arrested for something else you’ll never be caught – they could spend a few hours with the DWP, get a warrant to find out when and where you sign-on and nick you as you arrive – but that’s a lot of work for a simple assault and they don’t have the budget for that – it’s not ‘efficient’ – 2 years later when you’re picked up for something else they’ll ask lots of questions, which you’ll give “no comment” to, by then the victim isn’t interested, the witnesses are in the wind and the CPS won’t fancy it.

Have your house or shed/garage burgled or car stolen and unless you catch someone in the act (don’t use disproportional force or you WILL be arrested) and they’ll mostly want to give you a crime number for the insurance and move on. Should you talk someone into coming around, they’ll mooch about a bit, ask “what do you want us to do?” and leave – 3 days later you get a letter to say the case is closed and advice on how to try to recover your stolen items by monitoring eBay. Stolen items on eBay aren’t sold by the person who nicked them, they’re sold by the mug who bought them from the thief. This was a big shock to me, but pretty much these days’ thieves only face risk during the act, the Police can’t investigate household burglaries. I was told pretty much who stole our stuff, they knew his name, where he lived, who he worked with and that he was a prolific thief and “our local thief” and had been for years (still is) you’d think they could task a few people who investigate him, stakeouts and stuff – nah, no budget for that.

Motoring offences though, well that’s easy – do it all with cameras, throwaway centuries of principles and change the rules so it’s guilty until proven innocent and levy huge penalties for failing to do so. Make some offences absolute offenses – there is no defence – you’re guilty. If you’re an otherwise law abiding person, it’s easy for them – your car will be in your name, at your address and you won’t drive if you’re banned or don’t have insurance etc – but for the hardcore wrong ‘uns they don’t have any of this so largely go unpunished – if they are caught it’s penalty points and a ban on a license they don’t hold and a few hundred quid fine they’ll pay at £3 a week.

It’s probably not as bad as I’m making out, but IMHO given the budget and restrictions they face they’re only really good at 3 things these days –

Convicting easy to convict people, for easy to convict things – to the underclass of hardened criminals they’re pretty ineffective these days.

Protecting public order – from keeping football matches from turning into fights to keeping the bloodshed down on Friday nights.

Thankfully – investigating serious crimes, especially sexual and violent ones. At least when it’s a proper serious crime they still can make a difference.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 11:22 am
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Easiest way to get a response , kick the shit out of the daughters ex, you can then raise all your points!


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 11:23 am
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My local police ( Edinburgh) have been professional polite and efficient in all my dealings with them. Same for my friends that have had dealings with them.

As for the speed cameras thing - deaths and seriously injured on the roads far outweigh any other source of deaths and injuries and effective road traffic policing is proven to reduce this. speeding is one major factor. So actually thats a very good use of police time as it will save lives.

Some of the incidents you mention why not push them harder? Its perfectly possible to do so


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 11:23 am
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Make a written complaint.
Write to the local PCC and ask for a meeting.

This will have minimal impact sadly but if you don't do it they will just keep ignoring you. I think there is a strong argument for a nationalised Police management structure, regionalised management just seems like top jobs for the boys/girls


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 11:26 am
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Can we have a go at guess at the town?

I'm betting Earlstown.

You from the Newton-le-Willows area?

From the police point of view, my BiL is a sergeant in the GMP. the number of officers and vehicles he has available to cover a significant part of the Wigan area is truly frightening. Successive governments have cut and cut at police budgets to the point where they have to be selective in the calls they respond to. It's a disgraceful situation but one that politicians of all shades are responsible for.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 11:40 am
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As I see it, the police are as incompetent, lazy and useless as I am at work, but their job is too important for them to model their levels of professionalism on the standards that I set.

Successive governments have cut and cut at police budgets

I am not sure that is true, iirc it is only the current government that has cut police budgets, the police force have done rather well previously while other areas of government spending has been slashed and burnt.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 11:45 am
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Few months ago my daughters ex abusive partner broke into her house and beat her up in front of her five year old daughter (she's pregnant). Police response.. No proof it was him other than a five year olds testimony. His word against hers. No further action.

Few weeks previous.. her car trashed.. all four tyres and windows by same person.. His junkie girlfriend admitted it was him but her word against his so police response.. No proof it was him.

Previous still, whilst she's staying at ours he goes to her house and smashes the doors in on her house and ransacks the place. neighbors identify him. Police response.. none.

Is ex/abusive partner previously known to police for abusing daughter? If yes and/or there is a pattern of behaviour, which it appears from your side of the story there is, then there should be a domestic abuse risk assessment in place... If you're getting no response/NFA to something like this then you should be taking it up initially with the duty inspector of the local station.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 11:47 am
 Drac
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Sandford I reckon.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 11:53 am
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Is ex/abusive partner previously known to police for abusing daughter? If yes and/or there is a pattern of behaviour, which it appears from your side of the story there is, then there should be a domestic abuse risk assessment in place... If you're getting no response/NFA to something like this then you should be taking it up initially with the duty inspector of the local station.

To be honest it's been an absolute nightmare.. for our daughter and us. She is now happily married to a great guy but the connection with this nutcase will always be there due to him being the father of her first child. All the relevant authorities are aware of him but he gets drunk/high and then randomly goes on a rampage. He's not allowed near his daughter unsupervised and only for very short periods but blames everyone else for the situation rather than himself. He recently whilst in a drunken rage beat his own father that badly, he put him in hospital for 10 weeks (he was awaiting trial for GBH with intent but I doubt anything will come of it as usual). Terrible situation and no end in sight for a good few years yet unless of course he ODs.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 12:04 pm
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Police charge CPS prosecute if there's not enough evidence the CPS won't prosecute

But, in my experience, the police don't pass things (driving offences) to the CPS if they don't think the CPS will prosecute, despite similar things being prosecuted elsewhere.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 12:11 pm
 Drac
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But, in my experience, the police don't pass things (driving offences) to the CPS if they don't think the CPS will prosecute, despite similar things being prosecuted elsewhere.

Every case is different though.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 12:15 pm
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you need to work the system

find out who is the neighbourhood PCSO/ PC for the area and chat to them

attend the local neighbourhood policing forums

for all incidents write to the police asking for written confirmation of the crime number and the action taken

write to/ get a meeting with the PCC

write to/ get a meeting with the local councillor/ MP

start/ join a local traders group

set up a Facebook page posting the videos (after all if not sufficient to identify anyone what is the issue?)

Police reflect their communities and the communities reflect the policing. So don't give up and don't let them give up


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 12:16 pm
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Well overall crime rates are low so the system, of which the Police are a part, are doing an effective job. THey have a pretty hard job to be honest. Most of the public hate them and don't want to help them, but when something happens to them they expect the Police to rock up and solve the crime instantaneously. They get targeted for physical violence by criminal types, and are forever dealing with a general public that seem to put criminals on a pedestal, like the Kray's and the Great Train Robbers. And if they do interject and have to get physical with someone it is likely to result in a complaint being made and they being hauled over some form of tribunal or enquiry where they are cross examined and made to feel like the criminals themselves. And they're working within a system that heavily favours the defendant such that everything has to be 100% in order and procedurally correct or the whole case is thrown out of court. It's a thankless and impossible job.

The handful of coppers I've known are genuine people and in it to try to make a difference and do a good job, but are frustrated by all the organisational and procedural barriers put in their place and a general public who don't seem to support them. And they've all got a tale or two to tell.

But despite all this and the odd rotten apple, which exists In all professions and organisations the fact is that they are doing a good job.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 12:25 pm
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I gave up on the police years ago. My force, Notts, are only interested in speeding. My parents were burgled and all the police did was issue a crime number and tell them to sort it out with their insurance. When 5 more houses in the same village were burgled in the same 2 weeks they still did nothing


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 12:38 pm
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Good advice from big_n_daft.

I deal with South Wales Police on a regular basis via work and the higher up officers are good at following up on stuff that is a higher response level than petty crime but anything dealt with by the regular plods on the beat are near-useless. They have no real authority to investigate anything without authorisation so they just gather the basic info (CCTV, victim statement) and put it in a file.

In general though no, they're not fit for purpose. Too many rules, regulations and lack of funding for the current system to work correctly.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 12:39 pm
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Well overall crime rates are low so the system, of which the Police are a part, are doing an effective job

Or is it just potentially because fewer people are reporting issues because they don't expect anything to come of it given a lack of resources in the justice system to deal with less serious crime...? Discuss.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 12:40 pm
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Nope - crime is well down on historical levels tho has risen a bit recently. Crime rates are calculated not on reported crime but on large groups of peoples actual experiences of crime.

Those tht say " nothing was done" - how do you know nothing was done?


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 12:44 pm
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The risk is that the police culturally descend into only worrying about serious crime and keeping ordinary decent people inline to stop vigilantes leaving a void for frequent low to mid level offenders to just do what they like blaming "resources" and the CPS


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 1:13 pm
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Can't say my experience is great. Garage broken into and £12k of bikes stolen, nothing. Had to chase for the crime ref no.

When a bus nearly drove into the back of me and then drove off. They hunted for 3 months to find me (because despite having my leg no on the bus CCTV they were looking for the wrong car) to send me on a driving awareness course and try to prosecute me for leaving the scene of an accident.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 1:19 pm
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"you need to work the system

find out who is the neighbourhood PCSO/ PC for the area and chat to them

attend the local neighbourhood policing forums

for all incidents write to the police asking for written confirmation of the crime number and the action taken

write to/ get a meeting with the PCC

write to/ get a meeting with the local councillor/ MP

start/ join a local traders group

set up a Facebook page posting the videos (after all if not sufficient to identify anyone what is the issue?)"

Blimey; someone's pregnant daughter is beaten up by a known violent thug, and they're expected to do all that just to get a response? 😯

"Police reflect their communities and the communities reflect the policing."

Roughly translated, this means that rich people get better policing, as they are far more likely to be able to take expensive legal action against the police if things go wrong. Someone in Mayfair or Hampstead is the 'victim' of a rude comment, and you'll have an armed response unit there in seconds. Someone is raped and beaten up in a rough part of Middlesborough, and they'll be lucky to get a crime reference number for their insurance... 🙄

As I said earlier; it's all about politics.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 2:52 pm
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I think the answer is some sort of vigilante caped crusader. 😈


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 4:03 pm
 cpon
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I think the answer is rightmove.co.uk


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 4:05 pm
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Sandford I reckon.

Very good old chap...!

Generally the evidential / charging system is barmy. The Police (certainly my force) have no interest at a local level about the proportion of successful prosecutions - so talk of going after the easy results is not true of the Police. The CPS however have a targets based performance system which compares the number of charges to the number of guilty verdicts at Court.

A very few low level crimes (low value thefts, public order and criminal damage, to name a few) are 'Police Charge' decisions, which means a decision can be reached by a Custody Sergeant (my current job FWIW), who will consider if they think that there is a reasonable prospect of conviction, and if there would be a public interest to a prosecution.

Most offences including assaults above common assaults, higher value thefts, dwelling burglaries and anything more serious HAVE to be authorised for charge by a CPS prosecutor - who will have one eye on the performance figures and the likely outcome at Court. Interestingly, they also charge all domestic and hate crime offences - Police cannot make a charging decision even if the offence is well evidenced and admissions are made.

The Police have to decide what to investigate, as we have finite resources and finite time. There are very few Officers in most towns - walk into a McDonald's restaurant at any time of day or night in the average town, and there will be more staff working there than there are Police Officers for the entire town and a good deal of the rural area around it. My current area has a population of 130,000 spread over 270 square miles, and we often patrol it with a Sergeant and nine Constables. That's 14,500 people each. Should be fine, shouldn't it?

There have been too many criticisms raised in this thread to address them all, but the Police are often seen as the public face of the entire criminal justice system - the CPS, Courts system, probation teams etc etc all have a part to play. There is very little money knocking around at the moment, and we are being pulled in every different direction going.

Oh, and speed cameras? With a nod to casualty reduction, they are a means of income generation. I spent five years as a traffic cop, and we were strongly encouraged to conduct speed enforcement on 'productive' sites - essentially easy speeders, not high risk routes. I hated that aspect of it, which is why I'm in a different job in the Police now.

OP - almost every Officer I know wants a significant reform of UK Policing, which will allow the Police to focus on what the public wants us to focus on, and not deal with every other job that other agencies can't resource.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 5:25 pm
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I can see where you coming from op, and I kinda agree with you, but I don't blame the average copper on the street.
The senior officers, management, and government have between them managed to completely **** it all up. Most PCs seem to be pretty stand up people (alright, some are dicks:D) doing a really tough job, in a tough situation.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 5:35 pm
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I've worked in children's homes for the last 9 years. In that time I've witnessed police assaulting children, refusing to accept evidence of child abuse, calling 14 year old victims of exploitation a "tease", refusing to look for missing children, refusing to issue ASBOs against people, then moaning when they act anti-socially, covering up for colleagues after they assaulted children, failing to gather evidence correctly in a rape case, racism, sexism, waiting six months to take a statement from me, then trying to put words in my mouth and the best one, when I called 999 to report a serious violent incident, their response was to call back 6 hours later to see if everything was OK.
There have been some excellent examples of good policing, namely a young PC utilising CCTV to locate a young person remotely, then directing a car to her to make her safe. However, the majority of police officers I come into contact with just seem pissed off that you called them and will do anything to avoid helping.

Forgot one, I once had an officer ask me why I hadn't broken in through the back window when I reported an address that may have been harbouring a missing child. I was almost arrested for my response.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 5:47 pm
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I found it ridiculous that a prolific high-end bike thief round here was caught but let go with a pat on the bum because it was too expensive to prosecute. Basically nicking bikes is fine.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 5:48 pm
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I find the police force lacking in regard to traffic enforcement. There are a proliferation of private number plates, or normal plates, butchered so they are supposed to read a name or some other hilarity. Also blacked out windows so dark that you can't see the driver (I don't care what's in the back, but the driver should be seen). Nothings done about these, quite minor I'll admit, infringements.
Very bad driving, I've seen folks blat pass those Motorway Wombles at well above 80mph, nothing's done about that. They're also very poor/slow to react to accidents and clearing the roads.. I was stuck on the M1 the other day for 3.5hrs when a truck driver forgot to concentrate on driving instead of playing on his iPad and rammed the central reservation, when we trundled passed the incident there was 2 wombles in a Shogun standing by a couple of flashing lights, doing nothing to clear the road or ease the traffic flow..

I fail to see why we bother paying for a traffic police force, if all they rely upon these days is CCTV, or those cameras that log your redg number, to see if your are legal or not.


 
Posted : 19/10/2016 6:38 pm
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Some disturbing stories of lack of action in this thread. Personally have only dealt with the police twice in the last 10 years (theft from my car and someone pulling a knife on me) and they did a good job in both cases.
The sheer amount of paper work they have to do these days is staggering and the CPS doesn't help when it comes to lack of prosecutions either but I'd be livid if they hadn't investigated some of the things people have mentioned above, I do think it's the exception rather than the norm though.


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 7:52 am
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O.K., but you have to admit, they had a great drummer.


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 8:44 am
 cpon
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I found it ridiculous that a prolific high-end bike thief round here was caught but let go with a pat on the bum because it was too expensive to prosecute. Basically nicking bikes is fine.

Which would be fine if the police admitted this and said "look we're too stretched to deal with theft, so deal with it yourself".

I'd love to boobytrap my shed with all sorts of anti-theft measures but I fear the police would find the resources prosecute me if a trespasser was injured on my property.

They often find the resources to fine and prosecute easy targets, such as motorists, yet find it difficult to catch known thieves.


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 9:17 am
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Part of it is all the different parts of the chain I think. Like, earlier this year I got caught up in an assault on a shopkeeper- crazy girl attacked man with hammer, ran off, he called 999 on and the response was bloody awful- OK, he was a wee bit hysterical but he'd just been attacked with a hammer so you'd think they'd go "OK, fair enough, you're having a bad day" rather than "If you don't calm down I'm going to end the call", like they were a telesales helpline.

She came back halfway through the call and we had another bout of hammering- so the call handler hung up! Then the next one treated it like a potential hoax because the first call had been marked as abandoned. None of that was the fault of the investigating officers, who were actually really good- but you lump it all in with "police response", same as with CPS.


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 9:32 am
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While the police are often all too aware of who is responsible for crimes, that is invariably a long way from having the evidence to charge them, grounds to arrest them, or even sufficient grounds to persuade the court to give you a warrant. That's because of all the legal safeguards that exist to stop the police doing whatever they want.

For example, a few years ago we had a spate of commercial break ins where cash was being stolen. We [i]knew[/i] who was doing it, 100%, because of certain things about the crimes, knowledge of drug debts he had, and also information that was coming in from other people - information that people will pass on but invariably and often understandably refuse to provide any sort of statement that can be used as evidence. But he left no forensic evidence, could never be ID'd from CCTV, and was very good at checking a target was being watched by us before deciding whether to go for it.

Could we search his house? No, the court won't grant a warrant without sufficient cause, and the police pleading we know it's him doesn't cut it.

Could we just arrest and charge him? No, we had no evidence. The Fiscal clearly won't entertain a prosecution simply on the basis of us being sure it was him.

Could we do proper surveillance on him? No, there are huge legal hurdles to overcome before you are allowed to do that, and the criteria weren't met, so we couldn't.

Take away all the legal rules and procedures then yeah, we could stand outside his house until he leaves then follow him round all day. That would stop him, but it's not allowed. We could lock him up, but without lawful grounds or evidence, that wouldn't be legal. We could sort him out the old fashioned way to get him to stop, but quite rightly that's not allowed.

I'm not and never have sought to defend poor quality, lazy or incompetent policing. Not at all. But often the notion of 'the police know it's him but don't do anything about it' is not a fair reflection of what's really going on. It's not as straightforward as people sometimes think.


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 9:43 am
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Part of it is all the different parts of the chain I think. Like, earlier this year I got caught up in an assault on a shopkeeper- crazy girl attacked man with hammer, ran off, he called 999 on and the response was bloody awful- OK, he was a wee bit hysterical but he'd just been attacked with a hammer so you'd think they'd go "OK, fair enough, you're having a bad day" rather than "If you don't calm down I'm going to end the call", like they were a telesales helpline.

She came back halfway through the call and we had another bout of hammering- so the call handler hung up! Then the next one treated it like a potential hoax because the first call had been marked as abandoned. None of that was the fault of the investigating officers, who were actually really good- but you lump it all in with "police response", same as with CPS.

Don't get me started on police control room staff. 80% of them I would happily strangle.


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 9:45 am
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"fit for purpose"..... This Made me chuckle.

Cousin of mine applied for Hampshire Police. I'm at a complete loss as to how she passed the fitness test. She is 5'5", weighs about 14,5St. She gets out of breath when chasing the dog around the garden. She hasn't ridden a bike for the last six years. She has three chins. She says "like" in,like, every sentence. Her grammar is crap.
And she is 21 years old.

HTW did she pass the fitness test?

If she tried to chase me she would stand no chance. If she tried to arrest me I'd laugh in her face.

With applicants like that it is not surprising people lack respect for the police....


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 10:14 am
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Just caught some debt collector nonsense on CH5. Long story short two court officers/debt collectors walk uninvited into some woman's detached bungalow in persuit of her sons debt. She very understandably asks them to get out. They then ask her to prove ownership of her own car or they'll seize it. Which she does.

Frustrated she phones the police. Once the police establish who the debt collectors are they go in. Inviting the debt collectors in too. The woman gets upset and remonstrates with the PC asking him to have the debt collectors leave - at which point the cop threatens to arrest the woman for breach of the peace.

Not thread worthy but this kind of shit gets my goat. A woman alone in her house with three strange men gets understandably upset - gets threatened with arrest.

No doubt she would have ended up getting done for breaching the peace, resisting arrest and assaulting an officer if she hadn't complied.


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 12:50 pm
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jimjam - Member

Just caught some debt collector nonsense on CH5. Long story short two court officers/debt collectors walk uninvited into some woman's detached bungalow in persuit of her sons debt. She very understandably asks them to get out. They then ask her to prove ownership of her own car or they'll seize it. Which she does.

Frustrated she phones the police. Once the police establish who the debt collectors are they go in. Inviting the debt collectors in too. The woman gets upset and remonstrates with the PC asking him to have the debt collectors leave - at which point the cop threatens to arrest the woman for breach of the peace.

Not thread worthy but this kind of shit gets my goat. A woman alone in her house with three strange men gets understandably upset - gets threatened with arrest.

No doubt she would have ended up getting done for breaching the peace, resisting arrest and assaulting an officer if she hadn't complied.

I assume you're talking about "Can't pay, we'll take it away"?.

Whilst they are 'Debt Collectors' in the broadest sense, they are also High Court approved. They represent the very last line in debt collection - they're only used when someone owes money, has been taken to court at least once, usually twice and court has agreed they do owe the money and the creditor has proven they have refused to repay it, in any sort of reasonable time frame for a long period of time 6 months in the least but it's usually more than 2 years.

I'm met a lot through work and they are a mixed bunch, some have progressed from being Night Club Bouncers and other security jobs, Some come the other way from more customer friendly finance work - some are arseholes who really would love you to take a swing at them so they can give you a kicking but most are completely non-confrontational - but the nature of the job means they tend to be Male and quite Large.

It's not a nice job, it's not a nice thing to happen to someone, but there has to be a final consequence if you owe someone money and refuse to pay. It’s worth noting that that cannot enforce consumer finance agreements, so they won’t come knocking for credit card bills – I think they’d have a better reputation if every half-arsed ‘debt collector’ didn’t pretend to be a ‘bailiff’ and threaten all manner of stuff they can’t actually do.

If you think they're tough, you should meet the less 'offical' Asset Recovery people we used to use to get our plant stuff back when some ****er shipped it to Eastern Europe or somewhere. They were actally funny guys to chat to, but ****ing nuts - breaking into yards in latvia in the middle of the night to steal back excavator from the people who stole it by fraud from us and driving it through the night to Russia


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 1:20 pm
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"fit for purpose"..... This Made me chuckle.

Cousin of mine applied for Hampshire Police. I'm at a complete loss as to how she passed the fitness test. She is 5'5", weighs about 14,5St. She gets out of breath when chasing the dog around the garden. She hasn't ridden a bike for the last six years. She has three chins. She says "like" in,like, every sentence. Her grammar is crap.
And she is 21 years old.

HTW did she pass the fitness test?

If she tried to chase me she would stand no chance. If she tried to arrest me I'd laugh in her face.

With applicants like that it is not surprising people lack respect for the police....

Lesbian, gay, ethnic by chance? They'd shit themselves rather than say no. 🙂


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 1:25 pm
 hora
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12k's of bikes in a garage?!?!!?


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 1:32 pm
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"Lesbian, gay, ethnic by chance? They'd shit themselves rather than say no."

Nope...White, middle class and 0 GCSEs to her name. Oh, and massively overweight....


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 2:48 pm
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alpin

Nope...White, middle class and 0 GCSEs to her name. Oh, and massively overweight....

How would you feel if you were phone shopping together and the sales assistant mistook her for your wife?


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 2:52 pm
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BMI standards for Police Officers are set by the Home Office. The current Home Office Circular 59/2004 outlines this as between 18 to 30. Applicants who do not meet this standard may find their application delayed and/or will not be appointed


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 3:10 pm
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😆 @jimjam....


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 3:50 pm
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Bikebuoy. I do know how you feel, but traffic policing numbers have been cut, cut and then cut again,
In my area I know in the late 1980's there were 80 PC's operating out of three posts. From those three posts they covered a large part of the county. In 2016 there are 25 operating out of the one base. Consider that 25 has to be split within shifts to provide 24hr cover, then consider some may be on holiday, perhaps sick or on a course. It doesn't leave many to go around an area of many many hundreds of square miles.
The distances they have to travel is phenomenal. Its not their fault it takes time to get to an incident. A fifty mile drive even at high speed takes time and is mentally exhausting.
Its not the lower ranks that have done this, it from the top down. Government and senior management have put money and resources into other aspects of policing.
So, no perhaps blacked out windows and illegal number plates don't get the attention they should, nor do drink drivers, use of mobile phones and a myriad of other offences that irritate us, and that years ago got dealt with by larger staff numbers.
As far as the 'wombles' you mention. In theory you can go past them as fast as you like. They are Highway Officers employed by the DfT to assist in the free flow of traffic. They are not warranted officers, have very few actual powers and are not answerable to the local PCC.
As far as the HGV stuck in the central reserve, yes, you had a PITA journey, but put yourself in the position of the 'Womble', you have a 44t vehicle embedded on a barrier. How are you going to move it? Have you considered how long it might take to tranship an HGV's cargo? Its not quick and its not easy in the centre of the motorway. Recovery was perhaps on its way, but again that is very specialist and HGV recovery trucks are not parked on every slip road.
Yes, I feel for you and others who think that perhaps one policing department isn't up to scratch, but I'm sure its not the choice of the bobby in the car, he is a victim of cost cutting in the same way as many different professions in the public sector.


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 4:08 pm
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In their defence, well maybe more mitigation than actual defence, police are also having their already meagre and reducing resources called upuon as the last line of defence when the even more constrained health and social care system fails - hence those news reports you see about the mentally unwell sleeping in cells or even police cars because there's no other safe place for them to be taken.


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 4:13 pm
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Onpolice numbers - I have worked alongside them a bit and was astonished how few of them are on duty at any one time. I seem to remember ( could be wrong but it was very low) it could be as low as 6 "beat officers" for an entire city of 300 000 folk on a saturday night


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 5:01 pm
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My old man was stopped as his number plate had a font that was stopped (his fault for not checking even though MOT guy said it was fine).

Plod pulled him over and gave him a fine there and then. No producer/correct option and told him lucky his lights were ok as he was clamping down on faulty lights.

My Father apologised and said he didn't know as they were legal from Halfords. The policeman was then rude and said you can keep your lies to yourself!

So 20 mins in the back of the car checking my old mans history, he was allowed to go home with a fine.

4 months later, a special C.O. was being attacked by 2 guys and my old man helps her. Then before leaving, he gets asked to prove his I.D. and residence!

Now my old man wouldn't p#% on a police officer who was on fire - his own words.

I still tell him not to label/prejudice a large population based on a stupid minority.


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 5:01 pm
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I still tell him not to label/prejudice a large population based on a stupid minority.

I seem to remember ( could be wrong but it was very low) it could be as low as 6 "beat officers" for an entire city of 300 000 folk on a saturday night

Well at least the number of people he has to judge is fewer now. #everyclound.


 
Posted : 20/10/2016 7:01 pm
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i'll just leave this here.....


 
Posted : 21/10/2016 1:21 am
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The police dog handler who took me to A&E when no ambulances were available was great...I guess this shows the issues they face and why other more important things get missed


 
Posted : 21/10/2016 5:24 am
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I've written out two responses on this thread and then deleted them without pressing send. Some of the stories above really do sound indefensible so I'm not even going to try. Unfortunately there are knobs in all corners of society.

I have been a cop for 21 years and I'm totally despondent about the effects that the cuts in our numbers is having and the direction that our service seems to be heading.

I have to be as vague as possible here but something that I was told yesterday was not a priority because we're too busy safeguarding two different sets of criminals from each other has genuinely left me wondering how much longer I can continue...


 
Posted : 21/10/2016 6:19 am
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I think a big problem is that the police are the front end of the whole criminal justice system, and a lot of the problems aren't the fault of individual officers, they're the ones who have to deal with decisions or incompetence higher up.

Pretty much every experience I've had with the police they've been decent and competent - even when charging me 😉

The real issues are later on, with the Procurator Fiscal and the courts. The way the courts service can waste everyone's time for days on end is remarkable.


 
Posted : 21/10/2016 7:08 am
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A police officer told a victim of assault (offering both witnesses and video evidence) that there's no point pursuing it as she will not be considered a reliable witness, due only to her being a looked after child. The whole exercise was based around getting the victim to accept an apology from the person who assaulted her so as to avoid a court case.
After much coercion, the child reluctantly agreed to the apology. When the guy that assaulted her (who we suspected may have been grooming her) turned up, she was clearly terrified. The apology was clearly not taken particularly seriously by either the perpetrator of the assault or the police. But then, why would they care? They didn't have to deal with the late nights, the panic attacks or the nightmares. They clearly acted on their preconceptions regarding children in care and took the course of action that required the least amount of work on their part.
Yes, I'm sure there are a few good coppers and cuts have been hard, but I've come across too many awful human beings in the uniform to hear about it.
Also, all us public servants are having to deal with major cuts, not all of us are using it as an excuse for being shit.


 
Posted : 21/10/2016 7:54 am
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"I have been a cop for 21 years and I'm totally despondent about the effects that the cuts in our numbers is having and the direction that our service seems to be heading."

I'm sorry, but this kind of 'cop out' really doesn't excuse the actions and behaviour of a large number of serving police officers. You don't get ambulance/fire crews etc acting badly/not doing their jobs properly, because of cuts.


 
Posted : 21/10/2016 9:15 am
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You don't get ambulance/fire crews etc acting badly/not doing their jobs properly, because of cuts.

Yes you do, see my earlier post. I called ambulance was told it was on its way. Passer by did same. After 1/2 an hour someone called again told the same. After 40mins a police car turned up. Told ambulance wasnt available so he took me under blue light to hospital.
I'm not writing this to be critical of the ambulance service but had it been the police not turning up to a crime people would be moaning.


 
Posted : 21/10/2016 11:41 am
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That's not the same though, response times are largely out of the control of front line staff and are a more obvious symptom of cuts.
A parallel would be an ambulance crew turning up to a patient with a broken leg, saying it's not worth their time and telling the injured party to take themselves to hospital. I've had as many interactions with the ambulance service as I have with the police in my professional capacity and the experience is totally different, much more professional, even in difficult circumstances.


 
Posted : 21/10/2016 12:07 pm

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