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Post by Rebirth on Nov 20, 2024 14:31:23 GMT
Just observing changes in public perception — which by the way is also coloured by the widespread allegations of two-tier policing... However it is recognised that two-tier policing is not coming from individual officers, it certainly seems to be policy and there is much evidence that is the case. Very true. I have to wonder if the BLM lot, who were campaigning to defund the police, may have helped to corrupt the force to bring about this two-tier corrupt policing which the Labour government are using as their vile personal henchmen.
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Post by johnofgwent on Nov 20, 2024 15:08:49 GMT
Anyone think this will be allowed to go ahead? linkIm not sure what you mean can a government stop private court proceedings. I hope it goes a head As I have said, elsewhere, although handyman disagreed with me, it is the right of the CPS to take over a private prosecution if they wish, and they can then pursue it, or drop it as they see fit. I cannot now remember the details, but they did exactly that after police refused to act following an assault on someone in Cardiff Bay. The victim initiated a private prosecution The CPS crushed it This was before Blair destroyed double indemnity so the CPS action was a clear act to deny justice.
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Post by Handyman on Nov 20, 2024 17:15:41 GMT
Out of 140,000 Officers only a few are a disgrace they colleagues detest what they have done, but you and others with an axe to grind are just stereotyping a usual That's not comforting the public. They're finding it ever-harder to believe that the police are there to keep them safe:
Number of Metropolitan Police officers being dismissed hits new high The number of Met police officers being dismissed has reached a new peak, with over 100 officers dismissed last year. Figures show that 113 police officers were dismissed in 2023, or would have been dismissed if they had not already left the force, as a result of misconduct or incompetence. There were 35 per cent more dismissals last year compared to in 2022 when 84 rogue officers were fired from the force. The number of officers who have lost their jobs due to misconduct or incompetence has also doubled since 2020, when only 52 officers were terminated. But the backlog of misconduct cases waiting to be heard has also reached a new high.
A head teacher has warned pupils at her all-girls' school "not to allow a lone policeman to approach you at any time".
100 out of 30,000 is too many IMO but they have been quite rightly sacked or banged up , even if they were all perfect never made a mistake appeared out of thin air when they wanted then some people would still not like them or trust them. Personally I don't have much trust in the Post Office after they arrested hundreds the biggest Miscarriage of Justice in the UK in the UK going back hundreds of years when the Post Office Investitive Branch was formed long before the Police were formed, as for Postmen, nicked a few of them in my time for theft at Mount Pleasant but I don't tar them all with brush because of a few bad eggs
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Post by patman post on Nov 21, 2024 13:17:02 GMT
Lower recruitment and training standards for roles that have authority over others has been proving problematical for the general population for over a decade. This is particularly so where male combativeness and machismo thrive as in military and policing type environments.
Public perception was mainly supportive and thankful for what was seen as protection. But since disclosures of misdemeanours by military and police personnel began to appear in the news media over the years, public trust has been increasingly eroded. Distrust, particularly in the effectiveness and honesty of the police, is growing to unprecedented proportions.
Clearing out the contamination prior to rebuilding and retraining an effective and trusted police force/service is likely to attract more attention, but it needs to be done…
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Post by bancroft on Nov 21, 2024 13:48:32 GMT
Im not sure what you mean can a government stop private court proceedings. I hope it goes a head As I have said, elsewhere, although handyman disagreed with me, it is the right of the CPS to take over a private prosecution if they wish, and they can then pursue it, or drop it as they see fit. I cannot now remember the details, but they did exactly that after police refused to act following an assault on someone in Cardiff Bay. The victim initiated a private prosecution The CPS crushed it This was before Blair destroyed double indemnity so the CPS action was a clear act to deny justice.
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Post by bancroft on Nov 21, 2024 13:51:41 GMT
As I have said, elsewhere, although handyman disagreed with me, it is the right of the CPS to take over a private prosecution if they wish, and they can then pursue it, or drop it as they see fit. I cannot now remember the details, but they did exactly that after police refused to act following an assault on someone in Cardiff Bay. The victim initiated a private prosecution The CPS crushed it This was before Blair destroyed double indemnity so the CPS action was a clear act to deny justice. Not sure what happened here, I am shown as being the poster though no content of mine appears?
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