Wudang
BOFH
If the post was only to her family how did the police see it?
I stayed there once, years ago. Terrible dump.A local one.
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Serving Thames Valley Police officer charged with rape and sexual assault
Following an investigation by Thames Valley Police, a serving officer based at Reading police station has been charged with raperdg.today
Women need to be allowed to incite violence at any and all times clearly.As far as I can make out, this woman was organising some sort of protest at a hotel housing migrants, on Facebook. The police trawled her Facebook page until they found a post (to her family) they could characterise as a hate crime. When they showed up to her house she was out. (At a hospital appointment with her severely disabled daughter.) A neighbour told the police that. They didn't go away. After some little time, when she was only ten minutes from getting home - which they had apparently been told - they got a carpenter to break into her house.
Once upon a time I would have thought, there must be more to it than that. Not any more, this is happening on a regular basis.
The police can be over zealous - look at what happened to Republic: https://apnews.com/article/king-cha...ers-arrested-04b571c1e9268f59e65a02272af4fe75 - they'd even spoken to the police prior to the event.At a protest in Newcastle, a police officer is filmed taking a Union Flag off a female teenager and another police officer is seen to usher her away from where she is standing. It is clear she is protesting outwith the area where the other protestors are, so it looks like the police are preventing her from protesting in that area. That is normal for any protest, it is given an area and those protestors must be in that area.
If you read about the incident on X, or news articles, you do not get any of that information. Instead, everyone is using the incident for clickbait.
That so many journalists and social media commentators, are using this incident, as clickbait, to sow discord, is bad for society. I do think that the police officer who grabs the flag and walks away, leaving the other police officer to remove the teenager, acting poorly. But, in the heat of a protest, mistakes will be made. I would not be surprised, as the officer is in light blue and he is acting as a liaison, he had had contact with the teenager, he had told her not to protest in that area, she ignored him and he became angry.
The police can be over zealous - look at what happened to Republic: https://apnews.com/article/king-cha...ers-arrested-04b571c1e9268f59e65a02272af4fe75 - they'd even spoken to the police prior to the event.
This came up in my feed on ThreadsAt a protest in Newcastle, a police officer is filmed taking a Union Flag off a female teenager and another police officer is seen to usher her away from where she is standing. It is clear she is protesting outwith the area where the other protestors are, so it looks like the police are preventing her from protesting in that area. That is normal for any protest, it is given an area and those protestors must be in that area.
If you read about the incident on X, or news articles, you do not get any of that information. Instead, everyone is using the incident for clickbait.
That so many journalists and social media commentators, are using this incident, as clickbait, to sow discord, is bad for society. I do think that the police officer who grabs the flag and walks away, leaving the other police officer to remove the teenager, acting poorly. But, in the heat of a protest, mistakes will be made. I would not be surprised, as the officer is in light blue and he is acting as a liaison, he had had contact with the teenager, he had told her not to protest in that area, she ignored him and he became angry.
In the UK Terrorism laws are too often misused as they give officials sweeping powers. Nice to see the safeguards working but note that Laim had 3 (three) KCs representing him and as DAG says "Such a challenge would require resources not normally available to a defendant.At the bottom of this mess is a simple point: the police and the prosecutors were careless with terrorism law and careless about its express safeguards.
Things were left to the last minute and a consent (which may or may not have been given) - a step imposed by parliament as a crucial step - was not obtained.
And this mishap meant that the Chief Magistrate of England and Wales had no jurisdiction to hear what was on the face of it a terrorism case.
Police and the prosecutors should remember that this is terrorism law that they are dealing with.
Terrorism law should be taken seriously.
This came up in my feed on Threads
Panorama programme, undercover bod works in a custody centre and lo and behold, sexism, racism etc. Met commissioner of course says action has been taken, as if that's the end of the matter. Every time someone scratches the surface of the Met they find the same thing and "action" is taken. I really do think the Met needs rebuilding from the bottom up.
You seem to be missing something, which is these idiots were bringing their "extreme opinions" and bias into their workplace. I could have sacked all those people for gross misconduct at any company I've worked at if they had come out with that crap when at work.Every job will have people with extreme opinions and bias in it. ...snip...
You seem to be missing something, which is these idiots were bringing their "extreme opinions" and bias into their workplace. I could have sacked all those people for gross misconduct at any company I've worked at if they had come out with that crap when at work.
You need people who are prepared to scrap, not people who actually want to.Some of what the programme covered, to me, was not very controversial. The cop who discussed how he liked to scrap, i.e, get involved in arrests that needed force, is the type of cop needed in response policing. We need physically confident people, not afraid of physical confrontation, to be the ones to face aggressive criminals who think they can fight their way out of being arrested.
And the commissioner trots those figures out as if he is proud of that and it's a good thing. I think to the rest of us it is jaw dropping.I think around 1500 stackings and disciplinary cases over the last few years in the Met is more towards endemic than the usual 'few bad apples'