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  1. #46
    Senior Member skidmarx's Avatar
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    Re: Safe Streets ? My experiance yesterday

    I think this one comes from N. Yorks around the time the Chief Constable admitted he hadn't enough police to do the job.
    Chap hears noises, looks out to find there's two people in the shed/barn.
    Rings police to be told they're sorry but they don't have any men in the area.
    Don't worry says the owner 'I'll deal with it' And rings back a minute later with, 'It's OK, no hurry I've shot them'.
    Before you know it there's cars, vans and a helicopter at the house the miscreants were caught. Chief policeperson to homeowner' I thought you said you shot them' to the response 'Ithought you said you hadn't any men'.

  2. #47
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    Re: Safe Streets ? My experiance yesterday

    [quote="Closet_Jibber"]
    Quote Originally Posted by Markintime
    To Gobby Idiot - You are quick to have a pop at the inspector for confirming what he/she was unsure of. I'm willing to bet you would have been all over it like a tramp on chips if he had guessed and got it wrong. I think you should sit back and think about how vast the law is and how easy it might be to forget the little things that you don't deal with. Or do you honestly believe that all bobbies should be walking Police Blackstones Manuals. If in doubt - Ask!
    .
    For the wages we are entitled to expect a pretty significant degree of knowledge of the law. There were two cops in Glasgow recently who told shop staff that they hadn't the right to detain shoplifters. Now that goes beyond ignorance and raises issues about basic intelligence - at any point did they think, "Hundreds of shoplifters in the local courts every week, all the "victims" (in my view) of unlawful arrest, and not one of their highly experienced briefs made use of this? How likely is that? I may have erred".

    I've you've been promoted twice, and passed two sittings of promotion exams, you really should be in complete command of the basics. How many other people would expect the thick end of fifty k while being hazy on the basics? How much disorder in this country has been caused by tens of thousands of cops being a bit hazy on i) the fundamental duty to maintain public order, and ii) the extensive common law powers which can be exercised by anyone?

    No, sorry, I'm sick of paying for "hazy".

  3. #48
    Senior Member ex-gunner's Avatar
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    Re: Safe Streets ? My experiance yesterday

    Quote Originally Posted by hogg
    Quote Originally Posted by ex-gunner
    Why Pikie ?
    Pikie (or piker) is an abbreviation for a user of the turnpike i.e. a mobile Romany, so originally it was a term of respect.
    Nowadays (like the Strictly Come Dancing fiasco) it is deemed to be a disrespectful and insulting name.
    I thank you. :D :D

  4. #49
    Senior Member Markintime's Avatar
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    Re: Safe Streets ? My experiance yesterday

    Quote Originally Posted by gobbyidiot
    Quote Originally Posted by Closet_Jibber
    To Gobby Idiot - You are quick to have a pop at the inspector for confirming what he/she was unsure of. I'm willing to bet you would have been all over it like a tramp on chips if he had guessed and got it wrong. I think you should sit back and think about how vast the law is and how easy it might be to forget the little things that you don't deal with. Or do you honestly believe that all bobbies should be walking Police Blackstones Manuals. If in doubt - Ask!
    .
    For the wages we are entitled to expect a pretty significant degree of knowledge of the law. There were two cops in Glasgow recently who told shop staff that they hadn't the right to detain shoplifters. Now that goes beyond ignorance and raises issues about basic intelligence - at any point did they think, "Hundreds of shoplifters in the local courts every week, all the "victims" (in my view) of unlawful arrest, and not one of their highly experienced briefs made use of this? How likely is that? I may have erred".

    I've you've been promoted twice, and passed two sittings of promotion exams, you really should be in complete command of the basics. How many other people would expect the thick end of fifty k while being hazy on the basics? How much disorder in this country has been caused by tens of thousands of cops being a bit hazy on i) the fundamental duty to maintain public order, and ii) the extensive common law powers which can be exercised by anyone?

    No, sorry, I'm sick of paying for "hazy".
    If you were having an operation to your heart surely you'd want a specialist heart surgeon to perform on you rather than a GP who knows a lot about a wide range of things?
    If you get stopped by a traffic cop you can bet your bottom dollar he will be well up on all aspects of traffic law. If you get pulled in by the Vice Squad you can bet your bottom dollar they'll know all aspects of vice law. This is not a general police officer it is the head of a specialist unit who normally deals with very specific issues, he probably doesn't know much about commercial fraud either but that is what the fraud squad are for.
    Law is an extremely complex subject, if you expected all officers to be fully conversant with every aspect of law then they would spend all their time in the classroom which would be no good to man nor beast.
    'The honesty and bravery of our fighting forces stands in stark contrast to the weasel words and dishonesty of their political masters'. Liam Fox Now with 'added irony'!


  5. #50
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    Re: Safe Streets ? My experiance yesterday

    [quote="Markintime"][quote="gobbyidiot"]
    Quote Originally Posted by Closet_Jibber
    Law is an extremely complex subject, if you expected all officers to be fully conversant with every aspect of law then they would spend all their time in the classroom which would be no good to man nor beast.
    Or, alternatively, they could acquire the same continuous professional development obligations as everyone else and do a bit of reading in their own time. If you want "salaries" and "professional status" then you can't clock-watch, expect "ovies" for every extra minute, and expect to walk out of the door and never think about it until you come back. Show me a solicitor, architect, doctor, IT professional, teacher or lecturer who expects white collar wages and blue collar terms and conditions. In fact, compare and contrast the regime in the military with the expectations embodied in the "if you expect me to understand this send me on a two week course" attitude which (arguably) exists among some cops.

  6. #51
    Senior Member vvaannmmaann's Avatar
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    Re: Safe Streets ? My experiance yesterday

    Oh dear.This will end in tears.
    Older,but no wiser.

  7. #52
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    Re: Safe Streets ? My experiance yesterday

    Quote Originally Posted by vvaannmmaann
    Oh dear.This will end in tears.
    ....or worse, loads of really ill-conceived arrests

  8. #53
    Senior Member Markintime's Avatar
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    Re: Safe Streets ? My experiance yesterday

    Quote Originally Posted by gobbyidiot
    Quote Originally Posted by Markintime
    Law is an extremely complex subject, if you expected all officers to be fully conversant with every aspect of law then they would spend all their time in the classroom which would be no good to man nor beast.
    Or, alternatively, they could acquire the same continuous professional development obligations as everyone else and do a bit of reading in their own time. If you want "salaries" and "professional status" then you can't clock-watch, expect "ovies" for every extra minute, and expect to walk out of the door and never think about it until you come back. Show me a solicitor, architect, doctor, IT professional, teacher or lecturer who expects white collar wages and blue collar terms and conditions. In fact, compare and contrast the regime in the military with the expectations embodied in the "if you expect me to understand this send me on a two week course" attitude which (arguably) exists among some cops.
    Even in the Army there are areas of expertise. You don't expect an infanteer to be able to carry out EOD work you don't expect an EOD expert to be a great chef. Our knowledge is always honed by experience. We retain the knowledge to do our day to day duties and our knowledge of the commonplace we forget the more obscure. Most Police that I know do make every effort to keep abreast of changes in the law, particularly if they affect their area of expertise. If you have solicitors and barristers that specialise in one aspect of the law why is it not acceptable that the police should become more familiar with one area of the law than another?
    'The honesty and bravery of our fighting forces stands in stark contrast to the weasel words and dishonesty of their political masters'. Liam Fox Now with 'added irony'!


  9. #54
    Senior Member Closet_Jibber's Avatar
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    Re: Safe Streets ? My experiance yesterday

    Quote Originally Posted by Markintime
    Quote Originally Posted by gobbyidiot
    Quote Originally Posted by Markintime
    Law is an extremely complex subject, if you expected all officers to be fully conversant with every aspect of law then they would spend all their time in the classroom which would be no good to man nor beast.
    Or, alternatively, they could acquire the same continuous professional development obligations as everyone else and do a bit of reading in their own time. If you want "salaries" and "professional status" then you can't clock-watch, expect "ovies" for every extra minute, and expect to walk out of the door and never think about it until you come back. Show me a solicitor, architect, doctor, IT professional, teacher or lecturer who expects white collar wages and blue collar terms and conditions. In fact, compare and contrast the regime in the military with the expectations embodied in the "if you expect me to understand this send me on a two week course" attitude which (arguably) exists among some cops.
    Even in the Army there are areas of expertise. You don't expect an infanteer to be able to carry out EOD work you don't expect an EOD expert to be a great chef. Our knowledge is always honed by experience. We retain the knowledge to do our day to day duties and our knowledge of the commonplace we forget the more obscure. Most Police that I know do make every effort to keep abreast of changes in the law, particularly if they affect their area of expertise. If you have solicitors and barristers that specialise in one aspect of the law why is it not acceptable that the police should become more familiar with one area of the law than another?
    The fact that he honestly thinks his solicitor knows all laws (And doesn't claim overtime), his doctor knows all medical conditions (and doesn't claim expenses) and teachers know their lessons long before they prepare their lesson means he's not really paying that much attention in life.

    The law is so vast it IS unreasonable to expect every copper to know every law. Further to the point the law can over lap and different laws can apply to the same incident so working out which one is best to arrest for might be a pickle. This is why we have radio rooms, specialists and bosses to speak to when we arrive at the most unusual. Rather than thinking we know it all ( ) we usually detain people at the scene and if we're not sure, we ask.

    However you who is worried about dodgy, wrongful arrests don't want this. You are a strange cat.

    As for the wages - Dry your eyes princess. If you want to pay your local Police officer less, move to India.
    Quote Originally Posted by jimmys_best_mate View Post
    If BAe got the contract then we'd order a couple of Leopard Seals to deal with the penguins but we'd end up with a couple of Salmon 'fitted for but not with' teeth by 2038 at only £24bn.

  10. #55
    Senior Member BarkingSpider's Avatar
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    Re: Safe Streets ? My experiance yesterday

    Quote Originally Posted by Markintime
    Even in the Army there are areas of expertise. You don't expect an infanteer to be able to carry out EOD work you don't expect an ACC expert to be a great chef. Our knowledge is always honed by experience. We retain the knowledge to do our day to day duties and our knowledge of the commonplace we forget the more obscure. Most Police that I know do make every effort to keep abreast of changes in the law, particularly if they affect their area of expertise. If you have solicitors and barristers that specialise in one aspect of the law why is it not acceptable that the police should become more familiar with one area of the law than another?
    Fixed that for you. :D

    See this? This is me getting the fcuk out of here...
    Fuck it.

  11. #56
    Senior Member CaptainPlume's Avatar
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    Re: Safe Streets ? My experiance yesterday

    Quote Originally Posted by gobbyidiot
    Did you see "The Force" last week? Inspector (I think) in charge of a murder investigation has to ask whether failing to report an accident is an offence, and doesn't mind doing this on camera.
    Not Plod-bashing here, but I find this & the response to it interesting. I didn't see the programme in question & this is a genuine request for information.

    Was the failure to report thing about an RTA? If so I'd hardly expect that to be a complicated piece of law understood only by traffic police. You & I are expected to know it & would have the book thrown at us if we didn't; surely we should expect a relatively senior police officer to do so too?

    After all we were calling for Harridan Harperson's head a week or so ago for her failure to stop/report...
    Every man has a right to utter what he thinks truth, and every other man has a right to knock him down for it.

    Samuel Johnson

    I have always been afraid of those people in possession of what they believe to be the truth. They will do anything to see that the facts are changed and whipped into shape to agree with it.

    Guido Brunetti (Donna Leon's Venetian Detective)

  12. #57
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    Re: Safe Streets ? My experiance yesterday

    More is coming back to me - our (I believe) Inspector on "The Force" also had to ask whether it was legal for them to put a charge to the murderer if the CPS didn't come through with the paperwork. FFS. The pay scale for an Inspector starts at £46,800.

    http://www.police-information.co.uk/...dpensions.html


    If we assume 2k for the council tax this makes a newly appointed single inspector richer than 98% of the UK population.

    http://www.ifs.org.uk/wheredoyoufitin/

    No. A job where you can make 48k plus without a degree and retire at 55 on (for present members) two thirds...................I expect some basic knowledge.

  13. #58
    Senior Member Closet_Jibber's Avatar
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    Re: Safe Streets ? My experiance yesterday

    I wish I knew everything like you mate. By your reckoning English Teachers should throw away their dictionarys and GP's should throw away their medical journals.

    Lets not mention mechanics getting rid of manuals and Platoon Commanders throwing away their Tams.

    After all we pay all these people to know these things!

    Yawn!
    Quote Originally Posted by jimmys_best_mate View Post
    If BAe got the contract then we'd order a couple of Leopard Seals to deal with the penguins but we'd end up with a couple of Salmon 'fitted for but not with' teeth by 2038 at only £24bn.

  14. #59
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    Re: Safe Streets ? My experiance yesterday

    Quote Originally Posted by Closet_Jibber
    I wish I knew everything like you mate. By your reckoning English Teachers should throw away their dictionarys and GP's should throw away their medical journals.

    Lets not mention mechanics getting rid of manuals and Platoon Commanders throwing away their Tams.

    After all we pay all these people to know these things!

    Yawn!
    The English teachers could even throw away their dictionaries

  15. #60
    Senior Member Closet_Jibber's Avatar
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    Re: Safe Streets ? My experiance yesterday

    Exactly! ;)


    I wish I meant that.
    Quote Originally Posted by jimmys_best_mate View Post
    If BAe got the contract then we'd order a couple of Leopard Seals to deal with the penguins but we'd end up with a couple of Salmon 'fitted for but not with' teeth by 2038 at only £24bn.

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