Pickman's model
Starry Wisdom
What a thick wanker. But he'll enjoy his time inside
What a thick wanker. But he'll enjoy his time inside
TBF, it was Stoke Newington, where stuff (including drugs) has had a habit of disappearing from the office safe for decades.What a thick wanker. But he'll enjoy his time inside
You think drug seizures made it as far as the safe?TBF, it was Stoke Newington, where stuff (including drugs) has had a habit of disappearing from the office safe for decades.
Only to the locker roomYou think drug seizures made it as far as the safe?
Cheers - Louis MacNeice
To the safe until the chief super went off duty, when it went to the back of his car.You think drug seizures made it as far as the safe?
Cheers - Louis MacNeice
"Shortly before midnight on a winter’s day in 2020, Ricky Jones, a retired police officer, jumped to his death from the Prince of Wales Bridge spanning the River Severn ...
... After his death, Jones’s eldest daughter looked through his iPhone, hoping to get some insight into her father’s cruelty. The phone exposed one of the most toxic police cultures in the UK ..."
30 odd years of corruption involving multiple officers. Absolutely staggering.How a dead officer’s iPhone exposes misogyny, corruption and racism in a police force
What a thick wanker. But he'll enjoy his time inside
In one case highlighted in the 161-page report published this month, a prospective officer was granted clearance despite an overseas conviction for attempted theft and intelligence possibly linking them to drug crime and an incident of aggravated burglary.
The watchdog also identified a “culture of misogyny, sexism and predatory behaviour” within the police force.
In another case, an officer misused force resources to search for the work location of his ex-girlfriend, who was a police staff member, the report said. She reported him and alleged that he had previously stalked her. The professional standards department didn’t investigate her claim, and the officer in charge of the case chose only to issue an informal warning.
The cases were among hundreds of vetting files and complaint and misconduct investigations reviewed by His Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services (HMICFRS), a government watchdog. Among the files, investigators found applicants with criminal records or with family ties to organized crime being cleared to join police forces with insufficient scrutiny, and allegations of misconduct not being properly assessed.
Investigators reviewed hundreds of decisions made by police forces on vetting and misconduct, and agreed with the majority of them. But they disagreed in almost one in five cases, finding some clearance decisions “questionable at best.”
Part of the problem, experts say, is that forces are under pressure to recruit more officers to meet targets set by the British government’s Police Uplift Program, launched by former prime minister Boris Johnson in 2019. Under that program, the government committed to recruiting 20,000 new police officers across England and Wales by March 2023.
To meet that goal, vetting units are told to “recruit, and recruit quickly, and recruit under difficult circumstances,” says Tim Newburn, a professor of criminology and social policy at the London School of Economics and Political Science, the author of several books on policing. “That doesn’t in any way justify the failures that are drawn attention [to] in this report, but it possibly goes some way — and only some way — to explaining why such failures possibly exist.”
Now charged with a load more offences Met police officer David Carrick charged with six more counts of rapeLet's call this one what he is - an allegedly serial predator with a reign of terror going back nearly two decades. I'd ask how he was allowed to get away with this for so long but he worked for the Met so...
""Serious failings" of police officers while restraining a man contributed to his death, an inquest jury has concluded ..."
PC Rupert Edwards, attached to the South West Basic Command Unit, was arrested on suspicion of rape of Monday, 5 September. He was bailed and suspended from duty.
On Thursday, 8 December, he was further arrested on suspicion of rape. On Friday, 9 December, was charged with two counts of rape.
He is due to appear in custody at Westminster Magistrates' Court on Friday, 9 December.
At Brixton academy last week apparently.
(...) attended the home address of Ms A, a sex worker, for the purpose of engaging in sexual relations with her, including an extra service on 12 January 2021. They agreed the price of £140 for the services, and the FPC placed that amount in cash on a table.
When the sexual activity concluded, the officer snatched the money that he had placed on the table and tried to leave the premises. There was then a struggle in which Ms A tried to recover the money from the FPC. The FPC lashed out with his hand towards Ms A and/or hit Ms A in the face. The FPC left the premises after leaving just £40 of the £140 that had been agreed.
Better get that chequebook out lads, going to be a long dayThe personal details of sexual abuse victims - the victims' names, addresses, dates of birth and details of the offences committed - have been published on the Suffolk Constabulary website:
Suffolk police publish victims' information in mass data breach
"An investigation is now taking place into how this error occurred.
"The Information Commissioner’s Office has been notified of this incident.
"We do take our obligations under the Data Protection Act very seriously."
Not surprised this happened. Where I used to work we received an email from the (met) police asking if we had information on an instance of historical child abuse. It was a local authority archive so it was possible. Looking down the email chain the officer had forwarded us, the names of victim and abuser were given along with dates of assaults and details of the abuse. I thought then that the practice of sharing very personal and confidential information must be widespread within the police, that what I'd seen wouldn't be a singular eventThe personal details of sexual abuse victims - the victims' names, addresses, dates of birth and details of the offences committed - have been published on the Suffolk Constabulary website:
Suffolk police publish victims' information in mass data breach
"An investigation is now taking place into how this error occurred.
"The Information Commissioner’s Office has been notified of this incident.
"We do take our obligations under the Data Protection Act very seriously."
Officer charged with two counts of rape - Metropolitan Police press release today
"Three currently-serving Metropolitan Police officers have been convicted of a sexual offence since joining the force and continue to serve, a Freedom of Information Request has found ..."
"More than 150 police officers from the UK’s biggest force are being prevented from holding public-facing roles because they are under investigation over allegations of sexual misconduct or racism ..."
what's the source of the second picture?Meet 49-year old PC David Longden-Thurgood of Waterlooville, Hampshire, who has served with the Hampshire Constabulary for 19 years ...
(Source: as stated in image)
PC David Longden-Thurgood is currently on trial, accused of not being willing to take “no for an answer” when he allegedly raped a businesswoman at her home in October 2020:
Waterlooville police officer accused of raping woman 'without warning' and 'would not take no for an answer'
(Source: as stated in image)
It is alleged that while assaulting the woman PC David Longden-Thurgood claimed “it feels too good I can’t stop now”. His trial continues.