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By (user no longer on site) OP   
over a year ago

I'd (Bob) never do their job - I'd be given the boot in less than week dealing with the arseholes that they have to deal with on a daily basis, not to mention the lack of support afforded to them by the judicial system so hats off to 99% of them

But isn't it such a shame that even the police force have tossers on their payroll ?

Look at

http://news.aol.co.uk/main-news/story/woman-assault-sergeant-facing-sack/1254060?icid=main|uk|dl1|link4|http%3A%2F%2Fnews.aol.co.uk%2Fmain-news%2Fstory%2Fwoman-assault-sergeant-facing-sack%2F1254060

No need to say any more except that 'in every barrel there's a rotton apple'

Just makes you wonder how many other 'rotten apples' lie there, undetected, unnoticed or unreported ?????

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

If she had done the dishes there wouldn't had been a problem.

Women

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

This has been on EVERY new channel tv and radio all day. Not to mention miles of newspaper columns, why?!!

"Little middle aged, educated, middle class" - news paper quotes not mine, gets roughed up by big, nasty policeman.

Don't get me wrong he came across like a real charmer: not! But would we have all this ho ha if he'd roughed up a Beneton wearing chav from the local council estate?

Yeah...right!

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

All because she refused to do a breathalyser test.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"All because she refused to do a breathalyser test.

"

im sure there is more to this story than we are beeing told

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By (user no longer on site) OP   
over a year ago


"This has been on EVERY new channel tv and radio all day. Not to mention miles of newspaper columns, why?!!

"Little middle aged, educated, middle class" - news paper quotes not mine, gets roughed up by big, nasty policeman.

Don't get me wrong he came across like a real charmer: not! But would we have all this ho ha if he'd roughed up a Beneton wearing chav from the local council estate?

Yeah...right!"

Educated , Middle class, whatever - did she deserve that treatment ??

I've never had any axe to grind with the police, but neither did I credit the average plod with being anywhere near to average intelligence, but this says it all ....

If your gonna give someone a beating, at least make sure thare's no CCTV close by ....

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"I'd (Bob) never do their job - I'd be given the boot in less than week dealing with the arseholes that they have to deal with on a daily basis, not to mention the lack of support afforded to them by the judicial system so hats off to 99% of them

But isn't it such a shame that even the police force have tossers on their payroll ?

Look at

http://news.aol.co.uk/main-news/story/woman-assault-sergeant-facing-sack/1254060?icid=main|uk|dl1|link4|http%3A%2F%2Fnews.aol.co.uk%2Fmain-news%2Fstory%2Fwoman-assault-sergeant-facing-sack%2F1254060

No need to say any more except that 'in every barrel there's a rotton apple'

Just makes you wonder how many other 'rotten apples' lie there, undetected, unnoticed or unreported ?????"

There is no excuse for his actions at all and he should be dismissed immediately. However i do not feel the victim if she was one should be able to claim compensation of the state. I watched he interview on TV and it just looked like a pre claim interview.

An apology and medical bills yes but no more.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

In every walk of life there are people who should not be doing that job.

However in most cases we (the public) dont get to see the bad until someone thinks "Ohh wait a minute give news at 10 a call and I might get some money".

Personally if it was me I would have been too ashamed to let anyone know I had been arrested never mind that a copper had done that.

I think a quiet complaint through the proper channels and get the person retrained would be better than dragging your own problems through the papers/news programmes.

But again I think thats cos I would be ashamed that my behaviour was bad enough to get arrested

Shona

x x x

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

The woman was woken whilst she was in her car and refused to do a breath test. This says to me she was d*unk (or hung over) and the law states that she was in control of the vehicle. This means she was probably argumentatuve and uncooperative with the policeman who arrested her, and ikely the ones who processed her too (being as she was likely d*unk). So the coppers probably had to shove her about to get into the cell.

Is this correct? Who knows, but it is likely that (as someone said above) if it were (and I hate the term) a chav, no one would have heard about it and I don't doubt it still happens to minorities as well.

Of course she should be entitled to compensation, she has been injured as a result of negligence on the part of the police (particularly if, as I have heard, her wound was not treated at the time). She should not be entitled to her medical bill sas she would be treated on the NHS (if she went to a private doctor, that's her choice and she should pay for it).

What was interesting to note, though, was that the incident was reported to a senior officer by an officer who witnessed the event.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"The woman was woken whilst she was in her car and refused to do a breath test. This says to me she was d*unk (or hung over) and the law states that she was in control of the vehicle. This means she was probably argumentatuve and uncooperative with the policeman who arrested her, and ikely the ones who processed her too (being as she was likely d*unk). So the coppers probably had to shove her about to get into the cell.

Is this correct? Who knows, but it is likely that (as someone said above) if it were (and I hate the term) a chav, no one would have heard about it and I don't doubt it still happens to minorities as well.

Of course she should be entitled to compensation, she has been injured as a result of negligence on the part of the police (particularly if, as I have heard, her wound was not treated at the time). She should not be entitled to her medical bill sas she would be treated on the NHS (if she went to a private doctor, that's her choice and she should pay for it).

What was interesting to note, though, was that the incident was reported to a senior officer by an officer who witnessed the event."

Her story is bizarre: she was asleep in her car 150 yards from her house. The natural conclusion would be to assume she was d*unk, especially as she refused to be breathalysed.

My point is the "shock, horror" reporting, the surprise that a policeman could do that, and to "one of us". I don't think anyone in any ethnic community was surprised at all: we've heard of worse and the public response has always been for the police, after all, you know what "these people" are like!

What did surprise me was his actions in an area with CCTV! His handling of her was totally inappropriate. Shame on the officer that just stood and watched but kudos to the female officer that reported him!

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

A previously unblemished career blighted by one moment of madness, attributed to many years of facing people who are disrepectful, abusive and in some cases, physically threatening.

And that was just a schoolteacher belting a couple of kids.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

Dont u think it always funny that these cctv moments they capture only show the moment the police are doing summat and not what happened and not the whole story. And over the years there has been many a cctv showing just what the police are doing and not these innocent people who get attention off the police

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"The woman was woken whilst she was in her car and refused to do a breath test. This says to me she was d*unk (or hung over) and the law states that she was in control of the vehicle. This means she was probably argumentatuve and uncooperative with the policeman who arrested her, and ikely the ones who processed her too (being as she was likely d*unk). So the coppers probably had to shove her about to get into the cell.

Is this correct? Who knows, but it is likely that (as someone said above) if it were (and I hate the term) a chav, no one would have heard about it and I don't doubt it still happens to minorities as well.

Of course she should be entitled to compensation, she has been injured as a result of negligence on the part of the police (particularly if, as I have heard, her wound was not treated at the time). She should not be entitled to her medical bill sas she would be treated on the NHS (if she went to a private doctor, that's her choice and she should pay for it).

What was interesting to note, though, was that the incident was reported to a senior officer by an officer who witnessed the event.

Her story is bizarre: she was asleep in her car 150 yards from her house. The natural conclusion would be to assume she was d*unk, especially as she refused to be breathalysed.

My point is the "shock, horror" reporting, the surprise that a policeman could do that, and to "one of us". I don't think anyone in any ethnic community was surprised at all: we've heard of worse and the public response has always been for the police, after all, you know what "these people" are like!

What did surprise me was his actions in an area with CCTV! His handling of her was totally inappropriate. Shame on the officer that just stood and watched but kudos to the female officer that reported him!"

Its not just the ethnic community its anyone that looks a bit different. some of them are ok but a lot let power get to them.

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