(09-17-2021, 11:06 AM)BIAD Wrote: The burden of being a child-fucker. (Don't tell me the Devil isn't here!)
Quote:Rochdale Grooming Gang Child Rapist Complains About Benefits in Britain
'A member of the notorious Rochdale grooming child rape gang has complained about his treatment
in Britain at a deportation hearing, saying that he is barely “surviving” on state benefits.
The oppressed Adil Khan.
Fifty-one-year-old Adil Khan from Pakistan, who was previously jailed for his role in the child rape gang
in Rochdale, Greater Manchester after he impregnated a thirteen-year-old girl and trafficked another
15-year-old girl.
Khan was sentenced to eight years in prison in 2012, yet he was released early and has remained in the
country despite years of promises from the government to deport him.
Alongside his fellow gang member Qari Abdul Rauf, 52, Khan has launched a series of taxpayer-funded
appeals against their deportation to their native Pakistan. Following reports that Rauf is still walking the
streets of Rochdale, Home Secretary Priti Patel promised to “strain every sinew” to remove the child
predators from the country.
Appearing before an immigration tribunal to discuss his case against deportation, Khan bemoaned his
current life in Britain, claiming he has not been afforded his rights. “I cannot exercise any rights in this country
as an individual. I cannot do anything for my family, I’m just surviving on my son’s benefits,” he said through
a translator per the BBC.
“The police informed me about a month ago that they have cancelled my driver’s licence, according to the
Home Office instructions.”
The chair of the hearing, Judge Nehar Bird informed the child rapists that the tribunal was convened “to decide
whether the Home Office decision to deport you back to Pakistan is right or wrong, in law”. Complications over
their deportations have arisen as both men were granted certificates from the government in Islamabad stating
that they officially renounced their citizenship from Pakistan.
However, the documents were issued in September of 2018, after they were already stripped of their UK citizenship.
The appeal is also attempting to cite Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which despite leaving
the European Union, the UK is still bound by as it is an instrument of the Council of Europe which is separate -although
closely tied -to the European Union.
In June, Khan claimed that he and his fellow child rapists were “not that big a criminal…We have not committed that big a crime.”...'
Quote:'The convict then attempted to shift blame onto the media, saying: “The journalists have made our lives a living hell,”
adding: “The journalists made us out to be big criminals.”
One of Khan’s victims said in April: “The fact they are appealing their sentences honestly makes me feel sick.”
“I have to live round here and it’s so easy to find me if they want to,” she said, adding: “We are nearly ten years on and
me and the other victims are still being let down by the police and the legal system. No one seems to care.”
The British government and local police forces throughout the country have been accused of overlooking the scourge
of child sexual grooming over the past few decades over politically correct fears.
Last year, for example, it was revealed that police in Rotherham police overlooked decades of abuse committed by
members of “Asian” rape gangs over concerns about stoking “racial tensions”. A report from the Independent Office
for Police Conduct (IOPC) said that a senior officer in Rotherham told a father of a missing girl that the city “would
erupt” if the public was made aware that “Asian” grooming gangs were sexually abusing young white girls, for example...'
09-19-2021, 09:29 AM (This post was last modified: 09-19-2021, 09:32 AM by BIAD.)
Anyone remember these days...?
Today, the National Health Service in London and elsewhere has changed and not for the best.
Quote:Knife gangs are breaking into hospital wards to finish off their stab victims: A chilling dispatch by a London junior doctor on a barely believable horror hidden from the world until now
'Working in a London hospital, you get used to dealing with the after-effects of gang fights. But you don’t
expect to see them. Of the many horrible things you might witness as a junior doctor in the capital, among
the worst must be watching a teenage gang trying to break into the ward you work on, hoping to finish off
a victim, punching your colleagues out of the way to get to him.
Where I work, there’s a ‘code red’ every day. That’s what we call the arrival of a stabbing victim.
The patient is almost always a teenager. We should provide a safe refuge. But just a few weeks into working
in a London hospital, I had witnessed two stabbings.
A few weeks ago, a boy came in with knife wounds and was taken to have a CT scan to assess the damage.
But his attackers were not satisfied with wounding him –they wanted him dead. After turning up at the hospital,
the whole gang rushed to the CT scanners.
The nurse and radiographer tried to stand in their way –my colleagues tend to be extremely brave –but they
were attacked and knocked to the ground. At this point, security arrived: the gang fled, successfully escaping.
If you’ve been to a hospital recently, you’ll know that you can pretty much walk in and around as you like.
There are far, far too many people to check. There are numerous restricted and locked areas, and we have
permanent security guards posted on the highest risk areas for gang violence –but most entrances are
completely open at all hours.
You can’t get into other wards without buzzing and being let in, but anyone can get into A&E.
The injured boy came in on a Saturday morning, when the hospital was quite empty. Later that day, someone
walking around on the first floor suddenly heard loud shouting and yelling. One of my friends was working in a
ward adjacent to A&E, and saw a man run up and start banging on the door, closely followed by a group of
young men.
The gang had returned, found a target, and were chasing him down the corridor, knives out. All the wards were
locked, and the man was trying his best to get away, hammering on all the doors –but no one was opening up.
None of the staff wanted men with knives running around their wards –and, frankly, probably didn’t want to be
in harm’s way themselves. We’re not paid danger money.
My friend felt guilty for not opening the door, but what was she supposed to do: put herself and all the patients
in her ward at risk?
Usually when there is a gang-related incident, there are stabbings on both sides. Hospitals go to great lengths
to ensure members of rival gangs are taken to separate trauma centres. But sometimes a mistake is made
–or both victims are too unwell to reach another hospital – and they end up in the same place.
Either way, if gangs are determined to take their feuds into hospitals, there is not much we can do.
Gangs come up with all sorts of ways to try and access victims who have survived. Sometimes, they pretend
to be family members. The hospital has started to set code words that genuine relatives can use to identify
themselves when they come and visit. But on one occasion, a hostile gang created fake ID badges.
They managed to get hold of their target’s location and just called on the intercom. They were buzzed in, and
at least a couple got onto the ward. Occasionally, gang members who’ve been stabbed are personally guarded
by the police during their admissions. I know of at least one who was discharged straight into witness protection.
There was blood all over the floors of the corridor when the gang left that Saturday. Their victim, the man who’d
been banging on doors, was rushed to the Intensive Care Unit. He was at –in terms of treatment quality –one of
the best hospitals he could hope for.
The major trauma team often includes ex-military doctors. There will be up to five different surgeons working to
save one victim simultaneously. This, of course, places a great strain on the health service, but the upside is that
London surgeons have become experts –the best in the world –at treating stab wounds.
People survive horrendous attacks that would have proved fatal a few years ago.
Some are not meant to kill, though; gangs sometimes go in for ‘bagging’, which is when they stab the victim in
the rectum, so that they need a colostomy bag for the rest of their life.
This is meant to be the most humiliating punishment...'
(09-17-2021, 11:06 AM)BIAD Wrote: The burden of being a child-fucker. (Don't tell me the Devil isn't here!)
Quote:Rochdale Grooming Gang Child Rapist Complains About Benefits in Britain
'A member of the notorious Rochdale grooming child rape gang has complained about his treatment
in Britain at a deportation hearing, saying that he is barely “surviving” on state benefits.
The oppressed Adil Khan.
Fifty-one-year-old Adil Khan from Pakistan, who was previously jailed for his role in the child rape gang
in Rochdale, Greater Manchester after he impregnated a thirteen-year-old girl and trafficked another
15-year-old girl.
A "man Without a Country", eh? Poor baby... but his lack of citizenship anywhere, his lack of a nation willing to claim him, sounds like a personal problem to me.
Deport him to Afghanistan. The Taliban will take him in like a brother. After all, the Taliban ARE Pakistanis, just like him, that Pakistan is ashamed to claim, just like him, AND the Taliban has a penchant for scrogging children, just like him... so it seems a no-brainer to me. Just deport him to the Taliban.
It's the only place on Earth he might find a home now.
.
Diogenes was eating bread and lentils for supper. He was seen by the philosopher Aristippus, who lived comfortably by flattering the king.
Said Aristippus, ‘If you would learn to be subservient to the king you would not have to live on lentils.’ Said Diogenes, ‘Learn to live on lentils and you will not have to be subservient to the king.’
(09-19-2021, 09:29 AM)BIAD Wrote: Anyone remember these days...?
Today, the National Health Service in London and elsewhere has changed and not for the best.
Quote:Knife gangs are breaking into hospital wards to finish off their stab victims: A chilling dispatch by a London junior doctor on a barely believable horror hidden from the world until now
I'm not certain why pikes have not made a comeback in the UK since restrictions of firearms have gotten chokingly tight, and gangs have had to resort to knives to exercise their penchants for mayhem. A pike is really just a big knife on a long pole, long enough that knife gangs cannot conceal it, and would be the perfect accessory for a night about town in Londonistan I would think.
You see, with a pike, you could keep the miscreants a few feet away while you turned them into meat sieves, and they could not in turn reach YOU with their bitty little concealable knives. It seems the only winning move in the current climate...
.
Diogenes was eating bread and lentils for supper. He was seen by the philosopher Aristippus, who lived comfortably by flattering the king.
Said Aristippus, ‘If you would learn to be subservient to the king you would not have to live on lentils.’ Said Diogenes, ‘Learn to live on lentils and you will not have to be subservient to the king.’
(09-19-2021, 08:21 PM)Ninurta Wrote: I'm not certain why pikes have not made a comeback in the UK since restrictions of firearms have gotten chokingly tight, and gangs have had to resort to knives to exercise their penchants for mayhem. A pike is really just a big knife on a long pole, long enough that knife gangs cannot conceal it, and would be the perfect accessory for a night about town in Londonistan I would think.
You see, with a pike, you could keep the miscreants a few feet away while you turned them into meat sieves, and they could not in turn reach YOU with their bitty little concealable knives. It seems the only winning move in the current climate...
Ah yes, but NHS hospital corridors can be quite narrow and the pike is not conducive with a passing tea-trolley
or an elderly lady making her way to the toilet -along with her squeaky-wheeled IV-drip.
(09-19-2021, 08:21 PM)Ninurta Wrote: I'm not certain why pikes have not made a comeback in the UK since restrictions of firearms have gotten chokingly tight, and gangs have had to resort to knives to exercise their penchants for mayhem. A pike is really just a big knife on a long pole, long enough that knife gangs cannot conceal it, and would be the perfect accessory for a night about town in Londonistan I would think.
You see, with a pike, you could keep the miscreants a few feet away while you turned them into meat sieves, and they could not in turn reach YOU with their bitty little concealable knives. It seems the only winning move in the current climate...
Ah yes, but NHS hospital corridors can be quite narrow and the pike is not conducive with a passing tea-trolley
or an elderly lady making her way to the toilet -along with her squeaky-wheeled IV-drip.
Plus the fact that you can't turn around in a corridor with a pike through your head!
Unless it is a fresh water one.....
Anyone seen my coat?
I still don't understand why the Kamikaze pilots wore helmets!
(09-19-2021, 08:21 PM)Ninurta Wrote: I'm not certain why pikes have not made a comeback in the UK since restrictions of firearms have gotten chokingly tight, and gangs have had to resort to knives to exercise their penchants for mayhem. A pike is really just a big knife on a long pole, long enough that knife gangs cannot conceal it, and would be the perfect accessory for a night about town in Londonistan I would think.
You see, with a pike, you could keep the miscreants a few feet away while you turned them into meat sieves, and they could not in turn reach YOU with their bitty little concealable knives. It seems the only winning move in the current climate...
Ah yes, but NHS hospital corridors can be quite narrow and the pike is not conducive with a passing tea-trolley
or an elderly lady making her way to the toilet -along with her squeaky-wheeled IV-drip.
(09-19-2021, 08:21 PM)Ninurta Wrote: I'm not certain why pikes have not made a comeback in the UK since restrictions of firearms have gotten chokingly tight, and gangs have had to resort to knives to exercise their penchants for mayhem. A pike is really just a big knife on a long pole, long enough that knife gangs cannot conceal it, and would be the perfect accessory for a night about town in Londonistan I would think.
You see, with a pike, you could keep the miscreants a few feet away while you turned them into meat sieves, and they could not in turn reach YOU with their bitty little concealable knives. It seems the only winning move in the current climate...
Ah yes, but NHS hospital corridors can be quite narrow and the pike is not conducive with a passing tea-trolley
or an elderly lady making her way to the toilet -along with her squeaky-wheeled IV-drip.
Cat-o-nine-tails would work for both situations.
Cheers
Thank you for reminding me BIAD it is half way through the month and my submissive is begging to be flogged as she was naughty last weekend...
I still don't understand why the Kamikaze pilots wore helmets!
09-24-2021, 03:44 PM (This post was last modified: 09-24-2021, 03:50 PM by BIAD.)
Britain is often offered as the world's most surveillance-happy country, with cameras seemingly on every corner.
In the cities, I guess it's true, but it doesn't actually stop crimes... just gives shitty images of those who've already
committed them.
This murder is particularly worrying. The 28 year-old left her home and was passing through a well-lit municipal park
on her way to meeting her friends at a pub. From what the Press are reporting, she was hit over head with an object
and we assume she then died.
Her body was found under some leaves in the park on Saturday afternoon.
In itself, tragic but not that remarkable when one considers the violence in London these days. However, one of
the particulars grabbed my attention and it was that after the assailant allegedly hit Ms Nessa -the victim, over the
head, he then carried her body to the pile of leaves.
Considering all the evil reasons to perform such a horrid act, the need to transport the body in order to hide it
for no logical purpose is something that pinging my radar. It was a public park with well-illuminated pathways,
the evening was just starting as dusk officially arrived at 7.10pm on the 17th September.
But this guy picks up the body, puts it over his shoulder and carries it to a convenient pile of leaves.
And Autumn (Fall) wasn't until 22nd September in the UK!
No... there's something else here.
Quote:Police issue CCTV footage of SECOND man who is 'vital' to Sabina Nessa murder probe:
*Detectives hunt male in hooded coat seen near pub where teacher, 28, was due to meet 'first date' but never
arrived after fatal attack
*Detectives released video of bearded man wearing grey trousers and black jacket walking outside some flats
*Asked anyone who recognises him to urgently get in touch by phoning 0208 721 4266 or Crimestoppers
*The attack itself was reportedly caught on CCTV, which showed her being hit on the head by an assailant
*Meanwhile in another development a man was arrested on suspicion of murdering Sabina, Met police said
*Officers also released a new appeal for a man and silver vehicle seen in area on separate CCTV images
*Sabina, a 28-year-old primary school teacher, was found in dead in Cator Park, south east London on Saturday
*She vanished on Friday evening after leaving home in Kidbrooke to go on a first date with a man in a local pub
'Police today released new CCTV footage of the second man they are hunting over the murder of Sabina Nessa
-after arresting a 38-year-old over the horrific attack on the primary school teacher just yards from her front door.
Ms Sabina Nessa and the poor image of the suspect in her murder.
A 12-second clip shows a bearded and balding man wearing a black hooded coat and grey jeans looking over his
shoulder and pulling at his hood as he walks down Pegler Square in Kidbrooke, south-east London.
Detectives have also released an image, captured in the same area, of a silver car they believe the man has access
to and appealed for anyone who recognised either to contact the force immediately. Det chief inspector Neil John, from
the Met's Specialist Crime Command, said 'an extensive trawl' of CCTV in the area continued and said information on
the man's identity and whereabouts could be 'vital' to the investigation.
The first man, 38, was arrested on suspicion of murder last night in the second arrest in the investigation. Officers want
anyone who can identify second man seen in the CCTV footage to urgently get in touch.
In a separate development, reports suggested the attack itself had been caught on CCTV.
Footage showed Sabina being struck on the head by an assailant wielding a weapon just moments after she left her flat,
before she was slung over his shoulder and dumped in a local park, it is claimed. Sabina disappeared on Friday evening
as she left home on a five minute walk to meet a man for a first date at a local pub.
Her body was found in Cator Park, 200 yards from her home, on Saturday afternoon.
What they think occurred.
On the same day a man in his 40s and known to her was the first to be arrested on suspicion of her murder. He was later
released under investigation. The attack CCTV, first reported by the Daily Telegraph, shows an assailant apparently striking
Sabina on the head with an object moments after she left her house.
He then carries her over his shoulder in the direction of Cator Park, a police source told the newspaper.
Their report came hours after police released their own CCTV images of a man they wish to identify in the case.
Scotland Yard appealed for information on the man shown, and a silver vehicle that was seen in the area, and asked the public
to come forward with information...
There's a lot about virtue-signalling a vigil for the poor woman, so I omitted it.
Quote:...The man, pictured with balding, brown hair and in grey tracksuit bottoms, a dark-coloured jacket and black shoes, was seen on
CCTV in Pegler Square, close to Kidbrooke rail station at the north end of Cator Park, on the evening of Sabina's attack...'
In the Daily Mail article above, they state: 'The attack itself was reportedly caught on CCTV, which showed her being hit on the head by an assailant'
But now the BBC -after reporting that a 36-year-old man has been arrested, confuse the MSM narrative with: 'A post-mortem examination into the cause of Ms Nessa's death was inconclusive.'
(09-26-2021, 09:03 PM)BIAD Wrote: In the Daily Mail article above, they state: 'The attack itself was reportedly caught on CCTV, which showed her being hit on the head by an assailant'
But now the BBC -after reporting that a 36-year-old man has been arrested, confuse the MSM narrative with: 'A post-mortem examination into the cause of Ms Nessa's death was inconclusive.'
What the hell is going on?
A blow to the head will not necessarily kill someone. It's the damage that blow does that does the dirt, and that is what they are looking for. Cerebral hemorrhage? Concussion of such severity to inflict death (slapping the brain around inside the skull causing damage leading to death)? They have inquiring minds that want to know, and appear to be frustrated that they cannot pinpoint the precise cause.
.
Diogenes was eating bread and lentils for supper. He was seen by the philosopher Aristippus, who lived comfortably by flattering the king.
Said Aristippus, ‘If you would learn to be subservient to the king you would not have to live on lentils.’ Said Diogenes, ‘Learn to live on lentils and you will not have to be subservient to the king.’
09-28-2021, 04:15 PM (This post was last modified: 09-28-2021, 04:20 PM by BIAD.)
(09-27-2021, 01:49 AM)Ninurta Wrote: A blow to the head will not necessarily kill someone.
It's the damage that blow does that does the dirt, and that is what they are looking for. Cerebral hemorrhage?
Concussion of such severity to inflict death (slapping the brain around inside the skull causing damage leading to death)?
They have inquiring minds that want to know, and appear to be frustrated that they cannot pinpoint the precise cause.
Well, I guess we'll find out from the Londoner they finally arrested.
Quote:Man appears in court charged with murder
A man has been remanded in custody after appearing in court charged with the murder of Sabina Nessa,
who was killed as she walked to meet a friend in south-east London.
Koci Selamaj, 36, appeared at Willesden Magistrates' Court on Tuesday.
He was arrested at a property on Terminus Road, Eastbourne, on Sunday.
Koci Selamaj.
The body of Ms Nessa, 28, was found in Cator Park in Kidbrooke, a few minutes' walk from her home, by
a member of the public on 18 September. Wearing a grey jumper and grey tracksuit bottoms, Mr Selamaj
appeared in the dock with an Albanian interpreter.
However the court was told he would be able to follow the proceedings without one.
Mr Selamaj's solicitor Aidan Harvey said his client intended to plead not guilty...'
That Whitty is in full speed....deadly vaccines and now wants people drinking toxic fluoride .
We have other crazy bastards -just like Chris Whitty, who are helping to destroy the UK!
Quote:Witness to 'targeted' attack 'wants to get the hell out of London'
'A witness to a 'targeted' shooting in South London says she 'wants to get the hell out' of the city.
At just before 1pm this afternoon (September 27) a man was shot on Garrett Lane in Tooting.
Officers were called to the crime scene at the junction between Fairlight Road and Garrett Lane...'
Quote:‘Decomposed’ body discovered by walkers in field as cops probe ‘unexplained death’
'A “decomposed’' body has been found by walkers in an isolated field as cops probe the “unexplained death”.
Metropolitan Police closed off the paddock close to Biggin Hill airport after the grim discovery on Sunday afternoon.
A white forensic tent has been set up in the field while the forensic investigation continues.
Unconfirmed reports on social media said the group which discovered the remains believed the body was a male.
They also said they thought the remains might have been in the field for "months".
A crime scene remains in place at the field, close to the airport at Biggin Hill in Bromley, South East London.
Walkers reportedly found the body in a corner of a field, on the side of a hill close to the airfield.
The paddock is surrounded by country lanes with the nearest homes located about one mile away...'
10-01-2021, 09:25 AM (This post was last modified: 10-01-2021, 09:30 AM by BIAD.)
As the UK legacy media paw at the remains of a disgusting murder of a woman by a Police Officer for more
opinionated articles to fill their Friday, the Metropolitan Police of London reacted to the media-driven negative
fallout of story.
On the evening of the third of March 2021, thirty-three year-old Sarah Everard was walking back from a friend's
house in Clapham, a district of South-West London, when she was stopped by a lone man who showed her his
warrant-card. He was Wayne Couzens, a off-duty Metropolitan Police constable.
After explaining that Everard was breaking Covid regulations, Couzens pretended to arrest the pretty marketing
executive and handcuffed her. Escorting into his vehicle, the Policeman drove seventy-seven miles to Dover in
Kent, where he switched from the car he had rented to his own.
In a secluded spot in the nearby village of Sibertswold, it's believed Couzens then raped and strangled her.
Later, Couzens burned the body and disposed of the remains in two rubble-bags that were dropped into a pond
close to where Sarah Everard been murdered.
Couzens was known as a 'problem Officer', he constantly wore a Police Duty Belt -whether on or off duty and was
nicknamed 'the Rapist' by some fellow-officers because of his taste in violent sexual footage he watched from his
cell-phone. It was the same belt he used to strangle Sarah Everard. There followed a cover-up and a reluctance
from the Met to sat what they had known for somme time.
But all of -what we assume was Couzens' final fantasy, was born from the restrictions that the public had come to
believe about Covid-19 and the trust that the public had in believing a Police Officer would never act in such a
despicable manner.
So what did the Metropolitan Police suggest after Couzens' verdict of life-imprisonment was announced and the
details of what he'd done...?
Quote:Challenge plain-clothes officers, Met Police says
'People stopped by a lone plain-clothes officer should challenge their legitimacy, the Met Police says.
As it seeks to reassure women after the murder of Sarah Everard by a serving police officer, the Met said it was
"entirely reasonable" to demand an officer's identity and intentions.
Wayne Couzens showed a warrant card and used handcuffs as he kidnapped Ms Everard before her rape and murder.
The Met faces questions over whether chances were missed to stop him.
Sarah Everard Wayne Couzens
Couzens, 48, targeted Ms Everard, 33, on a street in south London in March. He has been sentenced to a whole-life prison
term. He had been linked to two previous allegations of indecent exposure.
Policing minister Kit Malthouse said "officers up and down the land recognise the devastating consequences of this event".
"There is a job to be done to rebuild trust by the police, particularly, I have to say, in London," he told BBC Breakfast.
He said it was "reasonable" for a woman with doubts about a police officer's conduct to make "lines of enquiry", but that
"won't be appropriate in every circumstance" because officers "seeking to keep us all safe every day need to be able to
go about their business".
Metropolitan Police Commissioner Dame Cressida Dick faces calls to resign over the force's handling of the case, as Home
Secretary Priti Patel said it raised "serious questions". Speaking outside the Old Bailey after Couzens was sentenced, Dame
Cressida said "a precious bond of trust has been damaged" and she would ensure "any lessons" were learned.
As part of renewed efforts to ease fears in the capital, the Met will step-up "reassurance patrols" and treat indecent exposure
allegations more seriously. An extra 650 new officers will patrol busy public areas in London.
In a letter to MPs, seen by the BBC, Scotland Yard admitted the case was part of a "much bigger and troubling picture".
The force advised people detained by a lone plain-clothes officer to ask "where are your colleagues" and "where have you come
from?" It suggested other "very searching questions", including "why are you here" and "exactly why are you stopping or talking to
me?"
The force said that, to verify the answers, people should ask to speak to an operator on a police radio to determine if the officer
is genuine and acting legitimately. It added: "All officers will, of course, know about this case and will be expecting in an interaction
like that - rare as it may be - that members of the public may be understandably concerned and more distrusting than they previously
would have been, and should and will expect to be asked more questions."
In the event someone believes they are in "real and imminent danger" the Met advised they "must seek assistance - shouting out to
a passer-by, running into a house, knocking on a door, waving a bus down or if you are in the position to do so calling 999".
It said it was unusual for lone plain-clothes officers to engage with people.
In the letter, the Met explained officers are expected to intervene when required, and even when off duty, and that they routinely carry
warrant cards, and sometimes equipment when travelling.
Speaking to the London Assembly, Sir Stephen House, the Met's deputy commissioner, said plain-clothes officers will not be deployed
on their own and will be in pairs. But he warned there would be occasions where that is not possible given that off-duty officers not in
uniform "put themselves on duty" when they come across an incident.
Couzens' inept boss, Dame Cressida Dick. Met Commissioner.
Couzens, who had been a police officer since 2002, transferred to the Met in 2018 from the Civil Nuclear Constabulary, where he had
worked since 2011. He passed vetting checks. Assistant Met Commissioner Nick Ephgrave admitted a vetting check on Couzens was
not done correctly when he joined the Met.
It meant a link to an incident of indecent exposure in Kent in 2015, involving a vehicle linked to Couzens, was missed.
Though AC Ephgrave said that even if it had come up in the vetting process, it would not have changed the outcome as Couzens was
not named as a suspect. Around 72 hours before Ms Everard's abduction, Met Police officers received a separate allegation of indecent
exposure which also identified the vehicle involved, registered to Couzens.
He was sacked by the Met in July after pleading guilty to Ms Everard's murder...'
So now the public can rest assured knowing that any perverted Bobby-on-the-beat will no longer be able to carry out such dastardly
deeds due to the fact that such types of Police Officers will not be able to lie.
10-01-2021, 04:54 PM (This post was last modified: 10-01-2021, 04:57 PM by BIAD.)
On the back of the terrible murder in the above post, the BBC have now issued some advice for women
being approached by someone claiming they are a Policeman.
It's 2021, a Policeman has raped and killed a member of the public. Some of the killer's fellow Officers are
alleged to have behaved in a manner not conducive with how the law enforcement of the UK wish to be
perceived by that public and here we are with advice on what to do when interacting with a Constable of
the law.
Due to P.C. Wayne Couzens' crime, the whole of the UK's law enforcement are now being painted as dubious.
The media are having a field-day ripping apart the once-solid trust that the public had in their local Bobby and
now we're given 'advice' that won't stop a perspective rapist regardless what profession he claims to be in.
There's a reason why I sarcastically use the word 'standards' in the 'Britain Today' thread.
Quote:What should you do if you are stopped by police?
'Women have been asking how they should react if they are stopped by a lone police officer.
It comes after Metropolitan Police officer Wayne Couzens was jailed for using his police ID to kidnap, rape and
murder 33-year-old Sarah Everard.
What can I do if I'm worried about my safety?
Campaigners stress the onus should not be on women to keep themselves safe. Instead, they say the focus should
be on tackling violence against women and rebuilding trust in police.
Jess Phillips, shadow domestic violence and safeguarding minister, said "it is not women who need advice".
She said she would have got into Wayne Couzens' car - "almost anybody would".
But if you are stopped by someone claiming to be an officer and something doesn't feel right, what can you do?
Former Met Police chief superintendent Parm Sandhu urges people to "ask for help if you need it". She says if
you're stopped by someone who is alone, in plain clothes and an unmarked car, phone 999 to check who they are.
If you can't phone anyone, and you're scared, scream and draw attention to yourself, she says. If they ask you to get into their car, ask them to call for a marked police vehicle or insist they call another officer, she adds.
How can you find out if the officer is real?
Calling the police station they say they belong to, or 101 to check their warrant card and identity, is a good idea says
Adam Wagner, a human rights barrister at Doughty Street Chambers.
He also suggests calling a family member or friend (or lawyer if you know one) to let them know what is happening.
The Met Police says if you are alone with an officer and no others arrive, ask "searching questions", such as "where
are your colleagues?". If they have a radio, ask to hear the voice of the operator and ask them to verify you're with a
genuine officer, it says.
However, Andrea Simon, director of the End Violence Against Women Coalition, says it is "absurd" for police to advise
women to challenge officers - as this fails to recognise the power imbalance in the relationship.
She says this will be "felt most by women from black, minority ethnic and migrant communities who commonly experience
over-policing".
What is a police warrant card?
Officers always carry identification and can be asked for proof.
This is usually a warrant card - which can differ from force to force - but typically includes the officer's photograph, name,
identity number, the name of the force and a security hologram.
Police in Brent, north-west London, shared an image of a Met Police warrant card back in 2018.
It's a real warrant card 'cos someone has scrawled 'real' on the photograph.
Do police have to wear a uniform?
A police community support officer (PCSO) must wear uniform when they stop and question you.
Police officers don't always wear uniforms. But they must show you their warrant card, especially if they are in plain clothes.
It would be highly unusual for a plain-clothes officer to be working alone, the College of Policing says. If they are, it is standard
practice that they should call other officers who should arrive soon afterwards.
After Couzens' sentencing, the Met Police said it would no longer deploy plain-clothes officers on their own - although there
would be "occasions" when that was not possible.
What can police stop you for?
A police officer or PCSO can ask questions about who you are, where you are going and what you are doing.
This is under "stop and account" or "stop and question" powers, according to human rights organisation Liberty.
In most cases you have the right to refuse to answer and can walk away and this can't be used as the sole reason to search
or arrest you.
However, Liberty advises that if officers have reason to believe you're involved in anti-social behaviour, you must give your name
and address - as it is a criminal offence not to. Police can also stop you under separate "stop and search" powers.
These allow officers to search an individual if they have "reasonable grounds" to suspect you are carrying illegal drugs, a weapon,
stolen property or something which could be used to commit a crime.
How should police arrest someone?
A single police officer can arrest you, but must have reasonable grounds to suspect you are carrying a prohibited item - such as
illegal drugs or a weapon - or are engaging in anti-social behaviour, according to the College of Policing.
"If someone who says they are a police officer stops you, it can be difficult to know what to do," says Adam Wagner.
He says an officer arresting you should:
Tell you their name and which police station they are from
Show you their warrant card
Give you a summary of why they are arresting you and what crime they think you have committed
If you are being arrested on your own in a secluded location or at night, you could offer to give the officer your details and ask to
attend a police station the next day instead, he suggests.
Officers on the streets now almost always have body-worn video cameras, which are used to capture evidence when attending
incidents or arresting someone.
They also act as a safeguard for both the person being stopped and the officer in the event of a dispute.
Can an off-duty police officer arrest you?
Officers are expected to intervene if they see someone committing an offence or there is another need to protect the public
-even when off duty.
An officer can exercise most of their powers all the time - and as soon as they do so they are classed as being on duty.
If an officer is not wearing uniform they should show their warrant card when they stop and question you...'
Notice one thing, there's no advice for dealing with a Policeman who wishes to rape you and then choke the life out of you
in his car. Strange that...? Maybe if approached by a Policeman -especially in London, a member of the public can them
questions like:
Person: "I'm sorry to be a pest, but can you please call for a marked Police car, just so I feel less wary?"
Officer: "Why no Ma'am, that I cannot do. You see, I'm a rapist in a Policeman's uniform and such a request would be a hindrance to what I wish to do to you".
Person: "Excuse me Officer, is that a real form of law enforcement identification?"
Officer: "Why yes it is. Now get in the car as I'm a real Policeman with the correct identification and I wish to rape and murder you".
Please excuse the levity here, but is this where we are now with the country known for its exporting of law and order?!
Quote:Metropolitan Police officer charged with rape
'A Metropolitan Police officer has been charged with rape.
PC David Carrick, 46, of Stevenage, Hertfordshire, is due to appear via video link at court later.
He was off-duty at the time of the alleged offence on 4 September last year in St Albans, police said.
Met Police commissioner Dame Cressida Dick said she was "deeply concerned" at the news, and a
referral has been made to the police watchdog. Mr Carrick is based within the Met's Parliamentary and
Diplomatic Protection Command, Scotland Yard said.
He was charged by Hertfordshire Constabulary on Sunday after his arrest on Saturday.
Mr Carrick has been suspended by the Metropolitan Police, the force said, adding that a referral has been
made to the Independent Office for Police Conduct.
Mr Carrick remains in custody and is scheduled to appear via video link at Hatfield Magistrates' Court on Monday.
Dame Cressida said: "I am deeply concerned to hear the news that an officer from the Met's Parliamentary and
Diplomatic Protection Command has been arrested and now charged with this serious offence.
"I fully recognise the public will be very concerned too.
"Criminal proceedings must now take their course so I am unable to comment any further at this stage."...'
10-04-2021, 03:05 PM (This post was last modified: 10-04-2021, 03:07 PM by BIAD.)
There's been an ongoing problem with the housing of Afghanistan families in the UK recently and comments
on social-media haven't really painted the idea of transplanting certain cultures into another, in a very good
light.
The town where the 14th century English folk song 'Scarborough Fair' originated is enduring such a problem.
The coastal town of Scarborough in North Yorkshire has a cliff-top hotel that gazes out into the North Sea and
its structure tells of a time when pride and standards were the norm in England.
Now in the 21st century, the standards are different and The Grand Hotel became a place where some Afghan
refugees families were housed, but there's always a cost when cultures clash.
Quote:Live updates as Scarborough's The Grand Hotel guests urgently evacuated with huge police presence
Police have swarmed the historic hotel and guests are being urgently evacuated
'Guests staying at The Grand Hotel in Scarborough have been evacuated as police swarm the historic building.
Holidaymakers have been rushed out of the hotel by police, who have told them that if they do not get out now then
they may be "stuck in their rooms all day".
The Grand Hotel & today's problem.
Reports suggest that the hotel's fire alarm has gone off, with guests being urgently evacuated and police entering
the premises. Photos from the scene shows a police van parked outside the hotel, which hosts hundreds of people
in its 413 rooms, and a number of officers on the scene.
One guest said: "All the roads are blocked off. We don’t know what’s happened but we were told if we didn’t get out
now, we might be in our rooms all day. "They’re telling everyone to wait by the Royal hotel on the corner.
Everybody had to get out; all we’ve been told is that it’s a police incident. They’ve blocked all access near the Grand."
It is not yet clear what has happened at The Grand, but reports suggest there is a "police incident" inside.
YorkshireLive have contacted North Yorkshire Police for further information on this breaking news and we will be
keeping you updated in our dedicated live blog below...'
Scarborough 'bomb scare': Everything we know so far as The Grand Hotel evacuated after police swarm town -14:10
Reports from staff that bomb squad are on the way -12:13
Police statement -11:52
Nearby Travel Lodge also being evacuated -11:40
Shambles
Went here for break. Place is full of refugees running amok.
This used to be a lovely friendly place to stay We will never be back, ever
I have never felt like such a stranger in my own country.
The lifts were filthy and one refugee had decided to use it as a toilet
Do not book here
Date of stay: October 2021
Awful
The worst hotel I have stayed in, we did a Acklams coach trip so had no choice in where to stay,
would not have picked this place. Room was dirty, blood on bedsheets, thick dust on all surfaces
not to mention nearly everything in the room falling apart. Food was pretty awful compared to some
cheaper hotels I have stayed in.
And then to top it off lots of Afghan refugees with kids running around trashing the place, literally rubbish
and food thrown all over corridor floors, and god knows what else. Afghan men leering and glaring at
paying customers.
Kids running around corridors through the night. The hotel is such a beautiful building and could be an
amazing place to stay, I know the refugees need somewhere to stay but should make paying customers
aware of the situation and…
Read more
Date of stay: October 2021
Transiting. Refugee hotel. Horrible experience. Room in bad condition. Bad smell.
I was transiting with a friend.
For the price we saw on the internet, the hotel on the photos seemed very nice, so we booked it.
It was a long trip and we didn't have the time and energy to check the reviews first, as it was unplanned.
This resulted in a very big mistake.
The moment we came in, there was a bad smell inside the hotel. Lots of Arabic children running around
the lobby and their parents weren't doing anything to calm them down. Only 1 elevator was barely working,
so I insisted in walking the stairs.
The room was in bad condition, most thing half broken. When we wanted to complain at the Front Desk to
have our room changed or have our money refunded to go to another hotel, we saw other clients in front
of us complaining and saw the staff's reaction: that…
Read more
Date of stay: September 2021
(10-04-2021, 03:05 PM)BIAD Wrote: There's been an ongoing problem with the housing of Afghanistan families in the UK recently and comments
on social-media haven't really painted the idea of transplanting certain cultures into another, in a very good
light.
The town where the 14th century English folk song 'Scarborough Fair' originated is enduring such a problem.
The coastal town of Scarborough in North Yorkshire has a cliff-top hotel that gazes out into the North Sea and
its structure tells of a time when pride and standards were the norm in England.
Now in the 21st century, the standards are different and The Grand Hotel became a place where some Afghan
refugees families were housed, but there's always a cost when cultures clash.
...
So as you can see, problems.
Would you prefer Haitians?
"Good judgment comes from experience...
Experience...? Well, that comes from poor judgment."
~ Dean Martin ~