Police Theory, Police Practice

You do not have to believe that the police in England are corrupt but you are misguided if you don't. As a matter of direct experience I know that most of them are liars. They can be vicious bullies when they want, if they think that they can get away with it. And when it comes to getting away with it, policing comes into its very own. Knowing how to convict someone means having a slight knowledge of the law and a rather better knowledge of procedures and evidence. The really big advantage comes from being in a band of rogues with the collective experience of the Italian mafia. They know that they can hang together or they can hang separately. For more on this theme see:-


Police Corruption
Better than 100 reports show up on a search. Are they reliable? Are they all wrong? Read for yourself. Think for yourself. Decide for yourself.

 

Sir Robert Mark
QUOTE
In 1972, Sir Robert Mark became Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police. That year, the annual total of armed robberies in the Metropolitan district was 380 - partly because the culture was rife with bribe-taking, sharing in the proceeds of crime and "verballing", or fabricating evidence against suspects. Sir Robert felt compelled to remind his detectives which side of the law they were supposed to be on, he told them in his inaugural address: "A good police force, is one that catches more criminals than it employs."

At the centre of Sir Robert's focus was Criminal Investigation Department, and its pinnacle the Flying Squad - Ken Drury, commander of the Flying Squad and one of his inspectors, Alistair Ingram, later went to prison for corruption. 
UNQUOTE
Corruption in the Met is deep seated and very sincere. It will happen while bent coppers frighten any straight ones; not vice versa. Robert Mark was the last Commissioner who showed serious indications of wanting to sort bent coppers. He got rid of 300 and that was just in the CID.

 

Untouchables: Dirty Cops, Bent Justice and Racism in Scotland Yard
by Michael Gillard and Laurie Flynn
The title says it all, well most of it. There isn't much about racism or even bent justice  but the rest is spot on. Michael Gillard did a lot of financial writing for Private Eye and came up with some good stuff. He named names and rarely if ever got sued. That means that he got it right and he could prove it. The police are also enthusiastic about using libel to suppress the truth and the Police Federation has a track record of success. Perhaps that is where the bent justice comes in.

Robert Marks was the commissioner who sacked 300 men and that was just in the CID. He was the last commissioner in  the Met who gave us serious reason to believe that he had any intention of doing anything about police corruption. It can be done and it needs to be kept being done. When bent coppers are frightened of the honest ones, it is as under control as it is ever going to be. Robert Marks  was in thirty years ago. Significantly he was an outsider so blackmailing him was not quite so easy.

 

How Racial P.C. Corrupted the LAPD
It is easy. Politicians force the police to recruit minorities. This is American for blacks, Hispanics and others. This forces standards down and forces the recruitment of criminals and known criminal associates. They use their new found powers to give us Third World policing, which means murder, extortion, perverting the course of justice etc. The political answer is to cover it up.

 

British Police Drug Trafficking and Money Laundering
QUOTE
Illegal drugs trafficking and money laundering by the British police force

The Metropolitan Police, the London-based flagship constabulary of the British police force, has been criticized by a Judge for running a multi-million pound illegal drugs cartel and money laundering operation, without permission. (Yes, they usually have permission to do so.)

It is common practice for the British authorities to set up and operate drugs and money laundering cartels. Without the full cooperation of customs officials and law enforcement agencies it would obviously be extremely risky, and preclusively difficult to import the huge quantities drugs required to sustain the lucrative UK black-market.
UNQUOTE

It takes eighteen months to make a policeman, to make him a liar who will stand up in court and lie in his teeth. This is perjury, a major criminal offence but they know that they are going to get away with it. When they lie they pervert the course of justice. That is also a major criminal offence but how many of them ever get fingered? I knew a crime prevention officer who did not show up for work on week ends. Being AWOL [ absent without leave ] is a lesser offence, probably not criminal, just a perk. The word for it is ESSO [ Every Saturday and Sunday Off ]. CPOs are just one lot that never do what you would call policing, just swanning around with lots of excuses for being somewhere else.

The narcotics industry is a different area with far more opportunity for police crime. They mix with honest villains. Setting up deals is just too easy. Perhaps some further down the pecking order gets thrown to the wolves occasionally then the rest carry on to an early and very profitable retirement. See The Guardian (UK), "Illegal police sting costs £25m", front-page, 29 July 2003. [ Grauniad ]
QUOTE
Scotland Yard claimed last night that the future of covert police work was under threat after a court ruling that some of its officers had committed a "state-created crime" during a sting aimed at trapping suspected money launderers.
UNQUOTE
The real worries were about their bungs and their liberty.

 

Leaking the truth about the British police killing/murder/shooting and cover up of Jean Charles de Menezes
QUOTE
The circumstances surrounding the shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes would not have come to the public's attention without whistleblower Lana Vandenbergh. Lana worked as an administration secretary for the Independent Police Complaints Commission. Jean Charles de Menezes, an innocent man, was shot and killed at Stockwell tube station on the London Underground by police. Initially, police falsely claimed that he was wearing bulky clothing, had vaulted the ticket barriers and run from police. It soon become clear that de Menezes did not vault and run from the police, but police did not correct the misinformation until the correct information was leaked to the press. At first the police tried to cover up this dreadful mistake. Vandenbergh leaked details of the police enquiry, which was very different from the version then in the public domain.
UNQUOTE
Interestingly the incriminating paper was with the IPPC which implies that they knew what had really happened and they are just as bent.

 

Drug dealers, Thieves and Police [ 25 August 2000 ]
Police men are not supposed to go to fornicate  with drug dealers, but DC  Clark did and with his grass at that. She babbled. He nicked them, stole their drugs and sold them on to other customers. He was a great success - they thought but he got off with 12 years. His mate, DS Drury got off with 11 years.

 

Informers will be planted at training college [ 23 October 2003 ]
Sir John Stevens, commissioner of the Metropolitan police, said his force intends to plant informers in its classrooms to root out racist recruits. If he were going to investigate crime among his own you might think that it was a good thing. The spies will get life time immunity. He is doing it to enforce the political agenda of Marxist radicals who have taken over Her Majesty's Government.

Stevens is a man under the control of the Marxists. He probably wants the little sinecures that will come his way after he retires, if he plays ball and he definitely wants his job and the power that goes with it. This has a strong resemblance to Stalin's system of thought police in the nastiest days of the USSR. The propagandists will claim that racism is worse than crime. They are doing it as part of the  agenda of destroying England.

 

Errors & omissions, broken links, cock ups, over-emphasis, malice [ real or imaginary ] or whatever; if you find any I am open to comment.

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Updated onThursday, 21 August 2008 14:39:08