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Ian Wray's avatar

I think taking the police to court for misconduct in public office is well worth a try - although it would probably need crowd-funding and organisation to do it. However I have low confidence in the court system these days, which can be used to bring verdicts based upon politics, and which also prosecutes and punishes innocent people (as the Lucy Letby case increasingly appears to exemplify).

If such a case is brought against the police then I think it should include the policemen making the arrest. My understanding is that they can refuse to do things they consider to be misconduct. This might actually empower the rank and file policemen to stand up to their politicised bosses.

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Tracy Hill's avatar

I agree. The entire system is infected. Judges, police Sentencing Council all the people who you think would be the last level of protection of your rights but no, they're too busy fighting the rights of anyone who is not British.

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William Murphy's avatar

Given the quasi military nature of the police, I think it is very unlikely that any junior officers will resist their orders, however outrageous. I loved the story of one very courageous junior cop decades ago who was horrified at the appalling corruption all around him. He saw that the local sergeants and inspectors were totally corrupt and guessed that the chief inspectors and superintendents were very likely also up to their eyeballs. So he went straight to the head of the Flying Squad, the utterly corrupt Kenneth Drury.....

https://www.theoldie.co.uk/blog/partners-in-crime

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Ian Wray's avatar

That's an interesting read. I note that the police were then not paid well, so there was a clear financial incentive to become corrupt. That reminds me of elected politicians, who could lose their incomes through being voted out of office, succumbing to the blandishments of billionaires. And with regard to junior cops, as with people in other situations - do not expect them to be brave if that makes them likely to lose their job and with it their income.

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Martin T's avatar

The fact is that most of us don’t have the resources or standing to take on the taxpayer funded police force. in law, might is right.

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JD Rock's avatar

Incidents like this make the police look terrible due to the overreach in the case itself and against their now common failure to act over harmful crimes like theft.

MSM silence on a subject perhaps used to give some cover, by preventing public discussion and analysis of a record of behaviour if not stopping general suspicion.

Now, however, social media allows us to track patterns of conduct by the police, so there is little doubt about what is going on. The incredible thing is those in authority can't possibly be unaware that the public sees all this playing out now, yet still it goes on like a slow motion car crash.

What can be done?

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Mrs Bucket's avatar

It's all an April Fools joke on normal, sensible people by the truly loony, lethal Left of the Labour Party that once upon a time had a soul and ethics.

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@realityfoghornn's avatar

When the Qunnts, started their hijacking in 76, we should have been brutal with them.

But their Zionist pay-masters, the CIA, were playing ‘Junkie’ geopolitics under the guise of respected Patrons of a democratic and truthful society.

And who was comfortably moving all the pawn pieces?

No other, than the Royal, pedophile cult, of which, Lord Louie Mountbatten, ( King Charlie’s Uncle, who, both, caused the death of three million Indians, with his 1946, ‘Partition’,

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Tracy Hill's avatar

The parents who were arrested should sue the police. Crowd funding is easily done these days especially when people like you and others have a platform that could reach tens of thousands of people. The police need suing because they are an utter disgrace. The Tories started this nonsense and Labour are doubling down. It's a disgrace. And like you say they will continue to get away with it unless anything changes. I just look into raising NHCI as I "perceive" these actions to have taken place due to racism against white people.

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The Plucky Welshman's avatar

What these people need to do is to ask for the names of their accusers, the person who put the complaint into the police in the first place, then lodge a complaint of harassment/stalking etc, or wasting police time. It's the only way to stop more of this type of thing, that the complainers realise that the actions could have unpleasant legal consequences for them.

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Graham Ward's avatar

This interview was released on YouTube yesterday.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZakcPLybX2s

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JD Rock's avatar

No idea if this is true, but seems plausible given all we are seeing.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14590201/police-force-blocks-white-British-candidates-diverse.html

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@realityfoghornn's avatar

Good luck, ‚’Johnny come lately’

The Iron Agę Pedophile Death Cult, won the war of wits.

Where were you all in the 90s when folks like me, a Social Worker, and, independently, Sarah Champion MP, were being evidcerated ?

You fkn ‚woke morons!

The West Lost the Final Crusade.

Now, suck it up; „Colonialists”

The world over!

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@realityfoghornn's avatar

......

And Lord Louie, was reading lullaby stories, to future Globalist, and plant-advisor cum Islamic, King ‘Charlie-boy’, a representative of all evil, now parading, in our little, ‘Wonderland’....

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