coldpenguin
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somethingbeside
The police waited a week before seeing me after a burglary. They said that I could have a reference number for insurance, but they wouldn't proceed any further because I was a mile away from the railway station, and as they saw it, the villain probably robbed the house, then got on the train to somewhere else. This being the case there was little they could do apparently to track them.
I kinda understand this, but being told that they wouldn't try anything because of it, is a little disappointing.
However, in the main I am happy with Police. I would be polite and courteous to any which approached me, probably.
However, if one came up to me, demanding I identify myself, without first introducing themselves and the reason why, I would consider this to be rude, and at that point, if I could see no obvious reason (which from the same document I quoted earlier, even if there is an obvious reason, a policeman is obliged to state it, if the situation permits, which as far as I am concerned, if you have a camera on a tripod, you probably are not moving away too fast), then I would be requesting that they give me all the information they are obliged to first, a good reason, their identification etc.
It might just be 'reporting', but none of the recent threads which have pointed to newspaper articles seem to suggest that the police identified themselves and their reasons for suspicion before asking for ID.
The police waited a week before seeing me after a burglary. They said that I could have a reference number for insurance, but they wouldn't proceed any further because I was a mile away from the railway station, and as they saw it, the villain probably robbed the house, then got on the train to somewhere else. This being the case there was little they could do apparently to track them.
I kinda understand this, but being told that they wouldn't try anything because of it, is a little disappointing.
However, in the main I am happy with Police. I would be polite and courteous to any which approached me, probably.
However, if one came up to me, demanding I identify myself, without first introducing themselves and the reason why, I would consider this to be rude, and at that point, if I could see no obvious reason (which from the same document I quoted earlier, even if there is an obvious reason, a policeman is obliged to state it, if the situation permits, which as far as I am concerned, if you have a camera on a tripod, you probably are not moving away too fast), then I would be requesting that they give me all the information they are obliged to first, a good reason, their identification etc.
It might just be 'reporting', but none of the recent threads which have pointed to newspaper articles seem to suggest that the police identified themselves and their reasons for suspicion before asking for ID.

