- Messages
- 1,314
- Edit My Images
- Yes
It's a bit more than section 44 though isn't it. This is just another symptom of the general public's loss of confidence in the police force. I think it started with speed cameras, excessive paperwork meaning less coppers on the beat and the move to response teams rather than beat officers.
It's just been a steady loss of confidence in the police over the last say ten years rather than one incident.
The met haven't exactly helped themselves recently with a number of negative cases. Institutionalised racism, protests march kettling and assaults, shooting innocent people in tube trains and walthemstow houses, just to name a few off the top of my head.
The IPCC themselves stated there was a significant rise of something like 25% against the Met Police last year. As the biggest (or most public) police force, these do tend to have a knock on effect.
The media have a lot to answer for with regards to public opinion, Police are generally in the news (which is were the vast majority of us get our information) for two reasons. Either to discredit them....'they arrested a photographer'....or to gain public sympathy and outrage when a policeman gets killed in the line duty. Very rare do stories emerge where the police are the heros of the story. And before the cynics among you say it, the police do more good than harm, they are fighting a battle of epic proportions in the UK, whether it be terrorism or crime, or simple old public relations.
