The news is coming in thick and fast
that the Police can't be trusted and here are some reasons why:
- Proved to be racist during the Stephen Lawrence murder investigation.
- Proved to have altered personal witness statements during the Hillsborough disaster investigation.
- Proved to have protected Jimmy Savile (paedophile) from justifiable prosecution.
- Proved to have protected Cyril Smith (paedophile) from justifiable prosecution.
- Proved to have lied that Andrew Mitchell called a police officer a 'Pleb'.
Ironically its the fifth example above
which has erupted the most furious reaction from Parliament, and says
a lot about the calibre of politicians that such offences like
racism, murder cover up, aiding and abetting paedophiles should be
seen as minor offences compared with lying about one of their own.
That Police officers lie; is no
longer circumstantial evidence, it's fact.
The latest news coming from the fight
against corruption is that Michael Doherty has succeeded in winning
the right to launch an unprecedented private prosecution against a
police employee for perverting the course of justice. See here for the full story.
Michael Doherty is yet another victim
at the end of a long line of police corruption victims.
As reported in the Telegraph newspaper,
Ms Murphy, who is the secretary to
the Hounslow borough commander, Carl Bussey, made a police statement
alleging that Mr Doherty called her ten times over two days and made
her feel “upset” and “harassed”. The father-of-three then
decided to bring a private prosecution against her, alleging that the
witness statement was false.
There is a sea-change of
acknowledgement, that the Police are corrupt.
With the attention currently on Leeds
police and their active involvement in protecting the vile Jimmy
Savile from criminal prosecution, its easy to forget that Sussex
Police are just as guilty of police corruption as their colleagues in
the North of the country.
Michael Coughtrey tells of a disturbing
story in which his mentally ill brother was accused of attacking a
police officer with 20cm kitchen knife.
As reported by the local Brighton
Evening Argus newspaper, and seized upon by then Chief of Brighton
Police Graham Bartlett, PC Cameron, the officer in question was
praised for his bravery and the protective vest which saved his life,
were turned into local heroes.
All very commendable until you learn
that Alex Coughtrey aged 58, spent 15 months on remand, before the
case was dropped unexpectedly at the last minute, because the crown
prosecution were unable to produce the evidence.
As Michael says, “My brother would
have been given a life sentence. Surely there must be someone with
some clout who would be concerned enough to take an interest.”
The police made it up!
Michael Coughtrey
proves it at BrightonScandal.org.uk.
The truth is out: Alex never stabbed PC
Cameron and never even held a knife. It took nearly a years effort to
obtain a forensic report which showed the officers stab vest to be
completely unmarked, something his officers were well aware
of.
Graham Bartlett's attitude was that he supported his officers
regardless of the truth.
Graham Bartlett continues to hide
behind a wall of dignified silence rather than answering his accusers
and defend his honour. Read this article here to learn more.
If you've got a problem with the
Police take it to IPCC.
This is exactly what Graham Bartlett
said to Michael Coughtrey.
Michael continues, “Graham was also
well aware that the IPCC would come to his rescue and so it proved.
We had no faith in the IPCC but with the strong encouragement of
Simon Kirby MP felt we must give it a try. Another year of our life
was about to be wasted as the IPCC handed the complaint straight back
to Sussex Police Professional Standards Dept. who after an 8 week
investigation assisted Graham with a request to the IPCC to
discontinue the investigation.”
Isn't it any wonder the IPCC are
seen as a critical friend rather than a proper Complaint's
Commission?
Evident from the Youtube video below,
the IPCC are as effective as a chocolate tea-pot.
Victims of Police corruption complain
they have lost confidence in the system and claim the IPCC have
failed to deal with cases with fairness and impartiality. In effect
the IPCC are police investigating police.
Back to Sussex Police.
With the above in mind, namely that the
IPCC isn't fit for purpose, isn't it any wonder that the Chief
Constable of Sussex, Martin Richards was cleared of any wrong doing,
after a complaint was made against Arun District Council in 2002 that
a pedophile ring was operating within the council offices appears to
have been interfered with by the Chief Constable who appears to be
friends with the ex-Chief Executive of the Council.
To read more about this and sign a
petition calling for the removal of Martin Richard's as chief
Constable, click here.
Examples of Sussex Police corruption
are too many to count.
Briefly touching upon the James Ashley
assassination and the Katrina Taylor murder cover-up, examples of
corruption in Sussex Police is epidemic.
In 1999, the then Home Secretary David
Blunkett convinced the Sussex Police Authority to sack Paul
Whitehouse, the Sussex Chief Constable at the time, for criticism of
his decision to go ahead with promotions and pay rises for two of the
officers involved in the raid in which suspected drugs dealer James
Ashley, 39, who was shot dead in front of his girlfriend, as he lay
in bed, naked and unarmed, after officers burst into his Western Road
second-floor flat, firing a single shot into his chest.
For more information about James
Ashley assassination, see here.
The Katrina Taylor murder cover-up is
still in full swing, evident by the attack against David Joe Neilson,
who has campaigned tirelessly over the last 20 years to expose police
and local government corruption.
Attacked, beaten and left for dead,
David Joe Neilson was attacked by a person hiding behind a fence,
which was illegally put up to cover up messages of Sussex Police
corruption written on his property.
Read about the attack here. Shocking
doesn't begin to describe it.
Too frightened to call the Police.
Even the Jimmy Savile scandal taints
Sussex Police. In 2008 a victim of Jimmy Savile's perversion
approached Sussex police to make a complaint against him, but was
deterred from continuing due to his status as a celebrity and the
likelihood she would be branded a liar. For all intent and purposes,
Sussex Police convinced a victim of crime, not to bother. Read here
for more information.
No body cares anymore.
Examples of police corruption are
coming in thick and fast. We hear of cases on TV and read about them
in our newspapers. We have all heard the odd story here and there of
a bent copper. One of those coppers who would turn a blind eye, or
take a back hander. I personally know a friend of a friend of a drug
dealer who was busted for a pound of marijuana, only to be prosecuted
in court for possession and intend to supply half a pound of
marijuana.
I even know about a friends younger
daughter, going to rehab after becoming addicted to drugs while
serving as a police officer in the Metropolitan police force.
“We sieged the drugs and used them”
she confesses.
The police lied then and continue to
lie.
The buzz on Facebook are Twitter is
whether you can trust any thing the police say? One commentator
points out that the Police are so used to lying in court now, they
don't even bother to lie well.
Police corruption is becoming so
evident its plain to see.
Police corruption isn't circumstantial
evidence anymore, its fact. Anyone who doesn't see it for what it is,
is either a bent copper or is in bed with a bent copper.
The reassurances from Damian Green MP,
the Minister for Policing, Criminal Justice and Victims on the Andrew
Marr Show, saying “vast majority of police are honest people doing
a job very well,” are falling on deaf ears.
Calling all honest cops.
If what Damian Green MP (tipped to be Prime Minister) is true, then the vast majority of police officers
should expose their corrupt colleagues. With the sea-change of public
opinion in full swing, corrupt police officers are running out of
places to hide. Justice is coming and justice will be swift.
As David Joe Neilson reminds us, “If
police officers are found to be up to no good, stitching up people,
they don’t get away with it. If a police officer covered up
evidence or whatever, he should be found guilty and he should go to
prison and should serve twice the sentence of Joe Public in the
street because he is there to be trusted to do the job to protect
society and society being the individual not the system, not the
masons but the individual, the citizen.”
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