Heart breaking and disgusting, but not surprising from the Met
whatsontv222 on
I hate those unmarked police cars so much. They appear out of nowhere and usually you panic because you have no idea where they are or how to get out of their way, just some tiny blinking lights in the window of a black car. What’s event the point, the police should be visible.
Chachaslides2 on
I’m going to file this firmly under “wait and see” as far as forming an opinion goes.
It seems entirely possible that the officers were driving far beyond what any sane person would consider reasonable in that situation, to the point that their recklessness led to completely avoidable deaths, and therefore charging them is the right decision. Lord knows I’ve seen emergency vehicles do some absolutely ridiculous stuff when trying to get past junctions.
Given past form, it also seems entirely possible that the officers were behaving in a reasonable manner for an urgent situation but got into an accident, and this is yet another case of the IOPC and CPS proceeding with an absolutely outrageous prosecution of officers who were doing their best.
4 commenti
Heart breaking and disgusting, but not surprising from the Met
I hate those unmarked police cars so much. They appear out of nowhere and usually you panic because you have no idea where they are or how to get out of their way, just some tiny blinking lights in the window of a black car. What’s event the point, the police should be visible.
I’m going to file this firmly under “wait and see” as far as forming an opinion goes.
It seems entirely possible that the officers were driving far beyond what any sane person would consider reasonable in that situation, to the point that their recklessness led to completely avoidable deaths, and therefore charging them is the right decision. Lord knows I’ve seen emergency vehicles do some absolutely ridiculous stuff when trying to get past junctions.
Given past form, it also seems entirely possible that the officers were behaving in a reasonable manner for an urgent situation but got into an accident, and this is yet another case of the IOPC and CPS proceeding with an absolutely outrageous prosecution of officers who were doing their best.
Article from the initial incident
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0qzkn7wq0vo
It’s “unclear whether the police car was responding to an emergency” at the time.
Two days later they were investigated for gross misconduct, https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cwy42lxew44o
and now one of them is “former PC”
Was this a training incident?
Or two people who thought they were above the law using public property for recreational petroleum abuse?