New I V F Rules?? Why Do They Even Do It...
News1 min ago
A friend of mine was arrested last year, while I was with him on a night out. Charges against him were dropped, and he is subsequently in the process of filing a complaint. He says (and I can only go on what he tells me) that in the corridor leading to the cells, one officer said to him:
"get in the cell or you'll be on the ******* floor"
should he report this as threatening behaviour?
No best answer has yet been selected by Andy008. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Not to condone the police officer's behaviour but 'putting someone on the floor' is commonly used as a form of acceptable restraint. If someone in custody is struggling or resisting s/he will be put on the floor and restrained until they stop resisting.
Yesterday lunchtime I was in a shop and a clearly drunk / drugged man came in. He was smoking and the sales assistant asked him to put out the cigarette. He reacted very badly to this request and started trying to set fire to the stock with his lighter. The staff called the police. The police came very quickly, arrested him and when he struggled they told him to 'stop struggling or you'll be put on the floor' He was restrained this way but not hurt.
At no point did they swear at him or use abusive language which differentiates this from your friend's case. The restraint was appropriate as he was a danger not only to others but also himself. If someone is struggling the police are meant to restrain them.
It would seem that the words 'I'll put you on the floor' are commonly used by the police and are not deemed to be a threat. As such he might get further complaining about the abusive language than about the mention of being put on the floor...