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Missing Clubbers Found In Crashed Car
A group of five people, two men and three women, who failed to show up after a night out and were reported missing on Saturday have been found in a crashed car. Three are dead and two have serious injuries. Family members made repeated pleas on social media over the weekend and the police, who said officers are trying to piece together what happened, posted an appeal shortly before the car was found by family members on Monday. The families are now saying that the police didn't do enough but bearing in mind that these were all adults, is that fair?
https:/ /www.bb c.co.uk /news/u k-wales -648671 87
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No best answer has yet been selected by naomi24. 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.If this happened to my loved one I would be very angry at the lack of police response too but there are over 400 people reported missing every day in the UK, with on average 268 adults.
As adults are entitled to go missing I can't see what the police could have done realistically. The car was only found because a dog walker was off the beaten track.
As adults are entitled to go missing I can't see what the police could have done realistically. The car was only found because a dog walker was off the beaten track.
I don't believe it's fair to lay the blame on the police. No matter how quickly they responded to the calls, the accident had already happened.
The blame lies with each individual victim - the driver (if he had been drinking) and his four passengers (if they knew he had been drinking).
I do feel sorry that these youngsters have lost their lives and i truly feel for those bereaved. Particularly for the parents of Eve Smith, whose sister also died in a road traffic accident some 8 years previously.
The blame lies with each individual victim - the driver (if he had been drinking) and his four passengers (if they knew he had been drinking).
I do feel sorry that these youngsters have lost their lives and i truly feel for those bereaved. Particularly for the parents of Eve Smith, whose sister also died in a road traffic accident some 8 years previously.
I tend to agree with others here, but I can understand the anger of the families. I've no idea what is normal police procedure, but I guess one doesn't immediately appeal to the public as soon as someone is reported missing. In such a case I'd have thought that in the early days it would be hoped someone would have reported a crashed vehicle. If the car was not obviously visible from the nearest road, nor on anyone's normal walking route, then it is probable that they wouldn't be found until it was time to raise priority and escalate their effort on this particular issue. It's very unfortunate but fate can be at times.
Impossible to say. We don’t know what they did or didn’t do.
But the police force with all its resources failed to find them. And a family member did.
In 2010 the new Conservative Government cut 20,000 police jobs. Some police jobs have been returned, but not all of them. And they are still under resourced.
But the police force with all its resources failed to find them. And a family member did.
In 2010 the new Conservative Government cut 20,000 police jobs. Some police jobs have been returned, but not all of them. And they are still under resourced.
for one person to go missing is common enough. For five, and a car, to go missing all at once is highly unusual and might have merited a proper search: it sounds as if the police just drove along the road without getting out of their vehicle, which is barely a search at all. If the graphic in the link is correct, the car was barely 20 feet off the road.
A bobby on the beat, if there is such a thing any more, would have spotted the car in minutes.
A bobby on the beat, if there is such a thing any more, would have spotted the car in minutes.
I always thought that "missing person" reports were only recognised after a minimum of 24 hours. We now have hindsight at work.
The only point reported thus far that might have rung alarm bells is that the phones for all 5 of these young people went dead at the same time. If the car travelled some 85 miles from the club to the crash site I expect there will be some cctv to show the manner of driving.
Now have to wait for the result of a full investigation. The force has referred itself to the IOPC.
The only point reported thus far that might have rung alarm bells is that the phones for all 5 of these young people went dead at the same time. If the car travelled some 85 miles from the club to the crash site I expect there will be some cctv to show the manner of driving.
Now have to wait for the result of a full investigation. The force has referred itself to the IOPC.
I suppose it's an example of a service we used to be able to rely on but is no longer regarded as important enough to fund and staff adequately.
Maybe a root and branch review of how resources are deployed, getting people off social media and the hunt for 'hate speech' posts for example, would help.
I'm sure others have their own thoughts though.
Maybe a root and branch review of how resources are deployed, getting people off social media and the hunt for 'hate speech' posts for example, would help.
I'm sure others have their own thoughts though.
not really a country road, nero, there are houses right on the roundabout, you can see them in the aerial shot in the BBC report. Only one of the four quarters of the roundabout is open country, the others are built up. I dare say hundreds of people drove by without realising; but anyone who was conducting a search would have been well advised to get out and walk.
To repeat: this wasn't a missing person. It was five people, in a car.
To repeat: this wasn't a missing person. It was five people, in a car.
This story made my blood run cold as I remember back when I was in my 20s coming across a car smashed into trees one night with 4 dead young people in who had been drinking in the same pub as me that evening. I assume this is big news because 2 people lying injured with 3 dead colleagues in a car for 48 hrs is pretty horrific.
What I don't understand is I thought it must have been in the middle of nowhere but it was off a roundabout with loads of houses just over the road. Didn't anyone hear the crash?
What I don't understand is I thought it must have been in the middle of nowhere but it was off a roundabout with loads of houses just over the road. Didn't anyone hear the crash?
Unsure how much credence the police would give to supply resource for a major search earlier simply because five young folk in a car going missing isn't common. Five young adults in a car could easily have spurred each other on to spontaneously go travelling for a few days. Although I grant you, they may have expected a phone call to be made to family. There was no evidence they'd needed to be looking for a hidden crash, so I doubt procedure will change much.
Just one "missper" report on Saturday evening and a 2nd one on Sunday, apparently:
https:/ /www.bb c.co.uk /news/u k-wales -648725 17
If that is correct I would say it is unfair on the police. Can you see car tracks on the soft verge of the crash search? There are aerial photos on the internet to look at. There was quite an area to cover on the car's journey.
https:/
If that is correct I would say it is unfair on the police. Can you see car tracks on the soft verge of the crash search? There are aerial photos on the internet to look at. There was quite an area to cover on the car's journey.
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