News2 mins ago
Bad Timing Or What
Just as Police firearms officers pick up their blue cards the Police are sacking one who was exonerated of no wrong doing eight years ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.// A public inquiry later concluded that Baker had been lawfully killed, despite identifying a string of police mistakes in the planning of the operation. //
But the IOPC recommended that W80 face a gross misconduct hearing because disciplinary offences are based on the civil test that states an honest but mistaken belief must also be “reasonable”.
The Metropolitan Police disagreed with the decision and took the case to the Supreme Court to try to have it overturned.
It argued that the criminal threshold ought to be applied in both cases. However, in July the Supreme Court rejected the appeal and sided with the IOPC. //
Nowt to do with bad timing. There was a disagreement about prosecuting him, which has now been resolved by the Supreme Court.
Apprehending an armed suspect is dangerous for the police, the public and the man targetted. The successful conclusion must always be that no one is killed.
When there is a fatality then the mission has been a failure. The police are asking for the benefit of doubt that they were correct to kill. That is wrong. We should be eliminating all doubt.
No one wants police officers prosecuted, and no one wants an unarmed man killed.
The same mistake and the same result keep occurring. The guidelines need to be more tightly defined and better training needs to reflect that.
oops:
faces being sacked despite being cleared of any criminal wrongdoing,
criminal wrogdoing, and retro - looking back - haw haw haw, police discipline is not ONLY about being convicted, as with all boards of regulation ( Judges, lawyers, doctorss, teachers etc)
But you really always knew that .
And yes, in this day of videos, if there is no video, there is a reasonable chance that it will be accepted it never happened