Ish
Lights on for Luke
With that attitude you're on your way to becoming a detective in no time.
With that attitude you're on your way to becoming a detective in no time.
Id like to say that you’d be surprised how easy it is, but I’m not sure you would beWhat else are they looking at that they shouldn’t be?
Also how easy is it to access case files as a Police Officer? I’d have thought there’d have been more safeguards in place to prevent unwarranted access.
People get into trouble over these things. Like looking up a celebrity etc. I imagine you would be one of the first to be checking out the Giggs case for instance.What else are they looking at that they shouldn’t be?
Also how easy is it to access case files as a Police Officer? I’d have thought there’d have been more safeguards in place to prevent unwarranted access.
I don’t know how it works in the police, though I imagine limiting information isn’t useful to good policing. But in Probation we have limited access offenders, which are restricted to certain people for high profile/high media coverage cases.What else are they looking at that they shouldn’t be?
Also how easy is it to access case files as a Police Officer? I’d have thought there’d have been more safeguards in place to prevent unwarranted access.
& they should be investigated & punished for such.Nah. Another thread maybe but as I say it's people being nosey wanting to look at things they shouldn't.
Do you have access to every case? God, I'd find it so tempting to be nosey.People get into trouble over these things. Like looking up a celebrity etc. I imagine you would be one of the first to be checking out the Giggs case for instance.
You must use the systems for a policing purpose and have reason to access. It's all logged.
I don't think anyone suggested otherwise?& they should be investigated & punished for such.
I guess we'd like to know how the monitoring works.People get into trouble over these things. Like looking up a celebrity etc. I imagine you would be one of the first to be checking out the Giggs case for instance.
You must use the systems for a policing purpose and have reason to access. It's all logged.
Fair enough.I don't think anyone suggested otherwise?
Sounds a bit sensationalist. Depends what they were looking at in particular doesn't it.Fair enough.
Smacks a bit of police gore voyeurism like we saw immediately after the Kobe Bryant helicopter crash.
First responders at the crash site literally took pictures of the charred bodies / body parts & sent them to other LEOs & civilians in the immediate hours after the crash.Sounds a bit sensationalist. Depends what they were looking at in particular doesn't it.
You've lost me.First responders at the crash site literally took pictures of the charred bodies / body parts & sent them to other LEOs & civilians in the immediate hours after the crash.
Yes, it was a bit sensational.
I’m opining that it smacks a bit of police being gore voyeurs like they were at the Bryant crash, not being prudent with the evidence.You've lost me.
You said this sounds like what happened with Bryant. I say it depends what they were looking at and to compare it is a bit sensationalist without evidence?
All the tweets are coming up as Error 503 service unavavilable.
He'll claim she jumped a ticket barrier with wires coming out of her jacket.Is he trying to claim he didn't know what he was doing etc? Will be hard to back that up given he was a serving police officer.
I think quite a few things have just gone down.All the tweets are coming up as Error 503 service unavavilable.
Yea amazon down as well.I think quite a few things have just gone down.
A number of leading media websites are currently not working, including the Guardian, Financial Times, Independent and the New York Times.
The UK government website - gov.uk - is also down.
Affected websites displayed the message: "Error 503 Service Unavailable".
Early reports have suggested it could be related to Fastly, a cloud computing provider, which underpins a lot of major websites.
Found this explanation on reddit:I wonder what that means in practice regarding the murder charge.
Tweet
— Twitter API (@user) date
Must be really worrying too, because I’d imagine you’d be a bit wary but fearful of saying no.It would be so easy to trick a woman if you had a police warrant card. I imagine a scenario where he'd stopped and told her she shouldn't walk at night as there had been assaults, I'm a police officer, I'll see you home ....
Strangulation isn't a very quick way to die, sadly. That poor woman, how terrified she must have been.Must be really worrying too, because I’d imagine you’d be a bit wary but fearful of saying no.
I can only hope her death was quick, which is an awful thing to have to say. This at least saves the family/friends from having to go through a traumatic court ordeal.
I hope he gets many, many years. The crime itself is horrible enough, but the fact he was a police officer makes it much worse.In news that will shock absolutely nobody, he actually tried to blame it on foreigners.
He'll get to put his feet up in the nonce and old boys club wing of a prison for a few years. Nobody he'll come into daily contact with will even look at him funny.
He could have used his badge to make her lower her defences a little and get close to her, then could have attacked her when he was close enough. Not sure she needed to willingly enter the vehicle for him to get her in.Still really intrigued as to how her got her to get into his car. Especially if it was a white Enterprise rental which is usually very noticeable. I wonder what he actually pretended was happening. I don’t blame her in the slightest and it was probably very confusing and felt urgent that she needed to act.
It's really sickening when you think about the thought process that goes into planning something like this.He could have used his badge to make her lower her defences a little and get close to her, then could have attacked her when he was close enough. Not sure she needed to willingly enter the vehicle for him to get her in.
He was CNC Police which is basically a security guard with a gun at nuclear sites. He then transferred to the Met, and was quickly parachuted into an armed guard role again. He will have had basically zero investigative experienceGiving your real phone number when you're hiring your murder van seems a very basic mistake, especially for a police officer. The fact that he emailed work afterwards to say he should no longer be carrying a firearm is also interesting. Hopefully it suggests that this was his first and only victim.
Yeah I just feel like it would’ve been so much more obvious to do that. And also how would he drive with her fighting him off in the car?He could have used his badge to make her lower her defences a little and get close to her, then could have attacked her when he was close enough. Not sure she needed to willingly enter the vehicle for him to get her in.