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Roits in Manchester?
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1ernielynchFull Member
I don’t know what you saw dyna in that video but I saw the police do nothing more than grab someone to slap some handcuffs on them. Someone which they had allegedly been told had been involved in a physical altercation with other members of the public – of course he posed a threat to them. And the threat turned into reality – he became violent because presumably he didn’t want to be arrested.
And as well as being violent he is clearly an idiot. No sensible person believes that they can fight off armed officers at a major airport and then just go home and all will be forgotten.
What do you think you saw?
Great reference to the Daily Mail btw.
2ernielynchFull MemberI’m not sure about that. Lots of documentation of Tasering not working, or only working for a while, so the police officer really didnt want him getting up again.
I believe that typically they incapacitate for 5 seconds before people quickly recover and are back to normal
dyna-tiFull MemberI don’t know what you saw dyna in that video but I saw the police do nothing more than grab someone to slap some handcuffs on them. Someone which they had allegedly been told had been involved in a physical altercation with other members of the public
Again this is just a report. It hasnt been established as fact, so the police actions should be one of first investigate. Not grab someone in a choke hold and try to wrestle them to the ground.
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Now im just trying to describe what Im seeing Ernie. Im not looking for justification for the police to go on the offensive from the off, because according to that train of thought, you could report any crime and the police attend, then violently arrest them, without proof.
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Sure the police have the right to arrest, to then carry out an investigation. But I would say the police went in heavy handed and the accused to exception to being manhandled in such a manner and fought back. I would say thats something we’ve all seen on a weekend, but i have never seen the police boot someone in the face/head, then stamp on their head. And im sure if they did that to somebody surrounded by a load of people coming out the pub, a lot of people would intervene.
The police have the right to arrest us, they dont have the power to violently assault us, especially if you are lying prone on the ground
The officer should have after tasering him, moved to handcuff him. but he didnt. he firstly and foremost booted him in the head and then went to cuff him
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Straight off we know the public objected to that action from the shouting by members of the public, appalled by such actions.
I was appalled. the public were appalled, members of parliament were appalled, former officers were appalled.
Some here believe not and think it justified.
Yes he deserved to be arrested for assaulting to police, but no way was there any justification to seriously assaulting a prone man who at that point was no danger to anyone.
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Another thing I find interesting Ernie is how you’ve described the ‘accused’
First it was this – “allegedly been told had been involved in a physical altercation”
Then you went to this – “apparently they have been told that he is a violent suspect”
Followed by “And as well as being violent”
I would like a source for this “apparently been told etc etc”, cos no offence, but it sounds like you’ve embellished it
You could play Chinese whispers all by yourself lol
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I believe the police went in harder than they should have from the off and picked on the last 2 guys you want to do that with. They clearly bit off far more than they could chew and with hindsight, stepping back and engaging in talk would have been the better option. Because again, only an allegation has been made, no more than that.
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But it goes beyond whatever those two were involved in. The police then sprayed pepper spray right into the face of someone who was not involved in that altercation, and then, went for the exact same grab in a choke hold and try to throw to the ground. There was zero attempt there to arrest.
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The police’s job is to prevent breach of the peace and not to escalate a situation. I think there they failed and in doing so have caused Greater Manchester police a huge headache and some really bad PR.
1anagallis_arvensisFull MemberThe thing I don’t get is, that kicking officer, when surrounded by witnesses if you want to hurt someone, he could have simply dropped his knee into the back of of the guy on the floor as he cuffed him, then “pushed him down the stairs” once he was “in the back of the van”.
7funkmasterpFull MemberI believe the police went in harder than they should have from the off and picked on the last 2 guys you want to do that with. They clearly bit off far more than they could chew and with hindsight, stepping back and engaging in talk would have been the better option
I would love to live in your world. Have you ever tried talking to someone who is prone to violence and kicks off quickly? Stepping back and engaging in talk isn’t always a sensible thing with some people. Again, nobody on here has any clue as to what exactly happened. So why don’t we just wait for the full story to emerge.
argeeFull MemberAh well, luckily i left the door open to change my mind!
Having seen that, the whole thing is a sh*t show that they’ve had to try and control, the male officer wasn’t the one deploying the taser either, and from that angle the ‘kick’ isn’t a full body ‘soccer kick’ that it looked like from the other angle, they’re also trying to stop being overrun fast, with the two female officers having received some full blooded hits, and the male officer barely getting the grey shirted guy under control.
Guessing that the guys lawyer might lose public support now, so the hope of a big pay day might end up with jail time for his clients and no public outcry this time!
3theotherjonvFree MemberWho knows what the thought process was. Only the officer involved I’d suggest. Who’s just been attacked / seen other members of his team attacked, tasered an individual and then for ‘some reason’ has decided that’s not enough. Based on the video, even given the lead up to it, it looks disgraceful, I agree, but the key words are ‘based on the video’
Who knows what other intelligence was applied here. What if they’d been told over the radio as they’re being sent that CCTV has identified them and one of the individuals has history for whatever reason (just cos he’s a policeman’s relative doesn’t make them automatically alright – I’m an upstanding citizen but one of my relatives is an absolute scrote) We just don’t know and this is where the IPCC or whoever will take the evidence from everywhere and then find out.
Until then, no-one actually knows.
1timbaFree MemberIf it is indeed the case, thankfully the police federation have a very generous compensation plan in place which is between £12,990 and £28220 for a broken nose, as it is classed as a severe injury.
If theres a moderate case of PTSD from it, we can add another £10,000-£30,000 on top of that. Moderately severe it starts at 30k and goes up to 70k.
Please point me to a source for any of this. Admittedly retired, but I haven’t heard of “a very generous compensation plan”, never mind with those figures
1MoreCashThanDashFull Memberand from that angle the ‘kick’ isn’t a full body ‘soccer kick
In no way condoning the kick and the stamp, but the injuries he received seemed incredibly mild given the apparent ferocity of the kick in that first video.
5FunkyDuncFree MemberDyna-ti
I don’t think you live in the real world. It’s clear the men were very nasty violent men. Most normal people don’t decide to beat the crap out of the Police
I’ve seen people being detained at an airport and it was along the lines of ‘would one mind awfully coming this way sir?’ . On the telly I’ve watched plenty of stuff where if they have intelligence they ave also gone in super heavy to gain control because they know the people have no regard for authority (like here)
but no way was there any justification to seriously assaulting a prone man who at that point was no danger to anyone.
not right there. There was no justification for kicking in the head, but the man was still very dangerous. Even after being kicked in the head he was trying to get back up.
Again context is everything and we still haven’t seen and heard everything. The innocent by standers filming and shouting. How the hell do we know they are innocent. A lot of very naive people on here thought the men directly involved for seeet and innocent men.
How do you know they Police didn’t have intelligence that these men are all part of the same organised crime gang?
Even if they are not, they all stood there and watched the police get a good kicking and then continued to mount off at them. The Police didn’t know what they were going to do next , were asking them to stop doing something and they didn’t . They needed to get control of the situation
2tonyf1Free MemberThere was no justification for kicking in the head, but the man was still very dangerous. Even after being kicked in the head he was trying to get back up.
Genuine question, how would you have subdued him given he was still very dangerous? Maybe have a stern word?
FunkyDuncFree MemberGenuine question, how would you have subdued him given he was still very dangerous?
I don’t know I’m no expert , but I assume it was far off using a firearm as they certainly were not complying and a taser hadn’t worked
There must be someone on here that knows correct protocol. If someone is refusing to comply, and even a taser doesn’t work, at what point are you allowed to kick someone in the head or shoot them ?
timbaFree MemberAlso I thought firearms officers weren’t supposed to get involved in close stuff so there is something really odd about this. Lack of resourses?
First and foremost, firearms officers are police officers. There’s always a tension between talking to the public, routine traffic stops, etc, and their firearms role
In theory all police officers are to maintain a reactionary gap, but try doing that in a crowded, noisy, busy space and communicating effectively to hopefully avoid it all kicking off 🙂
dyna-tiFull MemberWhatever you say mate.
Please point me to a source for any of this. Admittedly retired, but I haven’t heard of “a very generous compensation plan”, never mind with those figures
Years ago I came across a chart, possibly linked to police federation or such, i really cant remember.
So knowing such a thing existed, i did a basic search on google because i was interested to know what compo injured police receive. obviously like all workplace injuries there would be a scheme
Scroll down near the bottom of the page
https://www.accidentclaimsadvice.org.uk/police-officer-injury-claims/
12binnersFull MemberAnother thing that needs addressing here is that matey boys shifty lawyer was clearly trying to make this a race issue. The deliberate implication from day one was that there was a racist element to the police behaviour here, which there clearly wasn’t. You kick off like that with armed police in an airport and you’ll get the same treatment, regardless of what colour or religion you are.
Given recent tensions regarding a variety of issues in places like Rochdale, the last thing that’s needed is some dodgy ambulance-chaser stirring things to imply racism where none exists and deliberately create a false narrative.
Still no word from him then, I see? Given his love for the TV cameras when releasing his version of events, he doesn’t seem to have anything to say now the more complete footage has emerged?
4bailsFull MemberI don’t know I’m no expert , but I assume it was far off using a firearm as they certainly were not complying and a taser hadn’t worked
Is that meant to say “not far off using a firearm”?
For those saying he should have handcuffed the guy on the ground, in an ideal world yes he would have, but the officer is probably dazed having just been on the end of a dozen hard punches in the head from grey man and blue man, he can see that both his colleagues have been put on the floor although they’ve got themselves back up. But the shorter of the other two was clearly not functioning fully (again, having both been attacked by the guy who got kicked), the other one is possibly the one with the broken nose so might have been a bloody sight, at this point he doesn’t know how effective they are going to be in supporting him. If he kneels down to cuff blue guy then grey guy (and others) might suddenly pile in. I don’t think a kick was a grossly disproportionate use of force given what had just happened and the situation they were in. There might have been other ways of dealing with it (more tasers? a foot on the back?) but I don’t think the kick was the example of police brutality that it was first made out to be.
As for the police “going in hard to begin with”, what a load of nonsense. They were trying to arrest him, not invite him to a group therapy session*, they tried to put his hands behind his back and his head down so they could quickly get cuffs on. The events of the next few seconds show why they were right to try to get him under control quickly. If the police had opened with a flying kick or a gun/taser shot with no warning then that would absolutely be wrong. But 2 coppers grabbing your arms and saying “you’re nicked sunshine” isn’t “going in hard”.
*I’m saying this as a lefty who has been on numerous other threads criticising the police.
dooosukFree MemberGenuine question, are armed police allowed you take their hands off their weapons in a situation like that?
GribsFull MemberYears ago I came across a chart, possibly linked to police federation or such, i really cant remember.
So knowing such a thing existed, i did a basic search on google because i was interested to know what compo injured police receive. obviously like all workplace injuries there would be a scheme
Scroll down near the bottom of the page
https://www.accidentclaimsadvice.org.uk/police-officer-injury-claims/
So as I thought you just made up the numbers as you hate women police officers. From the link the suggested payout is based on serious lifelong injuries and the police force being negligent. It’s possible to claim from the Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority like any one else for serious injuries and judges/magistrates sometimes award damages in court as part of the sentence paid by the perpetrator just as they would if you were assaulted.
timbaFree MemberThanks dyna-ti, however, that’s a generic No Win, No Fee, Claim the maximum compensation legal firm
Anyone can use similar schemes to get massive amounts of compensation if injured at work, except that many people won’t have a reasonable chance of success and will be turned down at the free advice stage
This is what the Police Federation offer and it’s the same as any other person can get, except that police officers have to show a higher level of exceptional risk than most other people to qualify. You get kicked in the nuts for real and you take another to pass the threshold for compensation https://www.polfed.org/lancashire/advice/injury-on-duty/
3convertFull MemberNot sure if it has been mentioned so far but not seen it…..Assuming (I know) that these are the sons who ‘dealt with’ the alleged racist passenger that had been pointed out to them by their mother – given their behaviour here you’ve got to assume (again) that interaction was quite spicy too. Which would account for the police going in straight to arrest them rather than have a nice chat.
No one is going to come out of this well.
And….if the police officer gets charged…..would they charge the ‘victim’ of his assault of assault? That feels all kinds of messy. Which I guess is a damn good reason if no other exists why police officers simply have to keep their heads.
Oh and damned good work whoever leaked that to the MEN – gives a bit more context and makes sure no one has the moral high ground to get too finger pointy. Should calm things down a bit.
1dyna-tiFull Memberhowever, that’s a generic No Win, No Fee, Claim the maximum compensation legal firm
Ahh I see.
Though I would have thought there would be some sort of scheme over and above standard CICA as I wouldnt have thought any injury, from falling off a chair in the office to being injured as in this incident, would be classed as risks of the job you(they) signed up for.
I got nearly 2k for an injured elbow, scarring from a robbery. They(CICA) had criteria if the injury leaving scarring was unsightly. Broken nose is more serious than that, as its central face.
But there you go. Cheers for at least clarifying things.
1revs1972Free MemberOh and damned good work whoever leaked that to the MEN – gives a bit more context and makes sure no one has the moral high ground to get too finger pointy. Should calm things down a bit.
I’m guessing by his comments early on, that Andy Burnham had seen “all” of the footage .
I , like others thought what the copper had done was over the top and an “act of revenge “ after the incident.
Now I have seen the whole footage , and saw that it was part of the same sequence, then I can see he was trying the neutralise the situation the best way he could. With all that shit going on around him , you think he’s going to try putting cuffs on , by himself ??7stanleyFull MemberHaving seen the more complete videos, I’ve completely changed my view on this. Binners nails it: copper was doing what he needed to do in an extremely difficult situation. The “victims” have played dirty when releasing their videos and they have made it a racist event.
3CaherFull MemberTrained armed police and you only get a kick in the head?
I’m sure if we watched this footage in any other part of the world they’d have been shot given the ferocity of the attack on the police.
6binnersFull MemberAndy Burnham has made simply repeated his initial statement that there is a lot more evidence to come out yet so people shouldn’t rush to judgement. Given what we’ve seen so far, I’m going to go out on a limb here and guess that might well involve earlier footage of another masssively violent assault by the same people which led to them being arrested in the first place.
Looking at their behavior in that video, they look like the type of people who quickly revert to violence at the slightest provocation. From the way thoes two were swinging punches, that doesn’t exactly look like its an activity they’re unfamilar with.
Its taken some bloody front from dodgy lawyer bloke to go out so aggressively to try and portay this event as some kind of unprovoked assault by racist police. I wonder how the people are feeling who went out protesting, on the strength of the selectively edited initial video, now they’ve seen what we’ve all now seen? No wonder the dodgy lawyer is now nowhere to be seen.
theotherjonvFree MemberMy BiL was a prison officer, and got headbutted and had broken nose and cheekbone with surgery to pull it out again (surgery but quite minor I think)
He got nothing (or very little), employer wasn’t negligent, a risk of the job. Nothing like the 10’s of k sorts of numbers above
He’s no longer a prison officer.
1crazy-legsFull MemberBinners nails it: copper was doing what he needed to do in an extremely difficult situation. The “victims” have played dirty when releasing their videos and they have made it a racist event.
I’m working on a bike race today and speaking to some of the police working on this, they’ve obviously seen the footage. Their view is that the female officers were singled out for assault initially, other officers rush in to support and it all kicks off.
They weren’t at all sure WTF was going on – there’s never any issues at the airport other than lost kids etc so why the hell are armed officers being assaulted?! It’s then been turned into a racist event, strategically selected pieces of video released without showing the initial escalation.
2zilog6128Full MemberThe “victims” have played dirty when releasing their videos
no shit. Kind of obvious when the video shows only exactly what supports their argument and nothing else. I’ll just bear this in mind when we have the next “advert” thread and the usual suspects declare themselves immune to advertising/manipulation 🙂
5coconutFree MemberI would like to see those two do that to Italian/French/Spanish police and see how it ended… Unfortunately the UK is full of scrotes that think nothing of now attacking emergency workers, shop workers and threatening people working on the transport networks.
1surferFree MemberThe police have the right to arrest us, they dont have the power to violently assault us, especially if you are lying prone on the ground
I disagree thats the case if, as alleged, they were violent on the flight. I expect the action to be arrest and incapacitate immediately. Ive had the odd interaction with the police growing up in lees than salubrious area of Liverpool, the time to argue about this is back at the station, not to start throwing punches.
Yes he deserved to be arrested for assaulting to police, but no way was there any justification to seriously assaulting a prone man who at that point was no danger to anyone.
Editing made it look like it was an unprovoked attack on an unarmed man. Now we see that less than 4 seconds prior the man on the ground had the officer in a headlock after punching him several times. A good case for the whole thing being part of the same fracas and in the officers view (being armed) a fight he had to win.
5dave661350Full MemberThere must be someone on here that knows correct protocol. If someone is refusing to comply, and even a taser doesn’t work, at what point are you allowed to kick someone in the head or shoot them ?
Correct protocol..is using the Use of Force Continuum. The problem being that in a nice cushy office when they’re writing these things…there is none of the stress of an actual situation and telling cops on a training course “if that doesn’t work, have a rethink, and come back in at the next level up” doesn’t tally with the reality of it kicking off within a second. 3 cops on their arses within 3 or 4 seconds, noisy chaotic and not knowing where the next assailant is coming from with 7 or 8 seconds….tazer deployed…less effective than they’d like…and we are at 10 seconds. Reading this took longer. Next step up from tazer when control is being lost could well be the firearm….the violent thug on the deck may be sat alone thinking ‘Thank f### he didn’t shoot me…’
https://www.college.police.uk/app/armed-policing/use-force-firearms-and-less-lethal-weapons
2binnersFull MemberI suspect that police are pretty good at evaluating the level of threat individual people pose to them. Let’s be honest 99% of people fight like this and that’s only at a point when a direct physical confrontation is simply unavoidable …
Most of us will do anything to avoid violence.
Then there’s a hardcore 1% who are proper brawlers and kick off merchants (I suspect we’ve all known a good few), will happily instigate situations, then meter out terrifyingly brutal levels of violence at the drop of a hat
You can tell from the way they conduct themselves that those 2 are definitely in the latter category, and there’s another 3 of their mates stood there who could also be of the same mindset. It’s no wonder the copper wasn’t taking any risks. He’s already been punched repeatedly in the head and seen 2 of his colleagues get sparked out.
What would you do in that situation? The obvious answer is run away, which is what I’d have done. But that’s why I’m not a copper, because you need to be made of sterner stuff
stumpyjonFull MemberI wonder how the people are feeling who went out protesting, on the strength of the selectively edited initial video, now they’ve seen what we’ve all now seen?
I bet most will still feel the same, police violence is what they wanted to see and that’s what they saw. Some no doubt will think twice but I bet many won’t, jump to a conclusion which ties into personal bias and stick with it, like a small number of posters on here.
I hope the lawyers professional body see all this and have a long hard think about whether Mr shit stirring lawyer should still be part of their profession.
1pondoFull MemberSome interesting insight. The head kick and stamp were andalways will be wrong.
https://x.com/PublicPriestley/status/1817292197785375205always will be wrong.
stumpyjonFull MemberPondo you’re going to have to do a lot better than some random on Twitter to justify you rather weak point given what we’ve all now seen.
1pondoFull MemberPondo you’re going to have to do a lot better than some random on Twitter to justify you rather weak point given what we’ve all now seen.
Mmm, not really – kicking and stamping a tazed man lying prone in the head remains entirely unecessary and inappropriate for an officer, no matter how much emotion you justify it with.
What is the ‘insight’ for those of us not on twitter/x ?
It’s an ex-copper talking through the incident – I’ll see if I can screenshot it…
surferFree Memberkicking and stamping a tazed man lying prone in the head remains entirely unecessary
He was quickly to become “untazed” and would no doubt quickly return to the fray.
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