Crap policing in London

Page may contain affiliate links. Please see terms for details.

spindrift

New Member
The increased danger to other road users by drivers who use handheld mobile phones is well known:
Research shows that reactions times are about 50 per cent slower and that people are four times more at risk of being involved in a collision, when driving and on the 'phone.
In spite of the growing numbers of cyclists, pedestrians and others killed by those who make the conscious choice to drive while chattering into a handheld mobile, it is an activity tacitly encouraged by both the government and the police. Three penalty points and a £60 fine is absolutely no deterrent for a lethal activity where the chances of being caught are negligible. And the police do not regard enforcement of this law as a priority. That might change if the government introduced legislation which meant that offenders automatically lost their license but no such legislation is on the horizon. Hundreds more cyclists and pedestrians will die at the hands of mobile phone drivers before a future government grudgingly changes the law. The current legislation is a spectacular failure but no politician or senior police officer appears at all concerned.
This situation was brought home to me last Friday afternoon as I watched the female driver of OV55 YWJ steering her car along Hoe Street (2.20 pm) with one hand, while with the other she was engrossed in a conversation on her handheld mobile phone. The car behind her was a marked police car, with two officers inside. And what did they do? You guessed: nothing at all. Incredibly, two cars behind the police car was another driver chatting into a handheld mobile phone. London drivers have certainly got the message: the police don't care.
On Monday at 3.30 pm the male driver of a lorry reg. MX51 GYF turned out of Church Hill E17 into Hoe Street, with the driver steering with one hand while chatting into his handheld mobile on the other. This prospective mass killer was utterly indifferent to the scores of pedestrians including children at this location.
When it comes to London’s crap traffic policing Jenny Jones of the London Assembly has described the difficulties: The Met Police halved the number of traffic police and regarded road safety as a very low priority. Drivers have spent the last decade or more thinking that they can break the law in London and get away with it. The result is that in some parts of London, a quarter of all people injured in traffic collisions are victims of hit and run drivers.
At its worst
Each week in London 80 people are the victims of hit-and-run drivers. This figure has doubled in the last two decades. By contrast the number of traffic police has fallen steeply over the same period. (pdf)
Jenny Jones produced an excellent report (pdf) noting that
The Metropolitan Police has failed to treat road crime with the seriousness it deserves. London’s roads are becoming increasingly lawless in several dangerous ways. This report describes the rise in “hit-and-run” incidents, the widespread evasion of vehicle tax and insurance, and the declining enforcement of traffic offences not detected by electronic devices, such as speed cameras. Cuts in the number of traffic police have lead a minority of drivers to believe that they can break the law with impunity. Yet, an increase of 8,000 in the total number of police officers in London over the last six years provided the Met Police with ample opportunity to make road safety a priority . More people die on London’s roads than are murdered. Most road deaths are preventable, yet several times more resources are devoted to murder investigations than to road death investigations. The lack of priority given to road crime is demonstrated by the current reluctance of the police to prosecute drivers who injure cyclists or pedestrians, in the absence of independent witnesses . This dismissive approach is not adopted towards the victims of car theft, burglary, assault and other crimes.
The latest example of this state of affairs occurred this weekend:
A driver ran off leaving a man and a woman dead on the pavement after hitting them in his top-of-the-range £84,000 BMW yesterday. The victims – a man aged 47 and a woman aged 21 – were walking home after a night out when they were struck by the car, which also hit a parked Mercedes.Witnesses saw the driver get out of his 155mph black BMW M6, look at the couple lying on the pavement and then run away from the scene, in Perivale, West London.
There was a fascinating case recently in which three men won their appeal against conviction for the crime that they had
supplied equipment to cannabis growers, reasonably foreseeing that the items would be used illegally.
The convictions were quashed, but only because
it was not proved that anyone had used the equipment to grow cannabis.
By the same logic the police should be raiding every car manufacturer and car sales outlet in Britain. They are all involved in supplying equipment – namely cars designed to be driven at speeds in excess of 70 mph – reasonably foreseeing that these cars will be used illegally. Obtaining convictions shouldn’t be a problem, with the evidence available every day of the week.
But though the Met turns a blind eye to killers on the road, it is enforcing some aspects of road traffic law:
A CRACKDOWN on cyclists who flout the law by riding on pavements netted one rider every four minutes. Police officers caught the offenders during a 90-minute purge in Stoke Newington High Street on Thursday morning last week. The cyclists were using the stretch of pavement to avoid going through the Stoke Newington one-way system. Twenty-one cyclists were hit by £30 fines for flouting the law. Officers issued 19 fines for cyclists on the pavement and a further two for going through red lights.
Of course if the Met chose to enforce the law supposed to deter drivers from stopping in Advanced Stop Lines for cyclists they would 'net' rather more than one offender every four minutes.

http://crapwalthamforest.blogspot.com/2008/09/crap-policing.html
 

hackbike 6

New Member
Officers issued 19 fines for cyclists on the pavement and a further two for going through red lights.

Excuse me but the way people talked on here this seems perfectly legal.(sic)

I don't think I am surprised how,now people have a blatant disregard for anybody else on the road now and this includes all road user lawbreakers and pedestrians who can't seem to do anything wrong.

Policing is a joke and something needs to be done.
I think the police are snowed under/undermanned and seem to have given up.
 
OP
OP
S

spindrift

New Member
Biased Ward Policing Consultation Suvey

June 19, 2008 · No Comments

Londoners are being encouraged by the police to fill in the Ward Policing Consultation document. Apparently, in conjunction with crime figures, the information gleaned from the survey is extremely useful to the police to “improve the quality of life for the people who live and work within the City of London…To help us target and address your issues”. So, the first question on the list, the issue that takes precedence over all others is:
citypolicesurvey_new.png


I mean come on, firstly I can think of a few other things that need to be addressed!
 
Top Bottom