Cubist said:
How do you define a major incident? Not Trolling, just curious.
I have learnt a few things, and been given some new perspectives on this as the thread has gone on. Vikeonabike's contributions particularly useful.
Your point about our ignorance of the facts, and the degree of blame that might or might not be attributable to either party, is entirely correct. But it's human nature to speculate, and that's what we've all been doing.
Anyway, what I was getting at was that, as has been pointed out, many call outs and blue light runs may be to attend what turn out to be relatively trivial incidents. We'd all probably agree that if someone is involved in an accident like the one reported as a result of such a run
, and the attending driver knows it's a trivial incident, that's unacceptable. What began as an attempt by the police to catch a petty criminal ends up with an innocent* person being horribly injured. (I'm not saying this
was a call-out to a trivial incident - we don't have the facts - it might or might not have been).
(*Even if the cyclist was a "ninja", he didn't deserve this punishment).
If, however, the policeman driving to an incident knows that, if he arrives promptly, he may be preventing something like a major terrorist plot, which will result in the deaths of scores or hundreds of people, then he may take greater risks, and we would probably support that. I suspect the likes of the RAF bomb squad and Special Branch have to do this more often than we ever hear about.
My point was that,
to our knowledge, there have been no such incidents in West Yorkshire, thwarted in the nick of time by police drivers, and therefore the injuries to the young man could not be justified. (
But the nature of anti-terrorist operations is such that we could very well not know about such plots being thwarted, and the police officer in this case might, for all we know, have been on his way to just such a thing).
Vike points out, though, that it's not always that straightforward. He pulled someone out of a burning car which seconds later, exploded. Had he not made a succesful (and, I presume, accident-free) blue light run to do so, she would not now be alive. If he lived through that again, knowing what he knows now, he would be balancing the
certain death of a young woman in a burning car, against the
risk of an accident occurring on the way there. In other words, if he drives slowly and safely, someone will definitely die. If he drives quickly, someone
might die or be injured in an accident partly of his making.
But of course, he can manage the risk of the road accident occurring by driving with all his skill and concentration. He cannot manage the risk of the burning car exploding, nor, before he arrives, can he know all of the circumstances of the incident he is driving to: his control room's info may be incomplete or wrong: it could be a whole bus that's burning. Or it could be an empty car. (Or it could be a hoax).
The more you think about this, and the more perspective you get from the police side of it, the more respect you have for those who do this sort of driving and have to make these judgements. And the more sympathy for those involved when it all goes wrong.