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Re: fewer prosecutions for emergency services
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---------- Post added at 12:24 ---------- Previous post was at 12:23 ---------- Quote:
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Re: fewer prosecutions for emergency services
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What's more, this wasn't even a life or death scenario. Just a suspect car. The fact that the ANPR was faulty is neither here nor there. He needlessly put lives at risk, and someone died. I think time in jail is more than warranted in this case. |
Re: fewer prosecutions for emergency services
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http://www.ukemergency.co.uk/index.p...&Itemid=61#ble Quote:
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Re: fewer prosecutions for emergency services
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But don't Customs and Excise, Coastguard, Mountain Rescue, and a few others use blue lights as well? |
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He reacted to information given and followed accepted protocol .The decision, was his to make ,he made what he thought was the right decision given his local knowledge and got punished for it and because of cases like this many drivers are scared to pursue criminals or drive fast to emergencies and given that emergency drivers have a specific response time they are stuck between a rock and a hard place |
Re: fewer prosecutions for emergency services
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it gives complete guidelines for the use of lights and sirens ,scroll to the bottom paragraph i cannot copy the document as it's security doesn't allow it Quote:
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About time as well. |
Re: fewer prosecutions for emergency services
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Remember the was no valid reason for him to drive with such scant regard for the rules of the road simply for a ANPR hit which could have been simply an out of date tax disc, he was justifiably jailed for this offence and should have received longer as to act as a warning to other officers as to the consequences of driving in such a dangerous and lethal manner. ---------- Post added at 20:27 ---------- Previous post was at 20:26 ---------- Quote:
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Remember he still has a life to live unlike his victim who never stood a chance being hit at 94 mph. |
Re: fewer prosecutions for emergency services
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I don't know how badly hurt the woman was in the car they collided with but they swerved and hit a building, the fire services had to cut the roof off the car to extract the 3 officers. I believe the police driver should be prosecuted in these circumstances. |
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Empty wide road ,well lit ,stolen car ,late at night the 2nd best scenario for a chase if there must be one ,the only better scenario is a daylight empty road but how many of those do you see .The control room rely on the drivers info to decide if the chase goes ahead I should add that i don't want to turn this thread into a debate on the conviction of PC Dougals conviction ,that has been done to death in it's own thread ,it is being used as a relatively current event that shows perfectly the dilemma faced by any emergency vehicle driver .They can pootle around at 30mph and let the fires burn ,the patients die and the crims get away or they can do their job without the fear of prosecution if things go wrong through no fault of their own |
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Have you actually seen the footage? If not it's here. From when he turned the car to pursue there was approximately 30 seconds before the impact. In that time he had to follow the car, make the control room aware of what was happening, confirm why the car was wanted, make progress on it to confirm the number of persons within and that the VRM was correct and it wasn't a misread and then if necessary activate the lights and sirens. He wasn't hooring the car for hours round an estate. Anyway I've had enough of the presumption that emergency service workers will be charged for crashes when they are going to emergencies when it's clear its not entirely their fault. A bit of common sense is long overdue. |
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