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Lawless Britain Cops walk away from 1,000 crimes every day

Repressive regimes have mastered the art of magicking the ‘thin blue line’ police service to an out-of-control weaponised mass movement of state police far more repressive than an occupying army.

Far-fetched? Compare pictures and lifestyle in carefree German Occupied France and the British Channel Islands (1940-1944) with the police use of the clenched fist, baton rounds, pepper sprays and violence wielded against even pacified anti-government protestors today.

Yet, these same police ‘service’ when it comes to actually fighting crime, which it is paid to do, is likely the most hapless profession in the already benighted unfortunate Boris-Britain. Britain’s police are as useless as a bull with tits when they’re actually called upon to fight crime.

Get out of gaol free: UK police abandoned investigations into over 1,000 crimes daily in 2020 with one in seven investigations dumped within 24 hours according to reports.

QUOTE: ‘Police forces across the UK wrote off over 1,000 crimes a day last year. Investigations into serious crimes like threats to murder, rapes, assaults and arson were apparently closed within 24 hours during the pandemic.’

Despite lower crime levels in the country during the Covid lockdowns, some forces doubled the number of criminal investigations they screened out. Tossed in the bin where they usually place their doughnut wrappers. One in seven crimes reported last year were allegedly abandoned within a day of police opening investigations into them.

The shocking figures revealed in freedom of information requests showed that police probes into some 432,634 crimes were ditched within a day, or about 1,185 crimes per day last year. The paper noted that the true figure was likely at least twice that amount since less than half of the UK’s police forces shared their data.

According to information provided by 17 police forces across the country, 15% of cases were closed on average without an officer even meeting the victim of a crime. The worst offenders were the Police Service of Northern Ireland which screened out 38% of cases while the UK’s largest force, Scotland Yard dumped 31% of new cases inside a day.

Although crimes judged as ‘lower harm’ or with poor evidence are typically more likely to be dropped, the reported figures show that during the CoFlu pandemic there was a spike in the numbers of serious offences going without any investigation.

About 42,073 reported violent incidents were ditched last year, a 6% jump from 2019 and there was a 4% rise in arson cases being abandoned, with the police shelving 6,753 reports in 2020 compared to 6,483 the year before.

Meanwhile, in a revelation that is expected to add to public outcry over police handling of women’s safety, forces reported that 71 rapes and over 420 other sexual offences were taken off the police computer screens within a day last year even though there was a 7% overall drop in sex offences in England and Wales.

The Bedfordshire police force had admitted to the Daily Mail that its data collection was ‘unreliable’. The force had reportedly dropped as many as 6% of rapes and 13% of sex offences last year.

‘It is still the case that too many victims do not have confidence in the response they will receive if they report to the police and so do not come forward,’ a new government policy paper on tackling violence against women notes.

Other crimes written off by police forces include 6,350 robberies, 1,137 muggings, 423 drugs possession cases and 171 weapons possession cases. In addition, some 29,730 residential burglaries were screened out with some forces in England and Wales failing to investigate over half of such cases. But the cops intimidate any who post memes critical of the Westminster crime scene known as the House (of Commons).

In April, an HM Inspectorate of Constabulary report had warned that some forces had ’increased the number of crimes they decided not to investigate because they were unlikely to be solved’ and were offering a ’reduced service in some areas of police work’.

‘If the public knew this was happening on this scale, they would be shocked and outraged. Anyone who reports a crime deserves a proper response from the police,’ Vera Baird, Victims’ Commissioner for England and Wales, told the paper.

But a National Police Chiefs’ Council spokesman responded, ’In some cases, there may not be enough intelligence or data for police to act on. This does not mean that a crime is closed indefinitely or that intelligence or information is ignored.’ If you like this story, share it with a friend!

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