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A Survival Guide For Decent UK Folk...

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  • A Survival Guide For Decent UK Folk...

    A Survival Guide For Decent UK Folk

    Written for law abiding citizens BY A COP!

    Article is HERE!

    NIGHTJACK (The blog) is HERE!

    In these days of us increasingly having to deal with law abiding folk who have fallen foul of the €œentitled poor€ and those who have learned how to use us to score points and exact revenge, I thought it would be a good idea to give out a bit of general guidance for those law abiding types who find themselves under suspicion or under arrest. It works for the bad guys so make it work for you.

    Complain First

    Always get your complaint in first, even if it is you who started it and you who were in the wrong. If things have gone awry and you suspect the cops are going to be called, get your retaliation in first. Ring the cops right away and allege for all you are worth. If you can work a racist or homophobic slant into it so much the better.

    Make a counter allegation

    Regardless of the facts, never let the other side be blameless. If they beat you to the phone, ring anyway and make a counter allegation against them. Again racism or homophobia are your friends. If you are not from a visible minority ethnic culture, may I suggest that that the phrase €œYou gay bastard€ or similar is always useful. In extremis allege sexual assault. It gives us something to bargain with when getting the other person to drop their complaint on a quid-pro-quo basis. This is particularly good where there are no independent witnesses. When it boils down to one word against another and nobody is €˜fessing up, CPS run a mile and you, my friend, are definitely on a walk out

    Never explain to the Police

    If the Police arrive to lock you up, say nothing. You are a decent person and you may think that reasoning with the Police will help. €œIf I can only explain, they will realise it is all a horrible mistake and go away€. Wrong. We do want to talk to you on tape in an interview room but that comes later. All you are doing by trying to explain is digging yourself further in. We call that stuff a significant statement and we love it. Decent folk can€™t help themselves, they think that they can talk their way out. Wrong.

    Admit Nothing

    To do anything more than lock you up for a few hours we need to prove a case. The easiest route to that is your admission. Without it, our case may be a lot weaker, maybe not enough to charge you with. In any case, it is always worth finding out exactly how damning the evidence is before you fall on your sword. So don€™t do the decent and honourable thing and admit what you have done. Don€™t even deny it or try to give your side of the story. Just say nothing. No confession and CPS are on the back foot already. They forsee a trial. They fear a trial. They are looking for any excuse to send you home free.

    Keep your mouth shut

    Say as little as possible to us. At the custody office desk a Sergeant will ask you some questions. It is safe to answer these. For the rest of the time, say nothing.

    Claim Suicidal Thoughts

    A debatable one this. Claiming to be thinking about topping yourself has several benefits. If you can keep it up, it might just bump up any compensation payable later. On the other hand you may find yourself in a paper suit with someone watching your every move.

    Always always always have a solicitor

    Duh. No brainer this one. Unless you know 100% for sure that your mate the solicitor does criminal law and is good at it, ask for the Duty Solicitor. They certainly do criminal law and they are good at it. Then listen to what the solicitor says and do it. Their job is to get you off without the Cops or CPS laying a glove on you if at all possible. It is what they get paid for. They are free to you. There is no down side. Now decent folks think it makes them look like they have something to hide if they ask for a solicitor. Irrelevant. Going into an interview without a solicitor is like taking a walk in Tottenham with a big gold Rolex. Bad things are very likely to happen to you. I wouldn€™t do it and I interview people for a living.

    Actively complain about every officer and everything they do

    Did they cuff you when they brought you in? Were they rude to you? Did they racially or homophobically abuse you? Didn€™t get fed? Cell too cold? You are decent folk who don€™t want to make a fuss but trust me, it pays to whinge and no matter how trivial and / or poorly founded your complaint there are people who will uncritically listen to you and try and prove the complaint on your behalf. Some of them are even police officers. Nothing like a complaint to muddy the waters and suggest that you are only in court because the vindictive Cops have a grudge against you. Far fetched? Wait until your solicitor spins it in court and you come over as Ghandi.

    Show no respect to the legal system or anybody working in it

    You think that if you are a difficult, unpleasant, sneering, unco-operative and rude things will go badly for you and you will be in more trouble. No sirree Bob. It seems that in fact the worse you are, the easier things will go for you if, horror of horrors, you do end up convicted. Remember to fake a drink problem if you haven€™t developed one as a result of dealing with us already. Magistrates and Judges do seem to like the idea that you are basically good but the naughty alcohol made you do it. They treat you better. Crazy I know but true.

    So there you go, basically anything you try and do because you are decent and staightforward hurts you badly. Act like an habitual, professional, lifestyle criminal and chances are you will walk away relatively unscathed.

    Copy the bad guys, its what they do for a living.


    The UK today! You're fucking welcome to it!

  • #2
    Somehow i can see those same things happening in Ireland
    i love t-girls

    Comment


    • #3
      The sad thing about this post Stogie,is how batantly true it is. And that's not funny.
      A friend in need is a f**king pest

      Comment


      • #4
        I work in the ahem... 'Justice' area... I believe this issue relates more to policing and police culture/practice than anything else...

        Comment


        • #5
          That's after you get caught.

          Beforehand, it's best to turn off your mobile phone.

          Comment



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