It's worth pointing out to those who say she deserved it, she didn't. Just because she was pissed and abusive and difficult doesn't mean she deserved this:
She might not have deserved the injuries but she certainly contributed to the events that led up to them. The cctv evidence now released seems to show a bit more than at the time. This time it clearly shows her trying to get out of the cell a couple of times.
Also, in your honest opinion as one of Britain's finest, would you suggest the charges against her were dropped because of the action she was taking and the 'video evidence'. One can only assume that a blood sample wasn't taken before she got injured (although surely they could have scrapped some off the cell floor!).
How's the stewarding going?.....
She might not have deserved the injuries but she certainly contributed to the events that led up to them. The cctv evidence now released seems to show a bit more than at the time. This time it clearly shows her trying to get out of the cell a couple of times.
Also, in your honest opinion as one of Britain's finest, would you suggest the charges against her were dropped because of the action she was taking and the 'video evidence'. One can only assume that a blood sample wasn't taken before she got injured (although surely they could have scrapped some off the cell floor!).
What's it got to do with anything?
Stewards don't manhandle people, are not police and have no powers of arrest. We look after your health and safety, and concerned with others around you, in keeping with regulations.
I have a qualification that is City and Guilds certified.
Still nothing to do with Police work, other than their work in tandem with us when called upon. I believe 'Collar Feeler' is the very acceptible face of the Constabulary usually present at Withdean - and you are lucky to have him around.
Buzzer has misbehaved in the past, and tried to contravene the Withdean 'Sportsman' rules, so that cock thinks he's an authority on 'Steward Watch' or something. He's got a boner for me since I didn't agree wholeheartedly with his poor example, even though invited to give unbiased opinion.
Never mind eh, he can think whatever he wants, he's been a bit of a nob and STILL can't take his meds.![]()
Only the consequences were just a tad more serious:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/2119943.stm
Flashback: Rodney King and the LA riots
The videotaped beating shocked the world
The videotape of the violent arrest of 16-year-old Donovan Jackson by Los Angeles police has reawakened uncomfortable memories of another assault on a black motorist.
In 1991, footage of Rodney King being beaten by four police officers while others looked on caused outrage around the world, and was a major factor in triggering serious rioting in the city a year later.
Rodney King was badly injured in the beating
Now there are fears that the latest incident could again ignite Los Angeles' simmering racial tensions.
King's white Hyundai car was stopped by traffic officers of the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) after a high-speed chase on 3 March 1991.
King, whose friends "Pooh" Allen and Freddie Helms were also in the vehicle, had been drinking and was behaving erratically.
Beating
Ordering him out of the car, four officers Laurence Powell, Timothy Wind, Theodore Briseno and Stacey Koon, beat Mr King repeatedly with their batons.
Sergeant Stacey Koon later received a 30 month jail term
The LAPD claimed the officers had acted in self-defence to restrain King, who they said was aggressive and resisting arrest.
Other officers present did not intervene. Rodney King suffered a fractured skull and internal injuries in the attack.
The incident was caught on camera by George Holliday, a manager of a plumbing company, whose apartment was close by.
Within a day, the tape was running on news networks around the world, focusing international attention on the apparent brutality of the LAPD.
Four days later, Los Angeles County District Attorney dismissed all charges against King. On 15 March, the four police officers were charged with assault.
However, a grand jury later refused to indict 17 other officers who had witnessed the beating.
Backlash
In July 1991, an independent commission ordered to investigate the LAPD delivered a damning verdict.
Its report documented what it described as the systematic use of excessive force and institutionalised racism. The commission recommended the resignation of police chief Daryl Gates.
Widespread broke out erupted after the trial
In Autumn 1991, the lenient sentence handed to a Korean-American convenience store assistant convicted of shooting dead a young black woman further heightened racial tensions.
The spark came in April 1992, when all four officers in the Rodney King case were cleared of assault. Within hours, violence erupted across the city's black neighbourhoods.
Fifty-five people were killed in several days of rioting, looting and retaliatory attacks against whites and Asians. About 2,000 people were injured, and another 12,000 arrested.
More than $1bn worth of property was damaged and the National Guard was deployed to help police restore order.
A year later, the four acquitted police officers faced a second trial on federal charges of violating Rodney King's civil rights.
Stacey Koon and Laurence Powell were found guilty and received 30 month jail terms; Timothy Wind and Theodore Briseno were cleared.
Rodney King won a $3.8m damages from the City of Los Angeles. He used some of the money to found a rap record business, Alta-Pazz Recording Company.
I haven't seen the other CCTV so can't judge what it shows however all police officers are taught home office approved control and restraint techniques and from what I've seen, dragging a prisoner across the cell block and throwing her into a cell isn't on any list of approved techniques I've ever seen. I'm struggling to see how a burly 6ft plus experienced officer is saying he had to resort to that behaviour because he couldn't control her, quite frankly I think thats bollocks.
I suspect no charges were offered against her because she was asleep in her car when she was first encountered, although she may well have been pissed and I suspect gave the officers grief when they spoke to her. She failed to provide a breath test but I think the CPS may have held that that request may have been unlawful if she wasn't held to be in control of the car which would be difficult to prove if she was asleep at the time! I have seen people prosecuted under these circumstances but they generally have to be in some way in control of the car such as in the drivers seat with the keys in the ignition. Insufficient evidence I suspect to continue hence no charges offered.
Exactly, she should have had the book thrown at her. She was aquitted due to lack of evidence?? One minute she can't (won't) walk, the next minute she is sprinting out of the cell? So just remember, she is still driving around the countryside, quite possibly so pissed she can't walk, oh, and she didn't even get fined for failing to give a breath test. Jesus, and the copper got put in jail for that, disgrace.
I have seen people prosecuted under these circumstances but they generally have to be in some way in control of the car such as in the drivers seat with the keys in the ignition. Insufficient evidence I suspect to continue hence no charges offered.
One of my lads is a copper and I seem to spend half my time banging on to people about how the force are let down by the courts because they don't apply appropriately severe sentencing - in this instance they let them down for an entirely different reason
The keys don't have to be in the ignition but would have to be easily available, ie in a pocket.
I sat on one a few weeks back where the driver was pissed (one of the highest readings I've come across) in the drivers seat with the keys on the seat. We were under no doubt that he didn't intend to drive but according to the letter of the law, he was guilty.
With the greatest respect to your lad, sentencing has nothing to do with police. their job is to bring suspects before the court and that's where their part of the criminal justice system ends. Sentencing is down to Magistrates and Judges after hearing all the facts and is set down in guidelines.
Sadly the job attracts a lot of rock-ape bully boys who don't think, or DO think they have a right to give it the physical on all comers just because of the uniform.
.
It would have been bad enough if the assault had been against a man but as it was a woman it is completely unforgivable.
With the greatest respect to your lad, sentencing has nothing to do with police. their job is to bring suspects before the court and that's where their part of the criminal justice system ends. Sentencing is down to Magistrates and Judges after hearing all the facts and is set down in guidelines.
What's it got to do with anything?
Stewards don't manhandle people, are not police and have no powers of arrest. We look after your health and safety, and concerned with others around you, in keeping with regulations.
I have a qualification that is City and Guilds certified.
Still nothing to do with Police work, other than their work in tandem with us when called upon. I believe 'Collar Feeler' is the very acceptible face of the Constabulary usually present at Withdean - and you are lucky to have him around.
Buzzer has misbehaved in the past, and tried to contravene the Withdean 'Sportsman' rules, so that cock thinks he's an authority on 'Steward Watch' or something. He's got a boner for me since I didn't agree wholeheartedly with his poor example, even though invited to give unbiased opinion.
Never mind eh, he can think whatever he wants, he's been a bit of a nob and STILL can't take his meds.![]()
What's it got to do with anything?
Stewards don't manhandle people