sickening police violence

Channel 4 news, he had tried several ways on his route home only to be blocked by Police, he was going home to watch the football.
 
I'm not entirely sure that he was hit (I'd expect him to react if he had been) but even if he was, how is this relevant - and more importantly, how does this justify their actions?

Well if he was asked to move on (we can't hear the audio where they are..And he just down right ignored them for whatever reason, then I don't see why they can't move you along in other ways.


Excuse me? They weren't "clearing a road"; it wasn't even a road. It was a public thoroughfare, and the police were completely unobstructed. Hell, they were spread out in a line behind him; there was no need to move him on, let alone attack him.

The cowardly little jackbooted thug who attacked him should be charged with manslaughter.

Depends if they where instructed to form a line on that 'corner' I guess...

Why would they want people behind them during quite possibly, what could have turned into a threatening riot.
 
Its lucky he didn't die after hitting the ground or more officers may have had to join in and give him a proper seeing to and kill him again!
 
There are several conflicting stories about what he was actually doing there from several different news outlets..

It's completely irrelevant. He was free to walk there, free to protest there, free to walk slowly with his hands in his pocket. And free to expect NOT to be assaulted by an officer of the law.

I can't see any link between him dying and the push. It's little more than coincidence.

I'm not going to stick up for him either. If he had a problem that DID cause him to walk slowly in front of police with police dogs then he could have turned around and actually said something, but he didn't. He was simply trying to annoy the police, and trying to provoke a reaction.

Think about it, if you are walking in front of a line of police with dogs, clearing an area in order to get people out of the way, standing in front of them is a stupid idea, and most people out of common sense wouldn't do it. Calling the police force thuggish is all well and good but if you were a policeman i'm pretty sure you'd see it differently. That bloke was little more than another arrogant ******* trying to cause trouble.


Are you dense?.

Firstly, his heart attack can quite logically be linked to the trauma of being attacked in the middle of the street by a police officer (amidst the relative chaos of a group of officers quelling protestors).
Secondly, he's free to walk there, as slowly as he pleases. If in fact he was part of the protest then surely his peaceful demonstration is to be commended, not scorned.

Go back to bed.
 
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Although it does look like the man was being obstructive ir doesn't look malicious. By the way the officers are acting it doesn't look like there was much provocation before this clip.

Why did one officer take it upon himself to lunge at him and the others didn't? Clearly he lost the plot. Surely a better way to remove him is have two or three officers aside and behind him to move him on more swiftly, which wouldn't have taken up much of their time. Aren't they trained to deal with crowd situations and this kind of behaviour from the public? This is a clear case of manslaughter and will be dealt with as such. Also, the 'police' didn't cause his death, one 'police officer' did.
 
It's completely irrelevant. He was free to walk there, free to protest there, free to walk slowly with his hands in his pocket. And free to expect NOT to be assaulted by an officer of the law.

We'll, i'm going to go out now to deliberately get in the way of some police officers. If they tell me to stop i'll tell them I have a right to stop them doing their job and that they have no power to do anything to people causing trouble, no matter how small and insignificant that trouble may be.
 
He didn't need to be there for sure, and they definately didn't need to be so heavy on him. 50/50

What do you mean "he didn't need to be there"? He was trying to get home from work, the other ways he'd tried had been blocked by police and so he was going that way.

It's not 50/50 at all, it's 100% police brutality!
 
The cops didn't need to do anything. He wasn't obstructing then; he was simply walking in front of them, as he was perfectly entitled to do. They were spread out behind him, and could easily have walked past him if they'd wanted to, but they chose not to do this. Instead, one of them attacked him with a baton and hurled him to the ground for no legitimate reason whatsoever.

It's a frightening picture of Britain's thuggish police force at their most unprofessional. Are these little bully boys answerable to anyone? What is the government doing about this?

OcUK exclusive. Shock and horror, AJUK and Evangelion agree!
 
Excuse me? They weren't "clearing a road"; it wasn't even a road. It was a public thoroughfare, and the police were completely unobstructed. Hell, they were spread out in a line behind him; there was no need to move him on, let alone attack him.

Use some common sense the police are obviously trying to herd poeple away from the area.
 
Well if he was asked to move on (we can't hear the audio where they are..And he just down right ignored them for whatever reason, then I don't see why they can't move you along in other ways.

I'm not interested in "If" statements. The fact of the matter is that he was just a harmless bloke walking home from work, and they chose to attack him. He was not obstructing them in any way at all.

It's always been my understanding that the police are not permitted to brutalise members of the public without legitimate cause. Did this change and nobody told me?

Depends if they where instructed to form a line on that 'corner' I guess...

But they weren't forming a line on that corner. They were just walking in a straggled line. They didn't even form a police line when they stopped to admire their handiwork.

Why would they want people behind them during quite possibly, what could have turned into a threatening riot.

One guy who was clearly not taking part in the riot? One guy who was walking in the opposite direction? They could easily have stopped and asked the guy about his intentions; they could even have detained him if they'd had genuine concerns. But they didn't bother. Perhaps it didn't enter their tiny little brains.

I can't believe that you're even trying to justify the attack. It's just bizarre. Do you come from a 3rd world nation where this sort of thing is normal, perhaps? :confused:
 
What do you mean "he didn't need to be there"? He was trying to get home from work, the other ways he'd tried had been blocked by police and so he was going that way.

It's not 50/50 at all, it's 100% police brutality!

No I don't think so. The street is wide, padestrianised and unless he was deaf and blind he knew there was trouble around him. Sense of self preservation should have suggested taking another route. It was at the very least in part his own responsibility.

I have no qualms with the over zealous police work though. That was bang out of order.
 
He is quite obviously not 'walking home from work'. He is intentionally being obstructive, ignoring the Dog Handlers instructions to move. If you have a Police Dog behind you, you leave sharpish, not bimble along trying to provoke a reaction.

I do however agree the Officers approach was heavy handed.

In the article below, it says that witnesses saw the guy getting beat on by the officers just before the footage.
 
Use some common sense the police are obviously trying to herd poeple away from the area.

I am using common sense. And common sense tells me that there was no justification for this attack.

I appreciate that the concept of "unjustified violence" is completely alien to a Millwall fan, but please try to understand what it means. This is important.
 
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