They should have used Taser on all of them...

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Police should be allowed to carry guns for situations like this:

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...eving-father-dying-six-year-old-daughter.html

Shocking footage obtained by The Mail on Sunday shows how police officers violently dragged a grieving father from the hospital bedside of his dying daughter shortly after he had been told her life support was being withdrawn.

The harrowing film from a police body camera shows the moment Rashid Abbasi, a 59-year-old hospital consultant, was wrenched away from his critically ill six-year-old daughter by an officer holding his neck.
 
Mr and Mrs Abbasi fought a three-week legal battle against hospital bosses to overturn draconian reporting restrictions that prevented them telling their story. Dr Abbasi is suing the police for wrongful arrest.
 
Police should be allowed to carry guns for situations like this:

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...eving-father-dying-six-year-old-daughter.html

Shocking footage obtained by The Mail on Sunday shows how police officers violently dragged a grieving father from the hospital bedside of his dying daughter shortly after he had been told her life support was being withdrawn.

The harrowing film from a police body camera shows the moment Rashid Abbasi, a 59-year-old hospital consultant, was wrenched away from his critically ill six-year-old daughter by an officer holding his neck.

Have you thought about of a career in social worker, or as a lawyer, they're both usually tardy with cases? If a consultant doesn't know medical etiquette it's a poor reflection on who the NHS are employing. A harrowing historic story, with no doubt, but of all people a consultant in a hospital should have shown some decorum, however trying for him.
 
People should be allowed to take their family members' treatment elsewhere if the NHS throw the towel in, people have died at the hands of NHS incompetence so they shouldn't be the arbiter of life and death and the police should focus more on real crimes.

Police are supposed to serve the public not arrest them for trying to protect family from NHS bureaucrats.
 
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Police should be allowed to carry guns for situations like this:

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...eving-father-dying-six-year-old-daughter.html

Shocking footage obtained by The Mail on Sunday shows how police officers violently dragged a grieving father from the hospital bedside of his dying daughter shortly after he had been told her life support was being withdrawn.

The harrowing film from a police body camera shows the moment Rashid Abbasi, a 59-year-old hospital consultant, was wrenched away from his critically ill six-year-old daughter by an officer holding his neck.

Are you saying the way the police treated him wasn't enough, and they should have threatened him with a gun to force him away?
 
I have no idea what the OP is saying. But that female copper has no idea what compasion is, the guys daughter is a foot away dying! Poor work there by the police.

No idea who would be tasered or shot in that scenario though?
 
Those coppers need a good hard beating...

You could also say the police have got a lot more important things to do, so instead of wasting their time and resisting them just leave in orderly fashion and let them do they job.

The police asked numerous times politely for them to go. Clearly they were not going to, hence why the hospital had to call the police in to remove them.

We can't tolerate positive discrimination, "leave them because they are Asian and we don't want to upset the Asian community".

We want and need equity. Stop fighting the police.
 
People should be allowed to take their family members' treatment elsewhere if the NHS throw the towel in, people have died at the hands of NHS incompetence so they shouldn't be the arbiter of life and death and the police should focus more on real crimes.

Police are supposed to serve the public not arrest them for trying to protect family from NHS bureaucrats.
In what way is this random criticism of the National Health Service a worthwhile post?
 
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