Baron Pepperpot
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- #21
To be fair to the police, the only involvement they've had in this case is to obtain ownership information about the reported vehicle and to send out a standard letter. Automated office work - a few seconds of data entry. I guess that was done by civilian staff.**** em, how about getting rid of the ****ing pikeys all over Sussex? Oh sorry, forgot about the 'social' issues!
Similar to the grass line at the Amex busy bodies with nothing better to do will be constantly on the phone.
This looks to me to be a continuation of a scheme that started a few years back, in response to concerns by a lot of rural communities that the police didn't have the resources to deal with speeding traffic. Volunteers were trained up to use simple speed cameras to identify vehicles exceeding the speed limit, and set up a warning letter. The cameras don't meet the standards to achieve a prosecution or conviction, but they are accurate enough to identify a speeding vehicle. I was trained to set up and use this kit, but never actually got round to using it for real. The only police involvement was to support the training programme (which was run by the County Council's Road Safety Team, in their guise as members of the Sussex Speed Partnership), and to retrieve vehicle data from DVLA. Warning letters are the worst that a speeding motorist might ever receive.
The scheme now seems to allow members of the Public to report alleged violations for speeding and other "anti-social" driving activity. I guess it might make some folk think about their driving, but it could just as easily fire up the people who love moaning about private parking enforcement not having any basis in law.
Can somebody explain this sentence?
The phone line you can ring at the Amex to report unsocial behaviour
As the police couldn't even be arsed to investigate my wife and several neighbours having post stolen, bank cards duplicated, one guy being ripped off for over £25000 & other attempts at fraudulent use, I can't see them doing anything about some old biddy moaning when someone supposedly breaks the speed limit by 7mph even if it happens time and again. Waste of paper.
We even gave them a phone number to ring to get the IP address of the computer the fraudster used and they couldn't be bothered.
IP addresses used by fraudsters are a dead end 99.9% of the time. Often using masking software or Internet cafes that they cannot be traced back to. Unfortunately it's pretty much impossible to solve fraud such as this. Most police forces no longer investigate fraud in any case - it's all dealt with by a central bureau called action fraud. The only Fraud the police investigated is that with a 'local suspect' that is reasonably traceable.
When I had my bank card details used to achieve something like 30-40 low-value ATM withdrawals in the space of a couple of days, from South African banks as it happened, I simply contacted my bank, who immediately passed it to their own fraud investigators, stopped the card, delivered me a new one within two days, and refunded all the money that had been fraudulently withdrawn. I have no idea whether there was any police involvement. I guess not.Fair enough but the guy who lost so much money had 3 separate bank branch withdrawals made on the same day within a mile of each other in London. No CCTV? This was an organised, systematic fraud that involved making keys, stealing personal details, ordering cards... Doesn't sound like a one man band to me. They should be looking into it.
Fair enough but the guy who lost so much money had 3 separate bank branch withdrawals made on the same day within a mile of each other in London. No CCTV? This was an organised, systematic fraud that involved making keys, stealing personal details, ordering cards... Doesn't sound like a one man band to me. They should be looking into it.
It will be exactly this.
In upper Dicker nearly all last week there was a group (although they didnt seem to bother in the rain, just the sunny days!) with what appeared to be a rudimentary speed gun pointing at the direction from the a22 to the a27 taking notes when cars were going too fast it appeared.
The fact it's so organised, would make me think that they would also be dead ends (target branches which have CCTV that isn't sufficient for any real identification purposes). These sorts of teams tend to move about an awful lot so even if you did get decent enough CCTV then the chances of identification are still pretty slim. In the grand scheme of fraud 25k isn't that much so the time and cost to investigate with pretty much zero chance of finding an offender no longer becomes a 'worthwhile' use of resources. I'd hope your friend was reimbursed by the bank in any case?
I don't think these guns actually capture the frame, they just record speed.
The speed camera initiative was originally prompted by Parish Councils throughout Sussex being concerned that the Police were making no great efforts to curb the sort of speed violations that occur all the time in villages. Typically, these are the 37 mph in a 30 mph area - a constant source of moaning from local residents to their locally elected representatives.So rather than policing the area themselves or installing a speed camera the police have resorted to issuing speed guns to groups of bored pensioners. Am I the only one who thinks this is highly inappropriate and farcical? Especially given this means of monitoring is resulting in the police issuing letters and keeping records against individuals?
Whoever dreamt up this scheme needs their sanity checking