Via Edwin Greenwood, we find this extraordinary story, which I’m surprised has not yet been picked up by the ‘Daily Mail’:
Officers arrested the 36-year-old at home two days later and locked him in the cells at Chesterfield for four hours before charging him with contravening race relation laws.The ‘offensive’ ringtone? A sound clip from a film soundtrack.
Angry warehouseman Martin hit out after magistrates fined him £191 with £85 costs for using racially aggravated threatening or insulting words or behaviour.
Not a verboten film either:
"If Channel 4 can put Rita, Sue and Bob Too! on TV all the time, as it does, then why can't I play a clip from the soundtrack on my phone?A very good question, Martin. A very good question indeed.
"If it's good enough for prime time Tv then it ought to be good enough for me and my mobile."
Mind you, the police might be a little wary about marching into Channel 4 HQ after their last debacle…
The reaction of even his defenders says a lot, though:
Jon Barber, defending, said his client denied making a racist remark in front of the complainant, but accepted the woman may have been offended by the ringtone.And that lesson being? That the law’s an ass?
"He thought it was amusing – but it's a lesson learned."
Shopkeeper Geoff Wallage said the woman had made no complaint to his staff at the time.And if she had? What business is it of a shopkeeper if a customer has a ringtone that someone else doesn’t care for?
"I feel very sorry for Martin, he's a really decent bloke with a great sense of humour and he didn't deserve all this trouble. I feel that it's been a complete waste of public money.NO. THEY. SHOULDN’T.
They should have told Martin to swap his ringtone and left it at that, instead of dragging him to court."
What they should have done, and what would happen in any normal world, rather than the one that the racial grievance industry has dragged us to, was to point out to the affronted troublemaker the wise words of Stephen Fry…
Still, if Derbyshire residents don’t care for this use of their police force, they can always have their say:
People in Derbyshire are being asked for their views on Government plans to scrap police authorities and replace them with elected commissioners.Heh! That might just backfire. I really, really hope it does…
Derbyshire's Police Authority chairman, city councillor Philip Hickson, is concerned about the plans.
As reported in the Derby Telegraph on Monday, he says the proposals could cost Derbyshire police more than £750,000 in election fees and would offer the public "nothing".
Derbyshire Police Authority has already written to the Home Office and the Association of Police Authorities.And if the answer is ‘Yes, we want them!’, with an overwhelming majority?
It is now asking the public whether they would vote in such an election.
Responses will help the authority prepare its final response to the Home Office.
He made a bad choice ... regarding the standard of solicitor he got.
ReplyDeleteAlso, first rule when dealing with the police on issues like this is make a counter allegation of racism.
Then apply 2nd rule, admit to nothing and say nothing to police.
Period!
'But a woman from a mixed race family wasn't amused when Martin's Nokia went off as she queued alongside him at a village shop.'
ReplyDeleteLooks like someone got dealt a good hand in victimhood poker...
The following is one of the comments from that linked article:
ReplyDeleteYou will find that racial discrimination in the UK is one sided. If you go to your local police station and ask for the forms to report racial discrimination you will find the first question very hard to answer because it states.
" What ethnic minority are you "
I wouldn't find it hard to answer -
"White English"....
Holy milkfat!
ReplyDeleteHe wants to have a vote on whether there should be a vote? This saves money how, exactly?
I'm still trying to find out which of the tracks has the word "Paki" (which apparently was the offending word) in it. The soundtrack is by Madness, Bananarama and Black Lace.
ReplyDeleteUh-oh, might be time to think about changing my long-standing ringtone, Uncle *ucker (South Park). Either that, or not go to Derby again...
ReplyDeleteSee IMDb for quotes from the movie, including the offending phrase - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0091859/quotes
ReplyDelete"He made a bad choice ... regarding the standard of solicitor he got."
ReplyDeleteIt does seem far too absurd to be allowable under English law, doesn't it?
"Looks like someone got dealt a good hand in victimhood poker..."
If she's got a disability too, it'd be a winning hand pretty much every time!
"I wouldn't find it hard to answer -
"White English"...."
Indeed. I can see the commenter's point, though..
"He wants to have a vote on whether there should be a vote? This saves money how, exactly?"
He isn't worried about saving money. He's utterly terrified that his cozy backscratching relationship may be upset by someone who insists on doing the job they are (supposedly) paid to do.
"I'm still trying to find out which of the tracks has the word "Paki" (which apparently was the offending word) in it. The soundtrack is by Madness, Bananarama and Black Lace."
It's the script soundtrack, as SBML says. Not in one of the songs.
So he was overheard to play a recording of a Paki saying "Paki", is that it?
ReplyDeleteIsn't there a little problem here? Doesn't that let any black person sue you if they happen hear you playing just about any rap record?