Saturday, 8 October 2016

Don't You Mean 'Alleged Rape', Nev..?

“It’s a difficult one because we want more people to report it, but they are very labour intensive cases; there is not a single rape that we get that we don’t investigate.
“We get other crimes that we can say, we are not going to investigate that, but every rape we get reported, we put a lot into.”
It's our old pal Nev yet again. You'd think a man of his rank would .... well, be a bit smarter. Wouldn't you?
Referring to the increase in reporting of such crimes, he said: “These are really difficult, time-consuming, complex crimes to investigate. We have had to put extra people in to help.
“There has been some extra investment in that area through the precept, which was particularly around sexual offences and child sexual exploitation.
“But otherwise we have just had to realign what people have been doing, so less on some things like acquisitive crime (theft and burglary)."
I can prove beyond doubt that I had a TV that was nicked by someone, Nev. I can show you the receipt, the place where it stood, provide visitors to interview who will give you a statement that, yes indeed, I did possess a TV.

You aren't going to get that with most reported or claimed rapes.

So why pursue the crimes you can't ever prove actually happened in the first place?

3 comments:

  1. Excellent advice from Kommandant Kemp. And his next promotion could be just one press release away as irresponsible females ignore his inspirational wisdom and continue to behave provocatively by refusing to wear Hijabs. Nev's ship will be docking imminently - courtesy of the Brighton sluts who are just asking for it by visiting bars, drinking alcohol and brazenly talking to men. With all this going on, there is simply no chance of investigating any burglaries and thefts. (With the exception of property stolen from senior police colleagues or FreeMasons of some other profession, media editors, local councillors, federation reps, IPCC members, MPs, magistrates or other members of the judiciary, lawyers, police committee members or local Imans.)

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  2. I think there is some coded language going on there; Brighton has 'prided' itself on inclusivity on the hoplessly idealistic idea that everybody subscribes to rainbow ethics.

    The reality is that it has had an influx of people who hold more in common with the disgraceful Libyan cadets in Cambridgeshire who carried out a series of sex attacks culminating in the rape of a man in a public park.

    That, however, is a very difficult thing to say in Brighton. Or anywhere.

    Women - and men - under 30 have been subject to years of indoctrination about discrimination so that now they hesitate to use their judgment at all, even when it is obviously the case that they areentitled to discriminate according to their instincts and need give no excuse. The error becomes apparent only when it is too late.

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  3. "With all this going on, there is simply no chance of investigating any burglaries and thefts. (With the exception of property stolen from senior police colleagues or FreeMasons of some other profession, media editors, local councillors, federation reps, IPCC members, MPs, magistrates or other members of the judiciary, lawyers, police committee members or local Imans.)"

    A two-tier justice system? Perish the thought!

    "That, however, is a very difficult thing to say in Brighton. Or anywhere. "

    It's certainly difficult if you've been picked to sip from the poisoned chalice of historic sex abuse investigations..!

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