Wednesday, 6 December 2017

No, Actually, They Didn’t…


Really? Well, no.
He had been drinking since 11am and then, at The Railway pub in South Street, Lancing, he threatened to burn the barmaid’s house down and was asked to leave.
When he refused, bar staff called 999. When he eventually left, they rang the police back to tell them he had gone so no officers attended.
So the complainant cancelled the call. Not the police's fault.
He continued on to the Andreas kebab shop. There staff also called 999 after Hearsey got into a scuffle and a window was broken. En route to respond, officers were diverted to a cardiac arrest at Lancing Railway Station as the closest emergency service to a potentially life-threatening situation.
So a potentially life-threatening incident took priority over the night's latest abusive drunk. Not the police's fault.
Meanwhile, Hearsey, still spoiling for a fight, carried on to The Farmers pub. When staff refused to serve him he threatened to cut a barmaid’s face off. Again the police were called – but again they were called back later when he left and no police officer attended.
So the complainant once more cancelled the call. Yet again, not the police's fault.
At 8.15pm Mr Creasy called police to report an intruder was attacking him. Finally officers did arrive, then after advising Mr Creasey to lock his doors, they responded to earlier reports from Andreas kebabs and The Farmers and went in search of Hearsey, but did not find him.
Cracking 'journalism' there, 'Argus'.

6 comments:

ivan said...

Only one comment here, maybe all this could have been avoided if the police had been a little faster off the mark and arrived in reasonable time to the first 999 call - like in a couple of minuets after all they used to be able to do that in the past.

Ted Treen said...

Evidently Emily Walker, Chief Reporter, is hoping to move to the Daily Mail.

Anonymous said...

Yes Ivan,it was so much better in the "past". Kids got a clip round the ear,the man on the desk was a burly Sergeant,no breathalysers,officer on every street corneretc etc.
We don't deliberately fail to answer calls within minutes but the government (of any colour) keeps cutting our numbers and increasing our paperwork so we can't shoot from job to job like we did when I joined.
Jaded.

Ed P said...

If they logged all the calls for help and the subsequent cancellations, you'd think the pattern would have been obvious and alerted a plod. But that would require attention to detail, intelligence,alertness...oh, of course, it's the modern force, who have swapped "in action" for inaction.

The Jannie said...

"Evidently Emily Walker, Chief Reporter, is hoping to move to the Daily Mail."

But what's her house worth?

JuliaM said...

"...maybe all this could have been avoided if the police had been a little faster off the mark..."

Maybe so, but there's so many drunken lunatics, and so little time to attend them all. While I don't buy the line about 'police cuts', there's no doubting society has changed, and not in a good way.

"Evidently Emily Walker, Chief Reporter, is hoping to move to the Daily Mail."

She'll have to look to her spelling & sentence construction. It's far too polished ;)

"If they logged all the calls for help and the subsequent cancellations, you'd think the pattern would have been obvious..."

The pattern being what? The man was a well known drunken nuisance, but a potential murderer?

That's a stretch even Sherlock Holmes would be reluctant to make.