News The Ultimate Loss of Civil Liberties: Innocent Man Shot Dead in UK

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The discussion centers around the police shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes, a Brazilian man mistakenly identified as a terrorist following recent bomb attacks in London. His family expressed outrage, emphasizing that there was no reason to suspect him of terrorism. The police admitted regret over the incident, describing it as a tragedy. Participants in the discussion debated the justification for the use of deadly force, with some arguing that the police acted out of panic and fear, while others suggested that the circumstances—such as de Menezes wearing a heavy coat in warm weather and fleeing from plainclothes officers—raised suspicions. Eyewitness accounts described the chaotic scene, where de Menezes was pinned down and shot multiple times. The conversation highlighted concerns about police protocols in high-stress situations and the implications for civil liberties, questioning whether the police's actions were warranted given the context of recent terrorist threats. Participants emphasized the need for a thorough investigation into the incident and the broader implications for public safety and police conduct.
  • #571
arildno said:
I agree; most curificational.
This has always been my problem with peoplewho are set up to be the 'authority' or 'police' in any situation.

Who 'Polices the Police'?

Was it the same officers who performed this act who were responsible for gathering the evidence at the scene thus allowing them to tamper with that evidence?

And even if it wasn't, are we supposed to assume that people investigating the incident don't have a false morality of 'us and them' and the 'old boy network' gone mad?

Justice must not only be done ... it must appear to be done.
 
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  • #572
The Smoking Man said:
This has always been my problem with peoplewho are set up to be the 'authority' or 'police' in any situation.

Who 'Polices the Police'?
Well, it is the perennial problem, of course.
The guy who manages to find a neat and simple solution to this would get more than a Nobel prize..
 
  • #573
Daminc said:
I wasn't giving my opinion as such. I was just stating a possible alternative. This whole 'argument' started because people were stating their opinions as 'facts' when, at the time, they weren't.

The fact that your opinions have been validated over the past few days does not justify stating them as facts in the beginning.
What are you talking about?!? We were discussing the facts, those being:
- that he was not a suicide bomber (OVER-RIDING FACT: he did not have a bomb... this was known by the time I joined the thread);
- that the police and home office were spinning the facts about the case, giving 'reasons' that to the unthinking would pass for justification but under anaylsis collapsed like a paper cup under a ten ton weight (e.g. he lived in the same block of flats, he looked Asian, he ran toward the tube).

So, to summarise, we were wrong to discuss out opinions about the facts, while it was fine for you to hypothesise BS? Yeah, that works. Just about as much as expending so much energy on fabricated scenarios to justify the unjustifiable is not a biased attempt to exonerate the police.
 
  • #574
"But the armed officers maintain they would not have shot the man if he had not been openly identified to them by one of the surveillance team."

Well, it's good to know one thing at least: the criteria under which I can be shot. So as long as I'm identified by a police officer, even if I'm not identified as anything criminal, I may be killed. So glad I have no cop friends. If a passing officer said "Hi, El Hombre," I guess that would be the end of me.
 
  • #575
arildno said:
It has been confirmed on the morning of the incident that no camera was out of order at Stockwell:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,22989-1746975,00.html
It is quite startling how far they have gone to cover this up. Have I just gotten older and so am now more privy to the true corruption in our government and institutions, or has this method of operating arisen in a Labour cabinet? Or is the post-9/11, "we've got terror so anything goes" philosophy that brought us here, regardless of our spin-happy, fundementally dubious government?
 
  • #576
El Hombre Invisible said:
It is quite startling how far they have gone to cover this up. Have I just gotten older and so am now more privy to the true corruption in our government and institutions, or has this method of operating arisen in a Labour cabinet? Or is the post-9/11, "we've got terror so anything goes" philosophy that brought us here, regardless of our spin-happy, fundementally dubious government?
It is, IMO, what the overly simplistic bad guy/good guy mentality naturally evolves into.
A "good" guy has the moral right (and duty) to do anything to stop or punish a (suspected) bad guy, if he doesn't, he's either a bad guy himself, or not a guy at all.

In other words, apart from being an idiotic, worthless mentality, it is also extremely dangerous if it takes hold over the minds of people of consequence.
 
  • #577
So, to summarise, we were wrong to discuss out opinions about the facts, while it was fine for you to hypothesise BS? Yeah, that works. Just about as much as expending so much energy on fabricated scenarios to justify the unjustifiable is not a biased attempt to exonerate the police.
I wonder if you're deliberatly misunderstanding me and just wish to argue or it's something else. It's seems obvious to me that, no matter what I say, you'll find some way to twist it in order to find an excuse to insult me. So be it.

There's a quote from a song I'm particularly fond of:

"hearing only what you want to hear
and knowing only what you've heard"

I think it's quite apt, don't you?
 
  • #578
arildno said:
It is, IMO, what the overly simplistic bad guy/good guy mentality naturally evolves into.
A "good" guy has the moral right (and duty) to do anything to stop or punish a (suspected) bad guy, if he doesn't, he's either a bad guy himself, or not a guy at all.

In other words, apart from being an idiotic, worthless mentality, it is also extremely dangerous if it takes hold over the minds of people of consequence.
No, I didn't mean the shooting itself - I agree, I don't think there's any doubt that the shooters were over-zealous, and this can be sensibly be ascribed to the freedom, gung-ho attitude and paranoia that comes with the scare-mongering we've become subject to.

My question was more concerning the cover-up by the higher ups. Has the potential for this level of corruption always been present and it just took a scandal such as this to highlight it, or is the cause more recent?
 
  • #579
I think they justified it since they sincerely believe that any "embarassment" to the force will weaken their ability to catch the "bad guys" too much.

That is, they have what they think, a MORAL justification for this cover-up (which I don't regard as much else than a rationalization of the matter)
 
  • #580
Daminc said:
I wonder if you're deliberatly misunderstanding me and just wish to argue or it's something else. It's seems obvious to me that, no matter what I say, you'll find some way to twist it in order to find an excuse to insult me. So be it.
I don't think I've misunderstood you; I just don't believe you. Your enthusiasm to postulate circumstances under which the shooting may have been justified was bogus given the facts at the time and smacked of blind exoneration. Your follow-up wrist-slapping of those who weren't so keen to bury their heads in the sand with such foundless, unreserved faith only highlighted this further. I'm not trying to insult you; on the contrary it is very difficult to stop myself.

Daminc said:
There's a quote from a song I'm particularly fond of:

"hearing only what you want to hear
and knowing only what you've heard"

I think it's quite apt, don't you?
Here's one I'm fond of:

"We rely on technological follies
We forget how to function without these
More to lose, more to break, more to maintain
A mollycoddle all our kids will ever know
And, yes, kids are now an issue."

That doesn't have anything to do with anything either.
 
  • #581
arildno said:
I think they justified it since they sincerely believe that any "embarassment" to the force will weaken their ability to catch the "bad guys" too much.

That is, they have what they think, a MORAL justification for this cover-up (which I don't regard as much else than a rationalization of the matter)
Yes, we must distinguish between official motive and likely motive. They may claim they have such a moral justification, and indeed have made noise about the effects of the IPCC investigation and leaked information on public assessment of their ability. However, is this the true or only motive for such extreme behaviour? It seems highly unlikely to me that in order to obfuscate its cack-handedness the police would risk highlighting to the world its own predilection for immoral and unethical practises. Not to mention that, upon realising that they thought such policy would work, the public would also lose faith in their basic intelligence. So instead of just 'inept', they have risked the public opinion being 'inept', 'corrupt' and 'dumb'. I find that difficult to swallow. Are we Brits really that stupid? Maybe we are.

If public opinion as to their effectiveness is not the prime or only motive for a cover-up that goes to the lengths suggested by that last link, then where exactly do they think they're coming from?
 
  • #582
The (IMO, probable) fact that they sincerely believe in their own hearts that they have the right to destroy evidence, lie to the public, execute an innocent man is to me totally irrelevant in my judgment of them.
They do not posess these rights, however much they think themselves in posesssion of them.
 
  • #583
I don't think I've misunderstood you; I just don't believe you.
You think I'm lying?

Ok, amaze me with your powers of reason and deduction and come up with why I would lie to you or anyone else here.

Your enthusiasm to postulate circumstances under which the shooting may have been justified was bogus given the facts at the time and smacked of blind exoneration.
I'm sick of repeating myself in an effort to try and explain my position to you. Believe what you want to believe. I think you just justified my quote from that song.
 
  • #584
  • #585
arildno said:
The (IMO, probable) fact that they sincerely believe in their own hearts that they have the right to destroy evidence, lie to the public, execute an innocent man is to me totally irrelevant in my judgment of them.
They do not posess these rights, however much they think themselves in posesssion of them.
Oh yeah, it's not surprising to me that they do believe these actions are justified. I just can't believe they were sooooooo stupid they did it to such an extreme, in a way they could be caught out so easily and under such public scrutiny. But maybe you're right. If so, then you've convinced me of the impossible - the British police service is even worse than I thought, and I thought next to nothing of them beforehand.
 
  • #586
El Hombre Invisible said:
Oh yeah, it's not surprising to me that they do believe these actions are justified. I just can't believe they were sooooooo stupid they did it to such an extreme, in a way they could be caught out so easily and under such public scrutiny. But maybe you're right. If so, then you've convinced me of the impossible - the British police service is even worse than I thought, and I thought next to nothing of them beforehand.
Well, it is also the matter with the paranoid bad guy/good guy mentality that one goes about with the mistaken belief that the "good guys" never really can't do anything wrong ("Heck! I know his wife Glenda, she's so happy with him! How could such a husband ever do anything wrong??")

That, however, means, there will be a tendency to exonerate those you regard as "good guys" (a long with the tendency of vilifying those you regard as "bad guys")
So, since they didn't know whether De Menezes was a good guy or not, but that Shooter 1&2 were definitely good guys, wouldn't it be natural to be unwilling to let the shooters go to jail? (After all, Glenda and the kids would suffer then, wouldn't they?..)

Blah-blah..
 
  • #587
Daminc said:
You think I'm lying?
Ok, amaze me with your powers of reason and deduction and come up with why I would lie to you or anyone else here.
I think your endless suppositions of unfounded extentuating circumstances that may, were it not for the fact they were fictional, have justified the shooting (although they still wouldn't have in the eyes of pretty much everyone except you, DM and Brewnog, the latter of which presumably still think that everything's hunky-dorey in shoot-a-foreigner-land) were attempts to exonerate the police despite the known facts at the time (such as: no bomb). I think you views were proven wrong and, rather than accept that and move on, you tried to tell everyone that, even though their views proved correct, they were still wrong to hold them simply because they observed formidible truthsthat you were deterred by (re: no bomb). I think your defense of this hypocrisy by waiving off your earlier position as that of some Devil's advocate is phoney. What else do you want to know? This isn't an attempt to insult you anew - these are the same insults as before. :devil:

Daminc said:
I'm sick of repeating myself in an effort to try and explain my position to you.
Stop doing it then. I'm not forcing you to argue. My post you objected to was not aimed at you in particular. You can stop whenever you want.

Daminc said:
Believe what you want to believe. I think you just justified my quote from that song.
I'm a music lover. Quotes from songs are always justified.
 
  • #588
arildno said:
Well, it is also the matter with the paranoid bad guy/good guy mentality that one goes about with the mistaken belief that the "good guys" never really can't do anything wrong ("Heck! I know his wife Glenda, she's so happy with him! How could such a husband ever do anything wrong??")

That, however, means, there will be a tendency to exonerate those you regard as "good guys" (a long with the tendency of vilifying those you regard as "bad guys")
So, since they didn't know whether De Menezes was a good guy or not, but that Shooter 1&2 were definitely good guys, wouldn't it be natural to be unwilling to let the shooters go to jail? (After all, Glenda and the kids would suffer then, wouldn't they?..)

Blah-blah..
This still only works in, at most, the first day after the shooting. Claims such as those about the CCTV came much later, by which time de Menezes was cleared of pending 'bad guy' status. If it were that simple, why have they done everything to portray themselves as the bad guys (i.e. by doing that which will betray their corrupt working practises to the public eye) since de Menezes was known to be innocent? It makes no sense. Do we really expect people with so little foresight to fill us with confidence that they can foil a future terrorist plot? I'm not arguing; it's just hard to get a handle on. Blair & co. have done more to destroy the public image of the police service than even the shooters were capable of. If they'd told the truth from the beginning they could have fired the shooters and everyone would say "Good call!" As it is now, no-one has any choice but to fear the whole structure is fundementally f***ed.
 
  • #589
BTW, I do know how to spell 'fundamentally', but try telling my fingers! A law unto themselves, they are.
 
  • #590
arildno said:
Daminc:
Have you read this link?
What do you make of this?
When I first heard that all the CCTV's in that area were not active I thought it would be highly unlikey, especially given our security status as it stands.

That's why I thought it was possible that the SF were involved and the cover up was to prevent their identities become known (standard practice). I still think that this may be a possiblity, however, it's my opinion that there is CCTV coverage of the incident.

Whether it will be available for public viewing at some time...I don't know.
Whether it was removed to conceal SF identities...I don't know.
Whether it was removed to cover up a colossal f*ck-up by the police...I don't know.
 
  • #591
Daminc said:
When I first heard that all the CCTV's in that area were not active I thought it would be highly unlikey, especially given our security status as it stands.

That's why I thought it was possible that the SF were involved and the cover up was to prevent their identities become known (standard practice). I still think that this may be a possiblity, however, it's my opinion that there is CCTV coverage of the incident.

Whether it will be available for public viewing at some time...I don't know.
Whether it was removed to conceal SF identities...I don't know.
Whether it was removed to cover up a colossal f*ck-up by the police...I don't know.
1)That some key agents whose identities need to be kept secret are involved in this may well be true.
2) However, I cannot see how this should justify to withhold the tapes from the independent police complaints comission, nor do I see any justification for that the public is not informed that there ARE footage here, but that it cannot be publicly accessed for security reasons.
 
  • #592
arildno said:
1)That some key agents whose identities need to be kept secret are involved in this may well be true.
2) However, I cannot see how this should justify to withhold the tapes from the independent police complaints comission, nor do I see any justification for that the public is not informed that there ARE footage here, but that it cannot be publicly accessed for security reasons.
Ummm ... I think I have seen enough of those Cops and 'Stupid People Video' Programmes to know they can fog out a face when they don't want a person identified.
 
  • #593
Daminc said:
When I first heard that all the CCTV's in that area were not active I thought it would be highly unlikey, especially given our security status as it stands.

That's why I thought it was possible that the SF were involved and the cover up was to prevent their identities become known (standard practice). I still think that this may be a possiblity, however, it's my opinion that there is CCTV coverage of the incident.

Whether it will be available for public viewing at some time...I don't know.
Whether it was removed to conceal SF identities...I don't know.
Whether it was removed to cover up a colossal f*ck-up by the police...I don't know.
Aren't CO19 trained by SAS? Could be they employ the same tactics. However, they are NOT military, they are police, and as such they're actions should be visible and accountable. There is no security risk in the public knowing what happened, and so no justification in this evidence being withheld or destroyed.

Besides, if its disappearance isn't part of a cover-up, how would you account for the discrepancy between the police's far-fetched claims that all CCTV cameras were inoperative, and the claims of Undeground security that they were up-and-running? Regardless of the whereabouts and content of the footage itself, this contradiction is alarming.
 
  • #594
IF the SF were involved then the tapes would probably fall under the military jurisdiction and the 'independent police complaints comission' would have a say in the matter.

I can't think of any reason for why the public should be informed that any footage would be withheld for security reasons except perhaps they think it's simpler this way? I don't know.
 
  • #595
The Smoking Man said:
Ummm ... I think I have seen enough of those Cops and 'Stupid People Video' Programmes to know they can fog out a face when they don't want a person identified.
Very true. The identities of the shooters can remain protected while the actual events leading up to the shooting are inspected. Security isn't an issue. What else?
 
  • #596
Mmmm, you people type fast :bugeye:

"Aren't CO19 trained by SAS? "

Yes, I think I mentioned that before so yes they could employ the same tactics in that type of scenario (spelt it right this time). If they were SO19 then they would probably be held accountable after the internal investigation has been completed.
 
  • #597
Daminc said:
IF the SF were involved then the tapes would probably fall under the military jurisdiction and the 'independent police complaints comission' would have a say in the matter.
If it was SF, then the sarcastic proposal you suggested earlier (replace police with military) wouldn't be so far-fetched, I guess.

Daminc said:
I can't think of any reason for why the public should be informed that any footage would be withheld for security reasons except perhaps they think it's simpler this way? I don't know.
I think he meant as opposed to claiming it didn't exist at all, i.e. lying (if that is the case). Surely admitting it exists but for security reasons cannot be made public is a much less stupid idea?
 
  • #598
Surely admitting it exists but for security reasons cannot be made public is a much less stupid idea?
I would have thought so.

If it was SF, then the sarcastic proposal you suggested earlier (replace police with military) wouldn't be so far-fetched, I guess.
The SAS are primarily involved Counter Terrorism (as far as I'm aware anyway)
 
  • #599
Daminc said:
The SAS are primarily involved Counter Terrorism (as far as I'm aware anyway)
Sure, I'm aware of their involvement in Ireland for one thing. Don't think they'd have cocked this up so monumentally to be honest.
 
  • #600
They are involved all over the world and the one thing that gives me doubts is that I agree that they wouldn't make such a c*ck up (unless there was some bad intel going around that we're not aware of yet)
 

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