Friday, May 28, 2004

RACIST BRITISH POLICE

Race matters more than catching offenders to the new politically correct British police: Blacks are right and whites are wrong

"A CHEMIST beaten unconscious in his shop did his own detective work in a bid to nail the attackers – but says he was made to feel he was the wrong-doer. Brian Conn, the pharmacist at Barry Shooters on the High Road, Chadwell Heath, managed to get a picture of the lout who attacked him after grabbing a disposable camera from a display. He took the pictures to a local school and managed to identify the face. He then discovered that the 19-year-old yob had once been a customer and his address was even registered on the pharmacy's computer.

Armed with all the information so the police could need to make an arrest he passed them everything he had found out. But he was then told that if the case went to court he may have to answer questions regarding the Data Protection Act. This supposedly makes it illegal to pass on information obtained from a computer.

The 40-year-old said: "I phoned the police expecting them to be grateful. But they made me feel like I had done something wrong. "I was the one who had been beaten unconscious.

The attack happened on December 17 at around 3pm. A number of youths entered the shop and became abusive, so Mr Conn asked them to leave. One of them then assaulted him, knocking him to the floor before the gang fled.

The police have this week been back in contact with Mr Conn after a sudden burst of media attention surrounding the incident. But they claim that they only pointed out that if the case went to court Mr Conn would have to say where the details came from. A Metropolitan Police spokesman said: "We took the details from Mr Conn but haven't made any arrests yet as we are still carrying out interviews with the victim and other witnesses.""

Detail omitted above: The photo showed the thug to be black. So the police did nothing until media attention forced them to. They had to work hard at NOT catching the offender under the circumstances

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