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  • Abby Normal
    replied
    Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
    I think it's more likely that Mizen lied about being told that he was wanted by an officer to try and justify his decision not to detain CL and Paul. He could then have 'explained' that he'd assumed the other officer had at least taken their names or exonerated him.
    perhaps. but IMHO he didn't really do anything wrong.

    I think in all probability it was a misunderstanding. Lech didn't tell him he was wanted by another PC, Mizen misremembered because when he got there, there was another PC.

    lech may have said something like-"your needed in Bucks row..."

    stil a lot of questions and uncertainty.

    Leave a comment:


  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    I think it's more likely that Mizen lied about being told that he was wanted by an officer to try and justify his decision not to detain CL and Paul. He could then have 'explained' that he'd assumed the other officer had at least taken their names or exonerated him.

    Leave a comment:


  • Abby Normal
    replied
    Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
    Hi all.

    Questions, questions!

    Why did Neil apparently believe that he'd discovered the body? Why didn't he or, even more relevantly, his superiors ask the obvious question when he was going over events with them: why did Mizen turn up? He'd got no other reason to be there so how did he know that there was a body in Bucks Row if he hadn't been told about it? And so...who told him? Why did no one suss this?

    We now have the added knowledge that a policeman needed a really good reason to leave his beat. 'If' Mizen told the truth about CL and Paul saying that Nichols was only drunk, then how does this justify him leaving his beat? Maybe Mizen said that they'd told him 'drunk' to justify himself finishing off knocking up? And if anyone had asked why he'd left his beat for a drunk he added the 'wanted by another officer' bit.
    Sometimes statements have 'the ring of truth' about them although that doesn't always mean that they're definately true. One such statement is CL's at the Inquest when asked if he'd told Mizen that he was wanted by a policeman in Bucks Row. He replied 'no because I didn't see a policeman in Bucks Row.'
    Hi HS
    good points/ questions.

    I would imagine that Neil, or his superiors, in all the excitement, didn't note or care the whos or the whys that another PC showed up? at the time there was more important fish to fry.

    Leave a comment:


  • Robert St Devil
    replied
    PC Mizen's concern is admirable; and, being Aug 30th, his actions are forgivable since he may not have been expecting "a dead woman" to mean "a murdered woman". Still, his reason for being in Buck's Row is based on a conversation that he had with two men walking from the scene of the crime. Once the severity of the crime is realized, I'm almost certain the identity of those two men would want to be known; and, in this respect, PC Mizen's reason is lacking since he can't offer any identification. PC Mizen's suffered a professional gaffe.

    Had Paul and Cross not come forward, would PC Mizen have even been called before the inquest?

    Leave a comment:


  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Hi all.

    Questions, questions!

    Why did Neil apparently believe that he'd discovered the body? Why didn't he or, even more relevantly, his superiors ask the obvious question when he was going over events with them: why did Mizen turn up? He'd got no other reason to be there so how did he know that there was a body in Bucks Row if he hadn't been told about it? And so...who told him? Why did no one suss this?

    We now have the added knowledge that a policeman needed a really good reason to leave his beat. 'If' Mizen told the truth about CL and Paul saying that Nichols was only drunk, then how does this justify him leaving his beat? Maybe Mizen said that they'd told him 'drunk' to justify himself finishing off knocking up? And if anyone had asked why he'd left his beat for a drunk he added the 'wanted by another officer' bit.
    Sometimes statements have 'the ring of truth' about them although that doesn't always mean that they're definately true. One such statement is CL's at the Inquest when asked if he'd told Mizen that he was wanted by a policeman in Bucks Row. He replied 'no because I didn't see a policeman in Bucks Row.'

    Leave a comment:


  • Elamarna
    replied
    Originally posted by John G View Post
    Hi Steve,

    Could it be that he got himself into a bit of a pickle? Thus, based upon his own evidence, where he makes it clear he wasn't informed that someone might be dead, he had no legitimate reason for leaving his beat unless he thought he was being summoned by another officer in an emergency.

    Perhaps he initially distrusted Cross and Paul, believing they were trying to trick him to get him off his beat (this ruse had obviously been used before).

    However, maybe he then changed his mind and decides to respond. As a result he cannot now admit he delayed responding to what he now perceives as an emergency situation, so he therefore infers that there was no delay, hence he states he didn't continue knocking up.

    John
    Yes I think got himself in a pickle is a good description.
    I do not think he actually did anything procedurally incorrect, rather it was a question of his ethical/moral response that was the issue to him after the event. And the response which may have followed from that if it became public.

    Sorry for being less than clear


    Steve

    Leave a comment:


  • John G
    replied
    Originally posted by Elamarna View Post
    Hi John,
    First point of course correct.. And that is the question, was he told another officer wanted him?
    Its not just was he told that? But did he believe he had been told that?
    That was the view I long subscribed to myself.

    Second point is equally complicated. Did he stop knocking up after the last one?

    Could he have continued? Yes it appears so logistically.
    Did he? Probably not; but I will not say it's impossible.

    That however is only part of a complicated issue.


    Steve
    Hi Steve,

    Could it be that he got himself into a bit of a pickle? Thus, based upon his own evidence, where he makes it clear he wasn't informed that someone might be dead, he had no legitimate reason for leaving his beat unless he thought he was being summoned by another officer in an emergency.

    Perhaps he initially distrusted Cross and Paul, believing they were trying to trick him to get him off his beat (this ruse had obviously been used before).

    However, maybe he then changed his mind and decides to respond. As a result he cannot now admit he delayed responding to what he now perceives as an emergency situation, so he therefore infers that there was no delay, hence he states he didn't continue knocking up.

    Leave a comment:


  • Elamarna
    replied
    Originally posted by John G View Post
    Hi Steve,

    But surely if he was told that another officer wanted him then, by necessary implication, he has to assume it's an emergency, i.e. on the basis that the other officer must have known that he could only summon his assistance in an emergency situation.

    And wouldn't this explain why he felt it necessary to point out that he didn't continue "knocking up."


    Hi John,
    First point of course correct.. And that is the question, was he told another officer wanted him?
    Its not just was he told that? But did he believe he had been told that?
    That was the view I long subscribed to myself.

    Second point is equally complicated. Did he stop knocking up after the last one?

    Could he have continued? Yes it appears so logistically.
    Did he? Probably not; but I will not say it's impossible.

    That however is only part of a complicated issue.


    Steve

    Leave a comment:


  • John G
    replied
    Originally posted by Elamarna View Post
    This is a topic I have been working on for some time now.

    I do not wish to present all of my views at present as the work is not finished yet, and this debate highlights to me many of the issues.

    So let's just make a few observations.

    1. Was a police officer required to leave his beat if asked to?

    Not unless it was an emergency situation or the request came from another officer. In which case he had a legitimate reason to do so.

    2. Would a police officer be expected to cross divisional boundaries.

    Again only in an emergency situation or if requested by another officer.


    3. Was the situation on the 31st August, such that we should have expected Mizen to leave his Beat and cross divisional boundaries ?

    If he seriously believed the situation was an emergency then yes.
    If he believed he had been requested by another officer again yes.



    The big question is (Apart from the another policeman wants you suggestion) not how should he have reacted but how did he react?

    After the event and before he gives his testimony on the 3rd: What effect if any did the inquest testimony of PC Neil on the 1st and the Lloyds Weekly statement of Paul on the 2nd have on him? What effect might possible public opinion have on him?



    Steve
    Hi Steve,

    But surely if he was told that another officer wanted him then, by necessary implication, he has to assume it's an emergency, i.e. on the basis that the other officer must have known that he could only summon his assistance in an emergency situation.

    And wouldn't this explain why he felt it necessary to point out that he didn't continue "knocking up."
    Last edited by John G; 08-09-2017, 03:21 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Elamarna
    replied
    This is a topic I have been working on for some time now.

    I do not wish to present all of my views at present as the work is not finished yet, and this debate highlights to me many of the issues.

    So let's just make a few observations.

    1. Was a police officer required to leave his beat if asked to?

    Not unless it was an emergency situation or the request came from another officer. In which case he had a legitimate reason to do so.

    2. Would a police officer be expected to cross divisional boundaries.

    Again only in an emergency situation or if requested by another officer.


    3. Was the situation on the 31st August, such that we should have expected Mizen to leave his Beat and cross divisional boundaries ?

    If he seriously believed the situation was an emergency then yes.
    If he believed he had been requested by another officer again yes.



    The big question is (Apart from the another policeman wants you suggestion) not how should he have reacted but how did he react?

    After the event and before he gives his testimony on the 3rd: What effect if any did the inquest testimony of PC Neil on the 1st and the Lloyds Weekly statement of Paul on the 2nd have on him? What effect might possible public opinion have on him?



    Steve

    Leave a comment:


  • drstrange169
    replied
    >>It was not a question pf morals,it was purely a question of duty.Mizen would have had no Idea as to whether he was being told the truth by Cross and /or Paul.<<

    Precisely.What if they had been buglars getting rid of the policeman on the beat so they could rob a shop.That wouldn't have gone down too well back at the station.

    Leave a comment:


  • harry
    replied
    It was not a question pf morals,it was purely a question of duty.Mizen would have had no Idea as to whether he was being told the truth by Cross and /or Paul.It was an offence to leave his(Mizen) detailed area of duty,but it was an acceptable defence if he could prove reasonable cause for doing so.
    A report of a woman being drunk,and an officer already in attendance,would not be reasonable cause,my opinion,so it had to be something else that decided Mizen,and that was,I believe, the mention that she could be dead,and there was no officer in attendance.

    Leave a comment:


  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
    It was certainly the duty of the officer on the beat in which the woman was lying. The question is, whether an officer on another beat (in another division) should have interrupted the official service he was providing to residents to enable them to get to work on time in the morning in order to check out a report of a woman lying on the street (who might equally have been sleeping). That is not, I suggest, quite as clear cut as you seem to think it is
    This issue shifts from a question of duty to a question of morals.
    I can't imagine Mizen (H Div.) being reprimanded for leaving his beat, at least until Neil (J Div.) showed up to take care of the situation. Mizen would then be expected to return.
    They both belong to the same club (the Met.), when all is said and done.

    So long as nothing disastrous occurred on Mizen's beat while he was gone.
    Last edited by Wickerman; 08-08-2017, 04:35 PM.

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  • drstrange169
    replied
    "in another division" is the salient point here. If Mizen chose to go, then there had to be a compelling reason to cross borders, so to speak.

    Leave a comment:


  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by Bridewell View Post
    She might have been seriously ill or dying, rather than dead or drunk, and it was the officer's duty to check.
    It was certainly the duty of the officer on the beat in which the woman was lying. The question is, whether an officer on another beat (in another division) should have interrupted the official service he was providing to residents to enable them to get to work on time in the morning in order to check out a report of a woman lying on the street (who might equally have been sleeping). That is not, I suggest, quite as clear cut as you seem to think it is

    Leave a comment:

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