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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

The Fair Cop Report on the Capture of the Police is out

40 replies

gardenbird48 · 19/09/2020 18:48

www.faircop.org.uk/politicised-police-are-misrepresenting-the-law-new-report-reveals/

I haven’t read the whole thing yet but looking at the headings - yikes!

OP posts:
RedDogsBeg · 20/09/2020 15:05

I am going against the grain slightly here regarding the style of the report as I think it will appeal to and inform a different demographic to the one on here.

AnyOldPrion · 20/09/2020 16:39

Thanks for the explanation about the law @jj1968 .

So who chooses the characteristics that the Hate Crime legislation covers? Isn’t it intended to back up other laws? In which case, shouldn’t it reflect the wordings those laws use? Did the government specify what was covered? Or are we back to the College of Policing and/or the CPS choosing what they want again?

EwwSprouts · 20/09/2020 16:51

"Tweeting Stonewall slogans is as politically neutral as wearing a MAGA hat." p32 should be essential reading for all the captured public bodies hiding behind #bekind.

I think it's a good addition to the other papers/analyses/reports and hope it is read by many, especially serving officers. I'd love to see it used in schools for discussion.

SunsetBeetch · 20/09/2020 17:24

@RedDogsBeg

I am going against the grain slightly here regarding the style of the report as I think it will appeal to and inform a different demographic to the one on here.
I agree Smile
StandWitch · 20/09/2020 17:33

That's a really poor piece of writing.

There are numerous jarring mistakes even on the first page, such as 'favor' for 'favour', and 'MacPherson' for 'Macpherson', and it tries to blame the murder of Stephen Lawrence (a black man killed by white racists), but then starts talking about transgender people.

It doesn't suggest even that there might be legitimate goals here.

The introduction then randomly starts talking about covid, then again randomly about the lies of the Brexit campaign, and about the Iraqi information minister.

This is pisspoor.

There might be some good work and accurate research here, but when you start off with a sequence of non sequiturs and dubious premises, it undermines the credibility of what follows.

There are spelling and grammar mistakes throughout the document, and from what I've seen on social media, some of those involved with Fair Cop are not known for their professionalism either.

I gave up reading after a few pages because the endless references to the Arabian Knights, Bez (?!), Godfather 3, and so on, come across as the work of an adolescent English student.

Do they really not have anyone who can write, or at least someone brave enough to tell the author of this that they can't!?

HerewardTheWoke · 20/09/2020 18:33

This is intended in a constructive spirit. If this is aimed at alerting policymakers to political capture of the police (which will be more effective than talking to individual forces in my view) then FC need to bring someone on board who understands the public policy world and can produce something professional looking that can be shopped around influential think tanks, APPGs, given to MPs etc.

This is a really important issue and FC have a strong argument but presented like this it looks a bit tin foil hat.

StandWitch · 20/09/2020 18:42

Assumption of virtue leads to toleration of violence: the intimidation of attendees at a Woman’s Place UK meeting where the meeting hall was surrounded with masked protestors waving trans flags. The police did not intervene

That doesn't describe any clear crime.

A few days later, the lone protestor who banged on the window of Labour MP, Jess Phillips, was promptly arrested for a public order offence. Jess Phillips is a vocal trans ally.

Ok, but this doesn't seem to have been connected with trans issues.

It was an angry man banging on a female MP's door. www.standard.co.uk/news/crime/jess-phillips-man-fined-for-kicking-labour-mp-s-office-door-while-yelling-fascists-a4258696.html

We don't want angry men banging on MP's doors.

When the transwoman, Tara Wolf, was convicted of violently assaulting feminist Maria MacLachlan, the judge handed down a lighter sentence because Maria persisted in calling her assailant a man

What other kind of assault is there?

Violence that is tolerated includes the public burning of Harry Potter
books because JK Rowling tweeted that the term for people who menstruate is ‘woman.’

That's not violence though.

Manchester Police order ‘TERFS’ to stay out of the Pride village (Abbit, 2019)

The link doesn't support that. I spent 10 minutes fact checing the claim, and it doesn't appear to be true. What they said was 'TERF is not offensive', which they later deleted.

Women carrying a banner declaring ‘LESBIANS DON’T HAVE PENISES’ are fought to the ground.

No link is provided, but it appears that they were forceably moved from the parade to the side of the road. www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/lesbian-protesters-clash-police-security-16228379

jj1968 · 20/09/2020 18:58

@AnyOldPrion

When it comes to a hate crime, which means a criminal offence has been committed, then the characteristics are disability, race, religion, transgender identity or sexual orientation and they are defined by law, the police have no sahy. What it means is that if someone is prosecuted for say assault, and the victim perceived this was about race or sexuality then the court has the power if it agrees to give a harsher sentence. The police have no powers to expand these characteristics as they are enshrined in law.

Most police forces use the same characteristics to record hate incidents, but because this is just about what the police call routine information that is collected then they have the discretion to record incidents featuring other charateristics. Nottingham police force now record misogyny as a potential hate incident for example (although confusingly they talked about this as being about hate crimes rather than incidents). The main justification for this is that it is known that hate incidents, such as insulting remarks in the street which fall short of a crime can often escalate into actual crimes such as assault or damaging property (or worse as in the case of Stephen Lawrence) and so recording them, and encouraging the public to report them, allows police forces to build up a picture of what's going on. This is what Fair Cop are trying to prevent, although they lost in court and are now appealing.

It's been really unhelpful the way hate crimes and hate incidents have been confused by the media and often the police themselves. But in short a hate crime means an actual crime has been committed, these are also recorded in the hate crime statistics. A hate incident is merely a record of an incident which did not meet the threshold for criminal charges which is held in a local police station and which in very limited circumstances could be made known to a prospective employer in the kind of roles which require an enhanced DRB which is mostly jobs in childcare.

Aesopfable · 20/09/2020 21:22

hate incident is merely a record of an incident which did not meet the threshold for criminal charges which is held in a local police station and which in very limited circumstances could be made known to a prospective employer in the kind of roles which require an enhanced DRB which is mostly jobs in childcare.

A hate incident is NOT merely a record of an incident which did not meet the threshold for criminal charges: it is any incident where someone (who may be removed from the incident itself) perceives hate was involved. There is nothing at all to stop vexatious reports. There is no need for any hate at all to be involved. Absolutely no investigation is made into the merits of this report which, as you point out, can affect someone’s employment.

PenguindreamsofDraco · 20/09/2020 21:42

I do remember the police retweeting "No Terfs on our Turf" actually.

Agree about the tone and style. Many of us dug (a few times!) and the appeal is so important. Please don't come over all tinfoil hat.

jj1968 · 20/09/2020 21:49

@Aesopfable

hate incident is merely a record of an incident which did not meet the threshold for criminal charges which is held in a local police station and which in very limited circumstances could be made known to a prospective employer in the kind of roles which require an enhanced DRB which is mostly jobs in childcare.

A hate incident is NOT merely a record of an incident which did not meet the threshold for criminal charges: it is any incident where someone (who may be removed from the incident itself) perceives hate was involved. There is nothing at all to stop vexatious reports. There is no need for any hate at all to be involved. Absolutely no investigation is made into the merits of this report which, as you point out, can affect someone’s employment.

Well there's not much to stop vexatious reports about anything, although if it was found to be malicious then that could result in counter charges. People are always reporting things that aren't necessarily crimes, complaints about noise are a big one, and that information may be held at a police station and as such is potentially disclosable on an enhanced DBS. The only difference is that when it comes to incidents which the complainant perceives were motivated by hate then it is police policy to always record that information, but in almost all cases they probably would have done so anyway in case it escalated or later became part of a harassment charge.

I'd like to see Fair Cop explain exactly what it is they object to

Is it an objection to the police recording non crime information full stop?

If not do they object to that information being potentially disclosable?

Do they object to it being specifically called a hate incident?

Or do they think the police should have discretion on whether to record non-crime incidents which were reported to them as being perceived to be motivated by hatred?

If it's one of the first two then they are actually seeking to remove important safeguarding protections and I think they need to be clearer about that.

StandWitch · 20/09/2020 22:17

I do remember the police retweeting "No Terfs on our Turf" actually.

seems to be true, HOWEVER they've linked to a story from February 2019 from GMPCityCentre, whereas the No Terfs on Our Turf thing seems to be from GMPPrideNetwork from our October.

So there's an interesting story there in that it's not one incident, but several, from Manchester police. But the report fails to tell it.

Aesopfable · 20/09/2020 22:35

Well there's not much to stop vexatious reports about anything, although if it was found to be malicious then that could result in counter charges.

It will not be found to be malicious because there is no investigation. The ‘perpetrator’ does not get told and has not opportunity to correct the record. A record that could cost them their job.

jj1968 · 20/09/2020 22:45

The ‘perpetrator’ rarely gets told about accusations against them until they are charged. Imagine you reported a man because you suspected he was abusing his partner. Do you think the police should immediately contact him, and tell him who made the complaint? And in the event there is no evidence, or it isn't quite a crime, then the police should destroy all records of the allegation?

TreestumpsAndTrampolines · 21/09/2020 09:46

I can kind of see what you mean about a different audience - it's the kind of thing that would appeal to my dad. Mind you, he is into conspiracy theories, he also can't stick to a clear point and wanders around seemingly unconnected things when trying to make an argument, and the fundamental issue is he is also of the mind that 'feminists brought this on themselves' because he bundles anyone who doesn't think quite like he does into the 'feminist' bucket - be they woke hipsters, trans rights activists, MGTOW, or actual feminists.

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