For anyone who's old enough to remember, the tall one keeps lifting himself up and down on his heels, just like Blakey from On the Buses and that's the exact type of person he is.
man, you’ve turned this into a complete art form. The sweet, somewhat terse slash aggressive Glasgee accent is the cherry on the cake. I absolutely love it.
Sergent was great, his officer is a prime example of what is wrong with the police. Arrogant, disrespectful and then tried to intimidate. Glad his sergent asked him to identify properly great respect for him.
These foreign dignitaries think so highly of themselves. Incident with the piano man from boogie woogie, and this, why are the police becoming their puppets?
I'm sorry but the sergeant illustrated the reason why these tyrant constables are feral. He was meek, gentle, non-committal, watery, lightweight, insipid, reluctant and weak. He should be reading out the riot act to any constable who abuses him power, refuses to identify and acts like a bully. Saying 'I didn't see it' isn't good enough. He should be barking orders and keeping his crew in order.
They will never correct an officer in front of a member of the public, all you'll get is "I didn't see it", "I wasn't there", "you're talking to me now" and various other conversational tricks used to distract you from taking the officer to task . . . regardless of what an officer has done wrong, other officers will always side with them . . . it takes something horrific like an officer kidnapping and raping someone before the police will hold their own to account, beyond that they let each other get away with pretty much anything.
You are truly an inspiration 😂 A British Citizen on British soil and long may you continue doing what you are doing....thank you for standing up for our rights 😊
Excellent articulation TLA. If the police have contempt of their own policies, imagine the contempt they can have for the laws meant to protect us. That Sargent did ok.
“There’s nothing wrong with having a polite conversation.” Except when the “polite conversation” feels like an investigative detention and wastes the time of a member of the public who doesn’t wish to engage, and is in no way obliged to engage with a police officer.
If police ever just tell you they're having a 'chat' or 'polite conversation' with you, bat every one of their questions away and then ask them banal small talk questions: 'Oh I wouldn't know anything about that. Seen any good films lately?', 'I'm not sure of the answer to that Officer, but how's your family doing?', etc.
@@alexritchie4586You’re a lot more polite and cooperative than I would be. If it’s a consensual conversation, I’m just turning and walking away without a word. But then, I’m used to dealing with American cops, where if I’m not detained, I’m not participating. And if I’m detained, I’m not answering any questions, making any statements, or consenting to anything.
They’re concerned about English people photographing in their own country, I mean, how dare they , English people actually photographing in their own country.
First cops is a shining example of the exact thing that's wrong with the police.the superior attitude the retaliation and threats when you politely informed him of his policy, that the type of cop that will abuse and assault people
He had to be from Charing Cross , they send out one big cowboy to help the Indian`s. They have a new policy called the Couzens for identifying to the public . That was chalk and cheese, well done to the Sargeant
He is just another police thug, no respect for the public the MET will never be ok, if thugs like him are able to walk the streets, just imagine what the likes of him got away with before cameras, big up the sergeant, he was sound.
Wow. You have exposed another tyrant. He needs retraining at the least, he broke MET requirements & threatened you. You was perfectly polite & knowledgeable.
Accuses you of being obstructive after he fails to answer a polite request to identify himself as per MPS guidance 😂 Honestly, is this the way he wants the public to respect law enforcement 🤦♂️
The very first thing the officer says to you is"what are you up to?", so already he has made his mind up that you are doing something illegal/nefarious.
Yes fair play to the SGT I've seen many SGTs who haven't done what this one did and told the PC to identify fully. If you are a higher rank making sure things are done properly and teaching regarding lower ranks is part of their job after all.
Some of the embassy staff clearly were untrained. I would tender apology on behalf of all Indians, you were legally on the right and embassy had no right to question your identity or prove your innocence. Well done audit!!!
That poor copper, not only shown up by his sergeant, he is shown up by his mum now if the comment that's been made is a genuine one. TLA certain does get the laughs 😄😄
Masterfully handled TLA..great to see perceived pompous uniform authority from the Constable dealt with so firmly..I’m not sure he took this on board but hopefully he may engage brain before speaking next time?
What a suspicious cop, not even willing to identify, he should be heavily investigated by the police as to how much he gets away with while unidentified.
Fantastic. - put them in their place , just luv the Glaswegian accent gives so much emphasis and impact (one of my favourite accents - some of my friends are from Glasgow)- well done spot on!
Imagine standing on the soil of another persons country where you can barely speak the language and telling them they dont know what their rights are. You would have to be as arrogant as that cop that refused to identify to pull a stunt like that.
12:35 a look of pure loathing. I do sometimes feel sympathy for the police given the grief they often get but this officer makes it harder for the good ones. His first response to your request for ID was "I'm a police officer". The average member of the public would have felt deterred from pressing the matter further and this approach to requests for ID can only put the public in danger.
@@gazzcat4849 Best thing he could think of, just made him look ridiculous. But imagine a scenario where he'd had 'back up' from some other fkr who decided this was the way they wanted to deal with this (non) situation. The words 'slippery' and 'slope' come to mind.
@@MVT55 Sorry, but that is not correct. Section 3 is all to do with Searches. There is unfortunately nothing written down that I can find other than what is loosely required under the Police Code of Ethics umbrella.
Beautifully done TLA , he really tucked his tail in, he was raging. Other cop was grand. Damn that wee embassy guy tucked tail aswel grand job from N. Ireland lol