Met officer faces dismissal after racist attack.
Met officer faces dismissal after racist attack.
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Fittster

Original Poster:

20,120 posts

237 months

Tuesday 13th April 2021
quotequote all
Maybe it isn't just the Yanks?

"Charlie Harrison stopped Carl Abrahams ‘due to skin colour’ before attack in front of children, judge rules

A police officer jailed for picking on a black father because of his colour and attacking him in front of his children is facing dismissal.

A judge said PC Charlie Harrison, 39, targeted his victim – who was grieving for his dead partner – for a bogus stop because of his race, and then assaulted him.

Harrison was jailed for two years and three months and now faces being drummed out of the Metropolitan police after being convicted of grievous bodily harm.

His victim Carl Abrahams, 47, had been visiting his partner’s grave in east London along with his two teenage sons.

All three have been left traumatised with Abrahams suffering a fractured upper shin after the attack by Harrison, who was part of the Met’s violent crime taskforce, formed to crackdown on violence.

...

Abrahams and his children walked past the officer and without saying anything, Harrison kicked his victim’s knee, toppling him to the ground.

Harrison’s nearby colleagues then rushed out of their cars and a passerby who remonstrated with the officer was threatened with arrest. Harrison later claimed in interview the stop was to look for drugs and guns.

Judge Gregory Perrins said: “Having heard the evidence at trial, I strongly suspect that the reason that you stopped Mr Abrahams and his sons was because they were black.”

The judge later added: “Had Mr Abrahams and his sons been white I suspect that you would have simply drove on by; this was in my judgment a clear case of racial profiling.”

Harrison had tried to justify the stop during an interview by saying: “You don’t find drugs and weapons by remaining in your police car.”

The judge said: “You had no grounds to arrest either Mr Abrahams or his sons, nor did you have any grounds to carry out a stop and search. They had done absolutely nothing wrong nor had they behaved in any way that could be deemed suspicious.

“They were simply a family returning from a cemetery where they had gone to visit the grave of their partner and mother.

The judge continued: “You kicked Mr Abrahams’ leg, deliberately knocking him to the ground. Mr Abrahams was in obvious pain. Although it was suggested at trial that his sons were aggressive and confrontational in the aftermath of the incident, the video footage shows the exact opposite.

“It was your case at trial that Mr Abrahams was aggressive and that you quickly formed the view that he was going to assault you. You therefore used an approved ‘leg sweep’ manoeuvre to take him to the ground where he could be restrained.

“Having heard the evidence at trial I see no basis upon which you could genuinely have thought it necessary to defend yourself from a man walking down the street with his two sons with his hands in his pockets.

“This was a deliberate assault.”

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/apr/13/me...

stitched

3,813 posts

197 months

Tuesday 13th April 2021
quotequote all
Odd.
At 39 years of age you would expect a certain amount of maturity, Not sure we are seeing the full picture here.

Bigends

6,031 posts

152 months

Tuesday 13th April 2021
quotequote all
stitched said:
Odd.
At 39 years of age you would expect a certain amount of maturity, Not sure we are seeing the full picture here.
The judge had obviously seen the full picture and decided to lock him up

stitched

3,813 posts

197 months

Tuesday 13th April 2021
quotequote all
Bigends said:
stitched said:
Odd.
At 39 years of age you would expect a certain amount of maturity, Not sure we are seeing the full picture here.
The judge had obviously seen the full picture and decided to lock him up
Get that, and in no way pro police,(or anti).
Just seems a bit odd to me

DeepEnd

4,240 posts

90 months

Tuesday 13th April 2021
quotequote all
stable Savage is alive and well in 2021.

Will he lose his pension as well as his job?

Bigends

6,031 posts

152 months

Tuesday 13th April 2021
quotequote all
stitched said:
Bigends said:
stitched said:
Odd.
At 39 years of age you would expect a certain amount of maturity, Not sure we are seeing the full picture here.
The judge had obviously seen the full picture and decided to lock him up
Get that, and in no way pro police,(or anti).
Just seems a bit odd to me
True, I wonder if the grounds for the initial stop and search came out

stitched

3,813 posts

197 months

Tuesday 13th April 2021
quotequote all
DeepEnd said:
stable Savage is alive and well in 2021.

Will he lose his pension as well as his job?
You make a fair point, and if guilty I hope he loses the lot.
Just don't understand the motivation.
confused

Derek Smith

48,904 posts

272 months

Tuesday 13th April 2021
quotequote all
Idiot.

Bigends

6,031 posts

152 months

Tuesday 13th April 2021
quotequote all
La Liga said:
Not so much 'facing' dismissal. Obviously he's going to get dismissed.

He wasn't charged with the racially aggravated offence, so presumably the CPS didn't think that aspect could be proven.

Doubt he'll lose his pension. Pensions forfeiture is very rare.
Pensions guidance here

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/governmen...

DeepEnd

4,240 posts

90 months

Tuesday 13th April 2021
quotequote all
Bigends said:
La Liga said:
Not so much 'facing' dismissal. Obviously he's going to get dismissed.

He wasn't charged with the racially aggravated offence, so presumably the CPS didn't think that aspect could be proven.

Doubt he'll lose his pension. Pensions forfeiture is very rare.
Pensions guidance here

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/governmen...
Is GBH not considered serious enough against the criteria listed?

stitched

3,813 posts

197 months

Tuesday 13th April 2021
quotequote all
La Liga said:
Not so much 'facing' dismissal. Obviously he's going to get dismissed.

He wasn't charged with the racially aggravated offence, so presumably the CPS didn't think that aspect could be proven.

Doubt he'll lose his pension. Pension forfeiture is very rare.

stitched said:
You make a fair point, and if guilty I hope he loses the lot.
He is guilty. He's been convicted at a crown court trial.
Genuine question, directed at someone who I consider to be a decent BiB and answers questions more than most.
If the facts are as stated, how did this guy ever become BiB?

stitched

3,813 posts

197 months

Tuesday 13th April 2021
quotequote all
La Liga said:
DeepEnd said:
Bigends said:
La Liga said:
Not so much 'facing' dismissal. Obviously he's going to get dismissed.

He wasn't charged with the racially aggravated offence, so presumably the CPS didn't think that aspect could be proven.

Doubt he'll lose his pension. Pensions forfeiture is very rare.
Pensions guidance here

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/governmen...
Is GBH not considered serious enough against the criteria listed?
Don't think it's 'gravely injurious to the interests of the State' or, 'liable to lead to a serious loss of confidence in the public service'.

I think it needs to get a few levels above like this sort of thing: https://www.expressandstar.com/news/crime/2018/08/...

stitched said:
If the facts are as stated, how did this guy ever become BiB?
Presumably passed the selection process without demonstrating anything that would prevent him from becoming one.
I was not seeking a PC response.
More your thoughts?

Biggy Stardust

7,068 posts

68 months

Tuesday 13th April 2021
quotequote all
La Liga said:
Not so much 'facing' dismissal. Obviously he's going to get dismissed.

He wasn't charged with the racially aggravated offence, so presumably the CPS didn't think that aspect could be proven.

Doubt he'll lose his pension. Pension forfeiture is very rare.

stitched said:
You make a fair point, and if guilty I hope he loses the lot.
He is guilty. He's been convicted at a crown court trial.
I wonder how long it will take for him to be dismissed, bearing in mind he'll be on full pay until that time despite being a convicted criminal. A few months, maybe?

Edited by Biggy Stardust on Tuesday 13th April 23:02

eharding

14,648 posts

308 months

Tuesday 13th April 2021
quotequote all
DeepEnd said:
stable Savage is alive and well in 2021.
Chief Constable Slaphead : "Tell me Superintendent, when I asked you to set up the Met’s Violent Crime Taskforce, what did I explicitly tell you not to do?"

Superintendent Buggerlugs : "Recruit violent criminals into it, Sir"

Chief Constable Slaphead : "That's right Buggerlugs. Very good. So what did you then go and do almost immediately?"

Superintendent Buggerlugs : "Recruited violent criminals into it, Sir"

Biggy Stardust

7,068 posts

68 months

Tuesday 13th April 2021
quotequote all
La Liga said:
o.

It's being 'fast tracked' (special cases).

Practically, with all the minimum time limits in law, two weeks is about as quick as it can go.
Good- it would be nice if the procedure could have been made ready during the trial in case of a highly likely guilty verdict but by public sector standards this is like greased lightning.

(I note they haven't even fixed a date to start proceedings as yet.)

Edited by Biggy Stardust on Tuesday 13th April 23:24

DeepEnd

4,240 posts

90 months

Tuesday 13th April 2021
quotequote all
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=teSPN8sVbFU&ab...

Anyone have any details on the "SPG"? I assume that was a topical reference at the time?

Edit - found it - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_Patrol_Group

Edited by DeepEnd on Tuesday 13th April 23:39

eharding

14,648 posts

308 months

Wednesday 14th April 2021
quotequote all
DeepEnd said:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=teSPN8sVbFU&ab...

Anyone have any details on the "SPG"? I assume that was a topical reference at the time?

Edit - found it - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_Patrol_Group

Edited by DeepEnd on Tuesday 13th April 23:39
Special Patrol Group

biggbn

30,455 posts

244 months

Wednesday 14th April 2021
quotequote all
La Liga said:
DeepEnd said:
Bigends said:
La Liga said:
Not so much 'facing' dismissal. Obviously he's going to get dismissed.

He wasn't charged with the racially aggravated offence, so presumably the CPS didn't think that aspect could be proven.

Doubt he'll lose his pension. Pensions forfeiture is very rare.
Pensions guidance here

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/governmen...
Is GBH not considered serious enough against the criteria listed?
Don't think it's 'gravely injurious to the interests of the State' or, 'liable to lead to a serious loss of confidence in the public service'.

I think it needs to get a few levels above like this sort of thing: https://www.expressandstar.com/news/crime/2018/08/...

stitched said:
If the facts are as stated, how did this guy ever become BiB?
Presumably passed the selection process without demonstrating anything that would prevent him from becoming one.
So GBH is not enough to lead to a serious lack of confidence in the public service?

anonymous-user

78 months

Wednesday 14th April 2021
quotequote all
biggbn said:
So GBH is not enough to lead to a serious lack of confidence in the public service?
Although he wasn't convicted on the racial aspect, the judge did say that 'abuse of power' was a significant aggravating factor, even specifically saying "your actions have the potential to seriously undermine the trust placed in the police by members of the public". So who knows?

DeepEnd

4,240 posts

90 months

Wednesday 14th April 2021
quotequote all
La Liga said:
biggbn said:
So GBH is not enough to lead to a serious lack of confidence in the public service?
Depends what ‘serious’ means in this context.

I interpret it as wide-ranging and lasting. I don’t see this as that.
There are some awkward optics to this though - saying a “random racially motivated attack by a police officer on the public” is not serious enough to lead to lack of confidence?

The police need to make it very clear how seriously they take this.

That said I’m surprised the example of the child rapist kept some of his police pension.