What I Did On Duty 03/10/2015-04/10/2015 (Saturday) Part Two Apologies for splitting this one into two, it wasn't intended to be that way when I started writing! While we were heading to the patch I have a bit of a chuckle with one of our crime recorders over some of the aspects of this harassment incident, and get it logged as a crime, at least this way we won't be sat in a station on hold for half an hour! 2000 Hrs - We'd finally got onto the patch we were covering for the night, and decided to have a drive around the areas we'd been tasked to patrol to get it out of the way before things got busy. There wasn't a whole lot going on as expected, though a part way through there was a silver hatchback that took a crossroads at some speed. Unfortunately they turned off down our road and with a car behind us, we weren't able to pull the driver over, nor were we able to get the reg of the vehicle given how quick it happened. We headed down a road that we thought the vehicle might take and parked up, no joy though, but hopefully he saw us and modified his driving, though perhaps that's hoping too much! Failing to get him, we continued with the rest of that patrol with no more incidents of note. 2100 Hrs - Into the station we go, there's a PCSO on duty in the town tonight, so we have a chat with him as well as a bit of banter, sounds like he's had the usual sort of evening dealing with anti-social behaviour (Read: kids being kids, adults getting annoyed). My colleague gets started on the paperwork for the crime, and I start checking the persons involved on our systems, there has been some contact with us previously, so I print out the relevant incidents and we include them with the file. The risk assessment questions that we went through with the IP are on the fence between a medium / high risk domestic victim, but given the situation and the measures that will hopefully be put in place we go with a medium risk, though the sergeant will check it later and flag up any concerns he has anyway. We even manage to grab our dinner while we're doing the paperwork which is practically unheard of on a Saturday night! As another bizarre point, my partner asked me to submit some intelligence reports while she was busy with the paperwork, the first wasn't much to get excited about, though the second was somewhat unusual: A gentleman was stopped for suspected drink driving, he refused to provide a sample of breath at the roadside so was arrested for the offence of refusing to provide (failure / refusal to provide is treated much the same as a positive test over here) At custody, he refused to provide again for the evidential machine, so was put into a cell to sober up until he was fit to be charged. The case went to court, and failure / refusal to provide is an automatic conviction, however because of some bureaucratic failings resulting in the two arresting officers never being called as witnesses, the gentleman walked free. This in its own right would be frustrating, however we were informed by custody that the gentleman had been tested to ascertain whether he was fit to be charged. This test had taken place 6 hours after his arrest, and his alcohol content was still 143, the limit being 35. There was also information to suggest that he routinely drives in that state every week. 2300 Hrs - Back to our shift however, in a very unusual twist of fate, we actually managed to get all the paperwork completed and are getting to the point of thinking control had forgotten about us when the call comes in. 'PC518 immediate response to a domestic in progress' The call came in from a nearby town which wasn't on our patch, but the unit covering the town was already busy and to top it off, a pursuit had just started the other side of town! So it's into the car, hit the blues and twos and down the road we go. It was on a fairly new estate, and whoever designed them seems to have done it specifically to confuse police and postmen, long roads that sometimes continue straight on while other road branch off and sometimes branch off while turning into another road straight on. Eventually we find the block of flats and head up to speak to the IP. Unbeknownst to me, I'd actually seen the suspect briefly in the stairwell while trying to confirm it was the right block! My colleague speaks to the IP to ascertain what happened and as she's very clearly shaken up, I make her a cup of tea, accompanied by two small but very loud dogs in their cage. It seems they got into an argument, she asked him to leave and as he was leaving he seems to have deliberately shut the door on her arm. It's obviously painful, but she doesn't want a paramedic to have a look at it, and there's no damage that we can see other than some reddening of the skin, time will tell with that. She states that her boyfriend is in drink and that his car is parked in the visitor spot downstairs. a Citroen Saxo, reg starting with BU is all the information we have, so I head down to see if I can get a full reg to circulate in case it's seen out on the roads. No joy though as the vehicle had already disappeared. I head back upstairs and hang around outside the flat in case he comes back and sensing that the female touch might be appreciated more in this incident. Approx. 0030 Hrs Sunday - I hear a car pull up on the road fairly loudly and get a slight premonition that our suspect is about to make an appearance. Moments later, he's at the top of the stairs asking if his girlfriend is alright. He's got a bit of an attitude and clearly isn't happy that we're there, and have been there for so long, but when my colleague starts querying if he's going to be driving tonight he heads off fairly sharpish, we follow to see where he heads to, but lose him. Instead, I do a bit of a foot patrol of the area to see if I can locate his vehicle on the information we have. On a hunch I look down the roads opposite the direction he left in (I almost didn't bother looking) and as the Inspector pulls up to have a nosey around the area I spot the vehicle, Citroen Saxo, reg starting BU and the bonnet is still warm. I radio it through to control and flag the Inspector down, the vehicle has come back as in trade (no registered owner) and no insurance, as we're discussing the vehicle, our suspect wanders past, clearly heading back to his car, though thinking better of it with the police presence. I point him out to the Inspector who has a chat to him while I head back to my partner, it's not really proportionate to arrest him as the assault is minor with no confirmed complaint from the IP, and no visible injury at this time, and we're likely to need the cells later for the usual Saturday night problems. As it is, he's advised to find a different way home and not to drive his vehicle. 0200 Hrs - We've got everything we need from the IP, so we fix her door chain for her and head off. On a hunch, I suggest we drive past where the suspects vehicle had been and guess what, it's gone. I mention this to control, but the airwaves are too busy with immediates and another pursuit for them to circulate an observations message. Turns out it's not needed however as our Inspector has stopped the chap already for suspicion of drink driving, but with no breathalyser in his car we head over to assist. (Turns out he did have a breathalyser!) 0230 Hrs - We initially go down the drink driving route (my first live breathalyser), expecting this chap to blow a positive test, though he blew 24, high, but under the limit so he's safe from the cells tonight. Unfortunately for him however, it just means we have to look more closely into the no insurance matter, during which we realise the vehicle isn't taxed either. He's adamant that he has insurance and tax, though in hindsight he wasn't as angry about it as someone who did legitimately have them would be. We were all set to give him a HORTI (producer) to give him the benefit of the doubt and 7 days to produce his insurance and tax documents at a station when the Inspector pipes up again querying why we're not seizing the vehicle. Long and short of it, more checks are run to triple confirm that we can't find a trace of insurance or tax on the vehicle, and eventually we have to succumb and follow the lawful order from our Inspector to seize the vehicle, it's turning into a very bad night for this chap. To top it off, he lives in a different county which means we can only justifiably drop him off at his Mother's house which is in our county, though it's gone 0400 hrs by the time he's dropped off. On the plus side for us, he now doesn't have transport so isn't likely to be visiting his girlfriend anytime soon! 0500 Hrs - We finally get back to our main base and I check with my partner and Sergeant if they're alright with my knocking off as I know that I have to be up for my day job on the Monday morning and if I stay much later, it's likely to impact me too much on Monday. They're fine with this, though I'm well aware that my partner has another hour or two of paperwork to complete before she can go home. It's off to the locker room for me though, and time to shed the literal and metaphorical weight from my shoulders as I take the stabbie off. It's always a relief to take the uniform off at the end of another shift, as much as I enjoy it, it's nice to know I'm going home to bed safe and sound! I'm welcome to comments on these, it'd be nice to know if you guys would like to see more like this, and as I say, if you have any questions about law enforcement in the UK, I'm happy to answer what I can!