Wednesday 20 May 2009

Meeting a Veteran Officer

Quite recently, I attended a firearms incident and after it had all concluded, was stood writing my decision log next to my car. An elderly gentleman appeared from one of the houses and enquired about what had happened. I told him that there was nothing much to worry about. He then told me that he was once a police officer but had retired when he finished his full 30 year's service in 1975. He was years now 84 years of age. I shook his hand and congratulated him on receiving so much of what he was owed for such a lengthy period of time, as so many officers I knew who had retired died within just a few years of doing so. This was all too familiar with him, and he no longer had any friends remaining alive with whom he served.

I spent over an hour talking with this man, listening to how things were, and quickly realised that no matter what period in history an officer had patrolled the streets of Utopia, that we all share the same pride for having done so. I imagine it is the same elsewhere in the UK, if not the world. Unfortunately, I was called to return to the station to conduct a custody review, but I could have spent hours talking to this man. We said our farewells and I promised to drop in on him some time soon. Driving back to the station, the harshness and discipline he spoke about reminded me of the instructions I received from my Sergeant as a young probationary constable arriving at my first station in Oceana.

There were 10 points, and whichever one I transgressed during my probation, he would make me repeat to him verbatim:

1. You will run the tea club. You will do so enthusiastically. You will run it good. You will run it well. You may decide whether you want to collect subs on a weekly or monthly basis. The Inspector, other sergeants and I do not contribute to the running of the tea club, but you will ask us first above all others whether we would like tea, coffee, toast or biscuits after parade.

2. You will accept every shoplifter, sudden death and missing person report. If you are on foot patrol, which you will be until I am satisfied that you are capable of performing the role of operator in a marked vehicle, you will call up for a vehicle to collect you and take you to where you are needed.

3. You may come back to the station for your allocated refreshment breaks. You are not allowed in the station unless I or one of the other Sergeants requests your presence, or unless you have an arrest. I only want to see you on parade, in custody with a prisoner, on refreshments, or coming back to get changed out of your uniform at the end of the tour as I am going home.

4. You will not speak to the Inspector unless he asks you a question. If you want to speak to the Inspector, you will inform one of the other Sergeants or I of the subject you wish to speak to him about, and we will tell you not to bother him. Never transgress this rule.

5. You have no discretion. You will arrest anyone where an offence has been alleged against them, and you will give process tickets for every traffic offence that you observe. If you see the last hearse in a funeral cortege with the bereaved family not wearing a seat belt, you will give everyone of them a ticket. If the coffin is not suitably harnessed, you will give the bereaved a ticket.

6. Never ever complain about the conduct of a senior police constable. If you see something you do not like, learn from it, determine never to do it yourself.

7. If you are being bullied, do not bother the Inspector, other Sergeants or I. Resolve the matter physically, and hope that you are victorious.

8. Do not enter into a sexual relationship with a Woman Police Constable on your team. If you do, be prepared for the eventually that she will also be having a sexual relationship with one of your colleagues. I have seen this happen so many times, and I can assure you it will happen to you. There are far fewer WPC's in the force than there are men. She is in a Sweet Shop. She can have whatever different sweets she wants, and there will always be a nicer sweet than you.

9. I will only ever give you a direction once, or explain something once. If I have to tell you a second time, I will punish you. I will punish you severely. Do you understand? Or shall I repeat it?

10. I appreciate that you have a great deal of enthusiasm right now. Learn to temper it. I have been a police officer for 27 years. I love being a police officer. However, the force is now letting in people such as you. The force is not what it was. The job is f*cked. My Sergeant told me that when I joined and you will tell your new officers when, God forbid, you become a supervising officer.

'The job's f*cked.' If I had a penny for every time I've heard that throughout my career, I'd have £5.42p.

"Sarge, my arrest from the other day had no further action taken by CID." "Don't worry, the officers in CID are there because they were useless on the street and never had a clue. The job's f*cked."

"Guv, I've had both my rest days cancelled this weekend." "I know, me too, my wife was very unhappy. I said to her, I said, "The job's f*cked," but she still made me sleep in the shed."

"Hey, you never guess what everyone, I'm receiving a Chief Constable's Commendation for getting that burglar sent down!" "Well, done, you worked hard on that job. It's very much deserved."

I know that as soon as the officer leaves the canteen someone will say, "Unbelievable. He's useless and lazy. The job's f*cked."

Thinking back to my conversation with that elderly gentleman, I realised how little the attitudes of police officers have changed throughout history. Particularly when, as I was getting into my car to leave, the veteran officer tapped me on the shoulder and said, "Just one more thing Inspector, is the job still f*cked?"


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7 comments:

  1. Speaking as someone just starting off on his thirty-odd year odyssey, I don't know whether to find this reassuring (in that people actually make it through to the end) or down-right scary!

    As always though, a good read - and pleasing to see your hit count increasing too.

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  2. Thanks probie. You'll be fine, in a few years you'll be saying the 'job's f*cked' too. Mark my words! If ever you need any advice, you are always more than welcome to send me an e-mail. The job's actually great, I could think of nothing more rewarding in life. Nothing. I hope I make it to the end.

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  3. The Job is most definitely f*cked. It takes on new elements of f*ckedness every single day. Just when you thought it was completely and utterly f*cked - and couldn't possibly get any worse - it turns a corner or nose-dives into even more fascinating and disturbing levels of f*ckidity. Every officer in every generation of policing will say that it's f*cked, but the reasons they give will all depend on the social climate at the time. Whatever the case, it certainly is a great job and I for one would not trade my service for anything else, although it has been pretty easy leaving it all behind.

    And that's because the job is f*cked!

    Good post LH and congrats on the Oracle articles.

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  4. Brilliant!!

    As a fellow Inspector who seems to be in very similar circumstances (but digging a tunnel back to duty cover) this made me laugh out loud as so very true.

    I started lurking as a result of Copperfield's link and have added you to my favourites. Your style of writing is a perfect example of the 'black humour' that gets most of us through the day. Please keep up the humour. There are enough ranters blogging.

    I still think the jobs f**ked though!(But so did everyone when I joined).

    PS.My Sergeant included:

    'Don't ever expect thanks for what you do. That way on the odd occasion when you are thanked it will make your week, but the rest of the time you won't take it personally'.

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  5. I have just rejoined the job after a 25 year career break - blimey - its changed a bit ! My dad who joined in '52 thought we were a bunch of softies when i joined in '82 - I've just spent my training period 'learning' how brutal the Met were in the 80's.My dad would definitely think the job is f***ed now !!

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  6. Mac, that's a very good point your skipper made. I had the upmost respect for my first one, he was harsh but fair and didn't tolerate fools gladly. I knew when he told me I'd done a good job he meant it, and that spurned me on to do even better. My wife doesn't even say 'thanks' when I get paid now, as my salaried wage means I'm a lot of money down on being an overtime-bandit-sergeant. When, oh when will it all get better?

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  7. Reading blogs and posts like this is what makes me look forward to a career in policing. I guess that must be odd, but it's true. I know that there's not many people who want to go into this job, and there's a huge deficit in Canada (where I am; in the application process to the RCMP right now), so I hope that I will make it through and find out just how f***ed the job really is, heh.

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