ChatterBank3 mins ago
Is It April Fools Day?
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Investigating burglaries is time consuming and doesn't easily yield results. That's why they don't like doing it. They have limited resources, but their performance is judged on things like conviction rate league tables.
Much easier to sit in a layby with a speed camera picking off the low hanging fruit than actually investigating things.
Much easier to sit in a layby with a speed camera picking off the low hanging fruit than actually investigating things.
I think the police should concentrate on real crimes like Twitter spats rather than burglaries!!!
https:/ /www.da ilymail .co.uk/ news/ar ticle-1 1282263 /Moment -police -swoop- house-d evout-c atholic -mother -malici ous-onl ine-pos ts.html
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From (an alleged) serving police officer I've found online. Married up to my experience of being burgled a few year ago:
[Whether a burglary is investigated] depends on a number of things, but basically comes down to whether there is any evidence or not. With most burglaries the police will look for forensics (DNA, fingerprints), CCTV, witnesses, anything stolen being sold or seen. If they have some or all of these things there is a good chance that a suspect will be identified and charged. With none of these they will almost certainly file the case unsolved on the same day.
Sometimes in the UK people will admit to previous offences when they’re caught as these can be included in their charge without dramitaclly increasing their sentence, and thus meaning they can’t be re-sentanced for another offence at a later date, and so sometimes unsolved burglaries are cleared up much later.
Fingerprints can be found that don’t identify anyone, if they have no criminal record. This is pretty rare as people don’t often start their criminal career with burglaries, or spend a lifetime of crime without being caught, but it can happen. I had a guy who was arrested for a domestic matter and his fingerprints taken and linked to a burglary that happened 10 years previously.
If there are leads police will try and solve a burglary, but alas, many, if not most, go unsolved.
[Whether a burglary is investigated] depends on a number of things, but basically comes down to whether there is any evidence or not. With most burglaries the police will look for forensics (DNA, fingerprints), CCTV, witnesses, anything stolen being sold or seen. If they have some or all of these things there is a good chance that a suspect will be identified and charged. With none of these they will almost certainly file the case unsolved on the same day.
Sometimes in the UK people will admit to previous offences when they’re caught as these can be included in their charge without dramitaclly increasing their sentence, and thus meaning they can’t be re-sentanced for another offence at a later date, and so sometimes unsolved burglaries are cleared up much later.
Fingerprints can be found that don’t identify anyone, if they have no criminal record. This is pretty rare as people don’t often start their criminal career with burglaries, or spend a lifetime of crime without being caught, but it can happen. I had a guy who was arrested for a domestic matter and his fingerprints taken and linked to a burglary that happened 10 years previously.
If there are leads police will try and solve a burglary, but alas, many, if not most, go unsolved.
well, at least they can stop chasing up rape cases, now that the perfect excuse has been found for all men
https:/ /www.da ilymail .co.uk/ news/ar ticle-1 1281207 /CPS-ap ologise s-rape- case-th rown-se xsomnia -claim. html
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