The Chronicle

Ross Kemp on patrol with the armed police

-

TIME for hardman Ross Kemp to pull on his bulletproo­f vest again as he joins armed officers on the frontlines of British crime. As he heads out with officers who have experience­d being confronted with lethal weapons, it raises the issue of whether police at any level can be left unarmed today.

First he sees how two unarmed officers deal with a violent man who is threatenin­g them with a kitchen knife, revisiting the scene with two constables, Alex and Debbie, of Northampto­nshire Police.

Debbie says: “I honestly thought that Alex was going to be killed.”

Later Ross goes out with a covert mobile armed support surveillan­ce team on the hunt for a suspect with a gun in the West Midlands, but the man is aggressive when the team tries to arrest him.

Ross also visits a counterter­ror police training base for the first time – designed to instil military-style tactics into everyday police officers.

Officers use explosives to gain access to a building and he acts as a hostage in a practice raid.

Before they burst in using stun grenades, Ross says: “It’s actually tense doing this, I mean I know what’s about to happen. Can you imagine what, in a real hostage situation, they’d actually feel?”

Ross also interviews several officers, all with different views on whether or not police should be armed.

One says: “The number of incidents that we’re now seeing involving gang violence, they’re carrying guns and yet we’re still deploying with a small can of pepper spray and a baton.”

 ??  ?? Ross Kemp (centre) with police officers from the West Midlands Tactical Fire Arms Team
Ross Kemp (centre) with police officers from the West Midlands Tactical Fire Arms Team

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom