The Scottish Mail on Sunday

It really is time to scrap the police and start again

- Peter Hitchens Read Peter’s blog at hitchensbl­og.mailonsund­ay.co.uk and follow him on Twitter @clarkemica­h

HOW does a person such as Wayne Couzens, a known drug user with an unconceale­d taste for ‘extreme’ pornograph­y, become a police officer in the first place? How did he remain one? How is it that when this questionab­le figure was caught on camera exposing his private parts, nobody even followed it up?

How has what used to be the most civilised and subtle police force in the world lost the sense to sack such a person? How has it, at the same time, gained the powers to detain a totally law-abiding woman, so that she was not at first suspicious and could be hauled into a car and driven to an awful solitary death too horrible to imagine?

How has the grisly kidnap and murder of Sarah Everard, which has so many grim messages for us, been narrowed down by the BBC and many politician­s into an issue about the treatment of women? I am as concerned about the treatment of women as anybody, but these dreadful things could equally well have been done to anyone.

And they go far, far wider than that. I am glad that the Labour MP Harriet Harman is now calling for the resignatio­n of the disastrous Metropolit­an Police Commission­er, Dame Cressida Dick.

BUT what took you so long, Harriet? Dame Cressida is the very symbol of the useless, politicise­d modern policing which does not serve the public, male or female. That is how she got the job. Something tells me you would have been pleased when she did.

In February 2017 I warned against her appointmen­t on this page. I said: ‘In British public life, nothing succeeds like failure, provided you belong to the Blessed Company of the Politicall­y Correct… I am more interested in whether these people are up to the job, regardless of sex, which is surely the truly anti-sexist position.’

In October 2019, I wrote here: ‘Britain’s biggest police force is now institutio­nally unjust, and so is not fit for the task we have entrusted to it. The report by Sir Richard Henriques into its “VIP paedophile­s” investigat­ion is one of the most devastatin­g ever published about any official body.

‘If any other organisati­on was involved, we would disband it and start again, as I increasing­ly believe we should do with the police. This horrible mess is closely linked to their failure to control or deal with the crimes they increasing­ly regard as petty, of theft and disorder.’

It is so telling that the modern police pursued – with chilly, relentless zeal and platoons of constables – ludicrous evidence-free claims made by a wild fantasist that a decorated Field Marshal had been a paedophile. But faced with real worries that one of their own officers was a serious deviant, they did nothing, nothing, nothing, nothing, nothing!

Oh, you say, but we are no longer ‘judgmental’ about such things. A man must have a private life. ‘Sex workers’ have a job to do. Pornograph­y is everywhere.

Well, maybe we need to go back to being judgmental. I never bought the claim that releasing the liquid manure of pornograph­y into our society was a harmless reform that would make us less repressed and healthier. Rather the contrary, as we see here.

I think I can recall a time when a police officer who divorced would suffer in his career. One who was in serious debt would also have been under suspicion.

Police officers in those times no doubt had flaws of many kinds. But I do not think a man who was actually known among his colleagues for his taste for violent pornograph­y and drugs would have been hired, or retained, until quite recently. Because the police force upheld laws which also had something to do with the moral order we used to have here. Police constables did not just enforce the laws against violence, theft and disorder. They believed in them, and so did the public who were their friends.

Now the police enforce an entirely new code, which often seems to be mainly concerned with politics. The streets stink of marijuana. Vandalism, burglary, car theft and general disorder proceed unhampered. Yet when the Covid panic arrived, the police turned from patrolling Twitter and enforcing politicall­y correct speech codes, and instead suddenly appeared in legions to lecture people for sunbathing, hiking or having picnics. Couzens, let it never be forgotten, pretended to use Covid powers to get Sarah Everard into his car.

Think on these things. I was not joking when I said two long years ago that the police should be disbanded and replaced by something entirely new. I am joking even less now.

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