The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Hate-crime police quiz pensioner in her own home... just for taking a photo of this sticker

- By Chris Pollard

POLICE officers quizzed a pensioner in her home on suspicion of a hate crime after she stopped in the street to take a photo of a sticker which said: ‘Keep males out of women-only spaces.’

The sticker had been placed on to a LGBT+ pride poster which had the slogan Stand By Your Trans. Officers told the 73-year-old retired social worker that she had been identified from CCTV footage.

The woman told The Mail on Sunday she was ‘in a state of shock’ when officers arrived at her door. The incident happened in Hebden Bridge in West Yorkshire – the setting for BBC crime drama Happy Valley about no-nonsense policewoma­n Catherine Cawood. It comes after fury over police forces failing to send officers to investigat­e burglaries and other serious crimes.

Home Secretary Suella Braverman said the public was ‘fed up’ with virtue-signalling police wading into lawful debates, and has ordered HM Inspector of Constabula­ry to investigat­e the issue.

West Yorkshire Police confirmed last night it had recorded the matter as a ‘non-crime hate incident’.

The woman said she had stopped to take a photo with her phone because she agreed with its message that transgende­r women – who were born male – should not be allowed into women-only spaces such as changing rooms. She did not share the image on social media and only took the photo to show to her partner when she got home.

But several days later, while she was caring for her seriously ill female partner, two uniformed officers from West Yorkshire Police came calling.

‘They gave me a long lecture about the sensitivit­y of the issue, and how something like this could cause harassment and alarm to the community,’ she said.

‘They were investigat­ing it as a hate crime, which is outrageous. I was in a state of shock.’

The pensioner, who insisted that she didn’t put the sticker on the poster, said she believed she was reported to the police by LGBT+ community group Happy Valley Pride which had put up the Stand By Your Trans poster on an A-board outside the town hall in March.

The group knew the woman’s identity from when she previously wrote to them with her concerns about transgende­r women being allowed into single-sex spaces.

The woman, who said she had complained to West Yorkshire Police about her treatment, asked not to be named over fears of reprisals from online trolls and activists. ‘I think they wanted to correct my thinking,’ she added. ‘They are getting involved in a very divided and toxic debate, but it’s not their role to arbitrate political disagreeme­nts. I felt as if they were trying to gag a dissenting voice by harassing me in my own home.’

The police log, which she obtained via a data access request, stated they had given her ‘words of advice... regards the harassment and alarm that this sticker could potentiall­y cause to the community’.

West Yorkshire has the secondhigh­est crime rate in the UK, but more than 90 per cent of cases go unsolved in the area. The same force provoked outrage last month when officers arrested a 16year-old autistic girl in Leeds for suggesting that a shorthaire­d police officer resembled her ‘lesbian nana’. Viral footage showed seven officers manhandlin­g the girl, who cried out in distress as they took her into custody for a suspected ‘homophobic public-order offence’. The case was later dropped. Harry Miller, a former police officer, accused the officers of ‘thought policing’. He set up the free-speech group Fair Cop after he was investigat­ed in 2019 for posting a limerick on social media suggesting that transgende­r women are still men. The case was later dropped. He said: ‘How can a woman photograph­ing a sticker cause alarm and distress to the Happy Valley Pride community? There is politicall­y correct rot at the heart of West Yorkshire policing.’

Stella O’Malley, psychother­apist and founder of internatio­nal group Genspect, said: ‘It’s not the job of the police to decide that taking a photo is a hate crime.’

‘It is outrageous – I was in a state of shock’

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 ?? ?? BATTLE OF WORDS: The trans poster in Hebden Bridge, below, with the sticker added, left
BATTLE OF WORDS: The trans poster in Hebden Bridge, below, with the sticker added, left

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