Police 'Steal' From Unlocked Cars
Robadob writes "Police in south-west London have started to remove items from unlocked cars to protect motorists from thieves. From the article, 'Supt Jim Davis said no law was being breached but admitted: "Technically we are entering the vehicle." But a leading lawyer said police could face civil proceedings for trespass if any items taken by them were damaged.'"
So, first we have a story about reverse-pickpockets, and now reverse-policing.
Oh no... watch out for the fire department!
It really seems like the police might have more important things to do...are they police or nannies?
...we need to start funding our police better!
93rd rule of Slashdot: No matter how obvious my sarcasm is, my comment will be taken seriously by someone.
Subject really says it all.
A minor addition would be 'hide the valuable item under the seat' or some such.
What dumbass leaves their car unlocked in this day and age?
Cory Doctorow talking about cloud computing makes as much sense as George W Bush talking about electrical engineering.
Police 'Steal' From Unlocked Cars
They clearly have too many police officers with nothing better to do. They should lay the excess baggage off and save the tax payer money and aggravation.
1. leave a camera in my car 2. let cobs enter my car 3. go to police and demand they arrest the person that broke into my car 4. sue police 5. Profit!!! wash rinse repeat until rich or this stops.
-Ours is the wisdom of Solomon, the magic of Merlyn, the fall of Icaris.
So, I would only be helping the police by doing the same if I notice any unlocked cars and take stuff from them? NICE!
The problem with the freedom to be stupid is that it usually leads to someone else having to clean up after your mistake. The police have to work a lot harder to track down someone who actually stole your laptop than to just hand it back to you. Not to say that they're right in this regard, but at the very least they're saving taxpayer money by reducing the amount of work they have to do.
The police have to work a lot harder to track down someone who actually stole your laptop
... but they usually don't.
I'd rather you rationally disagree than irrationally agree.
I'm not sure cops would feel you were being benevolent, let alone acting legally, if average Joe Citizen tried opening every parked police car, let along lifting items from them, even if it were meant to encourage good behavior.
In the areas where this is taking place, if private citizens spot a police car that's unlocked, they can remove everything from inside there to prevent it from being stolen?
-- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."