Author Topic: Police tell locked-down Brits they can't go in their own GARDENS: Officer ....  (Read 1939 times)

Pip

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https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8207393/Sales-Easter-eggs-wine-barbecues-paddling-pools-soar-ahead-four-day-break.html

Police tell locked-down Brits they can't go in their own GARDENS: Officer orders family back inside for playing in their yard while others prowl supermarket aisles looking for shoppers buying 'non-essential' items

    Police forces across the UK have been accused of being over-zealous in their approach to Easter lockdown
    Video shows a South Yorkshire officer scolding a family for letting their young children play on the front lawn
    Cambridge Police boasted that officers had visited a local Tesco this morning to snoop on non-essential aisles
    Motorways, usually teeming with millions of holidaymakers, were left deserted amid warnings of roadblocks
    A Downing Street spokesperson warned police today that shops were 'free to sell anything they have in stock'
    Have you been scolded by over-zealous police? Email alexander.robertson@mailonline.co.uk with your stories

By Alexander Robertson For Mailonline

Published: 08:38, 10 April 2020 | Updated: 13:31, 10 April 2020

Heavy-handed police are prowling supermarket aisles in a bid to catch shoppers buying 'non-essential' items amid concerns that officers are abusing their powers as Britain goes into lockdown for the Easter weekend.  Police forces across the country have been accused of being over-zealous in their crackdown as they threatened to set up roadblocks to grill motorists on why they were not at home, causing #policestateUK to trend on Twitter.   Downing Street warned police today that  'if a shop is open then it will sell whatever it has in stock', while Home Secretary Priti Patel called on officers not to be 'heavy-handed' during the coronavirus lockdown.  It comes as Cambridge Police's official Twitter account boasted that officers had visited a local superstore this morning to snoop on shoppers and found aisles selling non-essentials were 'empty'.  The tweet caused outrage from social media users, with many pointing to a post sent by the same account hours earlier thanking a local chocolate shop for dropping off a 'generation donation of goodies' at its police station.  Meanwhile, a viral video showed a South Yorkshire police officer scolding a family on their own doorstep for letting their young children play on their front lawn.  The force later apologised for the encounter, which is called 'well-intentioned but ill-informed', after the officer told the young family: 'You do not want your children getting the virus, it does not stop in front of your garden.'

It comes as police chiefs called for laws to ban Britons from driving long distances and flouting rules to exercise more than once a day ahead of a 77F (25C) Easter weekend.  Warnings that officers would stop and search those venturing out during the four-day break saw Britain's roads left eerily quiet on Good Friday, on what is usually one of the busiest days of the year for car journeys.  Motorways, usually teeming with millions of holidaymakers making their way to seaside resorts, were left deserted this morning as top cops warned they would set up roadblocks to grill motorists on why they were not at home.  Cambridge Police's tweet in which it gloated of prowling through non-essential aisles was met with anger by many on social media.  The tweet read: 'Officers visited Tesco Barhill this morning as part of their patrols around supermarkets and green spaces this weekend.  Good to see everyone was abiding by social distancing measures and the non-essential aisles were empty.'

 But in a follow-up on Twitter, the force said the initial post, which has since been deleted, was made by an 'over-exuberant officer' and that its position was in line with national guidance.    For clarification, the force position, in line with national guidance, is that we are not monitoring what people are buying from supermarkets,' it said.

'This message was sent with good intentions by an over-exuberant officer who has been spoken to since this tweet was published.'

The force added that while it has had to issue a small number of fines to those ignoring lockdown guidance, none of these were in relation to shopping or supermarket visits.  Among those to chastise the post was Pip Moss, who wrote: 'The law doesn't forbid the purchase of non-essential items when also shopping for essentials such as food.  Your officer's time could be better spent, and over-stepping the law like this harms public confidence in the police.'

Another user added: 'One day you're going to have to look back on all this and tell people that in the midst of a crisis you chose to spend your time patrolling around looking to enforce laws that didn't exist.' 

Speaking yesterday, Northamptonshire Police said the 'three-week grace period is over' and threatened that they may even soon start 'checking the items in baskets and trolleys'. 

It is Chief Constable Nick Adderley said: 'We will not at this stage be starting to marshal supermarkets and checking the items in baskets and trolleys to see whether it's a legitimate and necessary item.  But again, be under no illusion, if people do not heed the warnings, and the pleas that I'm making, we will start to do that.'

And he added: 'If things don't improve, and we don't get the compliance we would expect, then the next stage will be roadblocks and it will be stopping people to ask why they are going, where they're going.'

But asked about the prospect of police officers potentially checking shopping trolleys, Ms. Patel told TalkRADIO: 'That is not appropriate, let me be clear on that... that is not the guidance.'

Officers in Windermere, Cumbria, are already sending people in camper vans home, while locals in St Ives, Cornwall, blocked some roads to protect vulnerable residents.  Police have also created online forms for people to report potential breaches of the lockdown which was imposed on March 23 to slow the spread of the deadly disease.  Merseyside Police said it will begin randomly stopping cars in its area to ensure drivers are sticking to lockdown rules ahead of the weekend.  Home Secretary Priti Patel, who has not been seen or heard in public since March 23, said in an unexpected radio interview this evening that police must not act in a 'heavy-handed' manner during the coronavirus lockdown.  She also said the government will 'absolutely not' be increasing police powers amid concerns about the way in which some officers have interpreted government guidance on breaking up groups and stopping journeys.  Ms. Patel's intervention came as:

    England, Scotland,  and Wales recorded 887 more coronavirus deaths yesterday, taking Britain's total to 7,984 as the coronavirus crisis continues;
    Downing Street said Britain was at a 'critical juncture' in the battle to curb the spread of the disease;
    The Government made clear there can be no early lifting of the strict social distancing rules, urging the public to 'stick with it';
    Boris Johnson's condition is 'continuing to improve' after a third night in intensive care at St Thomas' Hospital in London where he is being treated for coronavirus.

At least five chief constables are calling for the introduction of more stringent restrictions and clearer rules including laws to enforce limiting exercise to a one-hour period outdoors after some people flouted it to sunbathe in parks or beaches.  Mr. Adderley said forces are 'damned if you do, damned if you don't' when it comes to implementing the lockdown rules, and said the government guidance 'could be even clearer'.

Reacting to the trolley claims made by Mr Adderley, ex-justice secretary David Gauke said they were 'wholly inappropriate' and reveal 'worrying and unacceptable authoritarian instincts.'   Civil liberties campaigners were also furious, with Big Brother Watch director Silkie Carlo stating the 'suggestion of police rummaging through people's shopping trolleys is outrageous' as she questioned what the legal basis would be for doing so.  Mr. Adderley later attempted to clarify his remarks, tweeting: 'To be clear on the shopping trolley issue: This is about essential and necessary journeys, not what's in your trolley. I have been clear that we will not be judge and jury on what is an essential item or not, but we may now probe the purpose of the journey.'

The police have the power to issue fines to people who gather in groups during the lockdown. People are only supposed to go outside for food, medicine, to get to work, or for exercise once a day.   The emergency Coronavirus Act gave police powers to impose restrictions on 'events and gatherings' and it has been suggested that this could be used by forces in an attempt to justify roadblocks.  However, the law does not include any provision that could force people to require prior permission, show paperwork, or demonstrate reasonable cause for leaving their home.  Police forces in Cambridgeshire, London, Greater Manchester, West Yorkshire, Kent and Avon, and Somerset have all brought in online services for the public to report potential breaches of the lockdown rules.  The announcement on the online forms from Cambridgeshire Constabulary faced some criticism online, with one person describing it as a 'revolting' idea.  But a spokesman for the force urged people to only use the form 'if there is a significant issue or breach'.  Police forces in beauty spots across Britain have reported seeing visitors travel long distances from their homes to enjoy the recent warm weather.  People travelled far to spend time in Cumbria last weekend, while Malham Cove in North Yorkshire had visitors from Bradford, Leeds, and Oldham which is more than 50 miles away.   In the South West, Chief Superintendent Ian Drummond-Smith, police commander for Cornwall, warned non-residents to stay away from the area.  He said: 'Our officers will be patrolling this weekend, firstly on the M5 and A30 in an attempt to prevent visitors from entering the force area, and then locally to enforce the restrictions.  We will do so in a fair and balanced manner, but travelling down to the West Country is a serious breach of these restrictions and those doing so can expect to receive a fine.'

Britons load-up for lockdown weekend: Sales of Easter eggs, wine, barbecues and paddling pools soar by up to 4,000%   Sales of paddling pools and barbecues have skyrocketed in the lead up to the Easter weekend as Brits prepare for a sun-drenched lockdown in the back garden after police threatened to stomp out all non-essential travel.  Sunny forecasts for the weekend has seen sun loungers and parasols sell out on online websites, as officers warned they would go through peoples' shopping for 'non-essential items' if they dared to venture outside to shop.

Amazon reported a 4,000 per cent rise in the sale of paddling pools in the last 24 hours, while Waitrose saw a threefold increase in the sale of yoga equipment as Brits

Brits are also continuing to load up on food and drink, with Hotel Chocolat revealing that it had seen a 400 per cent increase in online orders for Easter eggs, while Thorntons had seen a similarly 'dramatic increase'.  Alcohol sales are still rising, too, with wine sales in supermarkets and corner shops jumping up by 22 percent in March, according to consumer analysts Kantar.  Discount website Vouchercodes said it had seen a 445 percent increase in the search for DIY equipment in the week-long lead up to the Easter weekend, as well as a 565 percent rise in searches for gardening equipment.

stewart

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Just one issueregarding 'essential' items. There is no black n white. Not to argue the rights and wrongs of anything, but for a chain smoker, the fags are essential, alcohol is essential for alcoholics, and even the lotto and scratch cards, some people will go off the deep end if they cant gamble.
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