London.
#261
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: multi-culturalism
'political prisoners' ; they swiftly realised that they had better stop or
> else, and the misty-eyed "my great grandpappy was a leprechaun"
> Irish-Americans stopped funding them).
>
Weren't the Scots kinda upset about the British occupation of their country
for a while?
#262
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: multi-culturalism
It seems that he was an illegal immigrant (and immigrant checks are often
done on tube stations). As our police don't normally carry guns he felt safe
in legging it.He lived in the same apartment block as some ---------
suspects, but not in the same apartment. There is some question over whether
these guys were policemen, but if they were they were marksmen trained by
the SAS. Looks like they got him 7 times in the head and once in the
shoulder.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Billy Ray" <Billy_Ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
news:9546c$42e6b7e5$42a1cc8c$19525@FUSE.NET...
> Dave,
>
> I was sporadically listening to these reports during my camping /
> off-roading visit to Canada. Part of the time the only radio reception
was
> a French station so I had some difficulty following their rapid speech
>
> Several questions came to mind when this occurred.
>
> It "seemed odd" that there was such a delay in the identification of the
> man.
>
> The contents of his rucksack and if anything was inside his coat was not
> mentioned.
>
> The following day's brief report that the man was "completely innocent"
did
> not address (or even mention) why he was in a house full of terrorists or
> was wearing a winter coat in July, or that the police were acting within
> current security rules of engagement.
>
> No further mention of the victim's failure to comply with the 'police'
order
> to stop, his running away, or his jumping onto a train to elude the
> 'police'
>
> The victims brother (also supposedly Brazilian) ,in an interview, did not
> sound like any Brazilian (Portuguese) accent I have ever heard.
>
> The whole story sounds fishy. Will we hear in a few days or weeks that
this
> --------- cell suspected they were being watched and sent a 'blocker' to
> gauge the 'police' response while the real terrorists went out the back
> door?
>
> The truth may never be known. He may have been innocent. He may have
been
> a red herring. He may have been used by the 'police' as a warning or
example
> to terrorists. Hopefully he was not innocent and selected at random by
the
> police to be used as a warning.
>
>
> For what it is worth I was happy to hear that the 'police' in a country
> where the police do not carry guns were able to hit a target with 100%
> accuracy.
>
>
>
>
>
> "Dave Milne" <jeep@_nospam_milne.info> wrote in message
> news:fizEe.75965$G8.66732@text.news.blueyonder.co. uk...
> > Operation Kratos (the authority on which we have a shoot to the head
> > policy
> > to avoid hitting a bomb strapped round the torso), is an
intelligence-led
> > system which requires them to identify the target in advance and take
them
> > out. Clearly they took out their target very professionally (no
criticism
> > of
> > the officers at all), but someone in intell cocked up.
> >
> > Dave Milne, Scotland
> > '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
> >
> > "DougW" <post.replies@invalid.address> wrote in message
> > news:w6zEe.27333$mC.24246@okepread07...
> >> Dave Milne did pass the time by typing:
> >> > OTOH, it seems our intelligence is crap, as they admit they shot the
> > wrong
> >> > guy, and
> >> > there is some debate as to whether they gave any warning.
> >> >
> >> > http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4711021.stm
> >> >
> >>
> >> The guy vaulted the ticket barrier and ran straight for the train.
> >>
> >> Given all that's gone on there I'd have shot him too.
> >>
> >> Then again if you go to any metro you find the odd person that
> >> jumps the gate. Some subways now use a checkpoint you can't jump.
> >>
> >> Some people feel the need to do stupid things at the wrong time.
> >> These days being stupid can get you killed.
> >>
> >> It's like security where I work. The signs that say "Deadly Force
> >> Authorized" used to be a laugh. Now it's no joke.
> >>
> >> --
> >> DougW
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
>
done on tube stations). As our police don't normally carry guns he felt safe
in legging it.He lived in the same apartment block as some ---------
suspects, but not in the same apartment. There is some question over whether
these guys were policemen, but if they were they were marksmen trained by
the SAS. Looks like they got him 7 times in the head and once in the
shoulder.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Billy Ray" <Billy_Ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
news:9546c$42e6b7e5$42a1cc8c$19525@FUSE.NET...
> Dave,
>
> I was sporadically listening to these reports during my camping /
> off-roading visit to Canada. Part of the time the only radio reception
was
> a French station so I had some difficulty following their rapid speech
>
> Several questions came to mind when this occurred.
>
> It "seemed odd" that there was such a delay in the identification of the
> man.
>
> The contents of his rucksack and if anything was inside his coat was not
> mentioned.
>
> The following day's brief report that the man was "completely innocent"
did
> not address (or even mention) why he was in a house full of terrorists or
> was wearing a winter coat in July, or that the police were acting within
> current security rules of engagement.
>
> No further mention of the victim's failure to comply with the 'police'
order
> to stop, his running away, or his jumping onto a train to elude the
> 'police'
>
> The victims brother (also supposedly Brazilian) ,in an interview, did not
> sound like any Brazilian (Portuguese) accent I have ever heard.
>
> The whole story sounds fishy. Will we hear in a few days or weeks that
this
> --------- cell suspected they were being watched and sent a 'blocker' to
> gauge the 'police' response while the real terrorists went out the back
> door?
>
> The truth may never be known. He may have been innocent. He may have
been
> a red herring. He may have been used by the 'police' as a warning or
example
> to terrorists. Hopefully he was not innocent and selected at random by
the
> police to be used as a warning.
>
>
> For what it is worth I was happy to hear that the 'police' in a country
> where the police do not carry guns were able to hit a target with 100%
> accuracy.
>
>
>
>
>
> "Dave Milne" <jeep@_nospam_milne.info> wrote in message
> news:fizEe.75965$G8.66732@text.news.blueyonder.co. uk...
> > Operation Kratos (the authority on which we have a shoot to the head
> > policy
> > to avoid hitting a bomb strapped round the torso), is an
intelligence-led
> > system which requires them to identify the target in advance and take
them
> > out. Clearly they took out their target very professionally (no
criticism
> > of
> > the officers at all), but someone in intell cocked up.
> >
> > Dave Milne, Scotland
> > '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
> >
> > "DougW" <post.replies@invalid.address> wrote in message
> > news:w6zEe.27333$mC.24246@okepread07...
> >> Dave Milne did pass the time by typing:
> >> > OTOH, it seems our intelligence is crap, as they admit they shot the
> > wrong
> >> > guy, and
> >> > there is some debate as to whether they gave any warning.
> >> >
> >> > http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4711021.stm
> >> >
> >>
> >> The guy vaulted the ticket barrier and ran straight for the train.
> >>
> >> Given all that's gone on there I'd have shot him too.
> >>
> >> Then again if you go to any metro you find the odd person that
> >> jumps the gate. Some subways now use a checkpoint you can't jump.
> >>
> >> Some people feel the need to do stupid things at the wrong time.
> >> These days being stupid can get you killed.
> >>
> >> It's like security where I work. The signs that say "Deadly Force
> >> Authorized" used to be a laugh. Now it's no joke.
> >>
> >> --
> >> DougW
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
>
#263
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: multi-culturalism
It seems that he was an illegal immigrant (and immigrant checks are often
done on tube stations). As our police don't normally carry guns he felt safe
in legging it.He lived in the same apartment block as some ---------
suspects, but not in the same apartment. There is some question over whether
these guys were policemen, but if they were they were marksmen trained by
the SAS. Looks like they got him 7 times in the head and once in the
shoulder.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Billy Ray" <Billy_Ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
news:9546c$42e6b7e5$42a1cc8c$19525@FUSE.NET...
> Dave,
>
> I was sporadically listening to these reports during my camping /
> off-roading visit to Canada. Part of the time the only radio reception
was
> a French station so I had some difficulty following their rapid speech
>
> Several questions came to mind when this occurred.
>
> It "seemed odd" that there was such a delay in the identification of the
> man.
>
> The contents of his rucksack and if anything was inside his coat was not
> mentioned.
>
> The following day's brief report that the man was "completely innocent"
did
> not address (or even mention) why he was in a house full of terrorists or
> was wearing a winter coat in July, or that the police were acting within
> current security rules of engagement.
>
> No further mention of the victim's failure to comply with the 'police'
order
> to stop, his running away, or his jumping onto a train to elude the
> 'police'
>
> The victims brother (also supposedly Brazilian) ,in an interview, did not
> sound like any Brazilian (Portuguese) accent I have ever heard.
>
> The whole story sounds fishy. Will we hear in a few days or weeks that
this
> --------- cell suspected they were being watched and sent a 'blocker' to
> gauge the 'police' response while the real terrorists went out the back
> door?
>
> The truth may never be known. He may have been innocent. He may have
been
> a red herring. He may have been used by the 'police' as a warning or
example
> to terrorists. Hopefully he was not innocent and selected at random by
the
> police to be used as a warning.
>
>
> For what it is worth I was happy to hear that the 'police' in a country
> where the police do not carry guns were able to hit a target with 100%
> accuracy.
>
>
>
>
>
> "Dave Milne" <jeep@_nospam_milne.info> wrote in message
> news:fizEe.75965$G8.66732@text.news.blueyonder.co. uk...
> > Operation Kratos (the authority on which we have a shoot to the head
> > policy
> > to avoid hitting a bomb strapped round the torso), is an
intelligence-led
> > system which requires them to identify the target in advance and take
them
> > out. Clearly they took out their target very professionally (no
criticism
> > of
> > the officers at all), but someone in intell cocked up.
> >
> > Dave Milne, Scotland
> > '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
> >
> > "DougW" <post.replies@invalid.address> wrote in message
> > news:w6zEe.27333$mC.24246@okepread07...
> >> Dave Milne did pass the time by typing:
> >> > OTOH, it seems our intelligence is crap, as they admit they shot the
> > wrong
> >> > guy, and
> >> > there is some debate as to whether they gave any warning.
> >> >
> >> > http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4711021.stm
> >> >
> >>
> >> The guy vaulted the ticket barrier and ran straight for the train.
> >>
> >> Given all that's gone on there I'd have shot him too.
> >>
> >> Then again if you go to any metro you find the odd person that
> >> jumps the gate. Some subways now use a checkpoint you can't jump.
> >>
> >> Some people feel the need to do stupid things at the wrong time.
> >> These days being stupid can get you killed.
> >>
> >> It's like security where I work. The signs that say "Deadly Force
> >> Authorized" used to be a laugh. Now it's no joke.
> >>
> >> --
> >> DougW
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
>
done on tube stations). As our police don't normally carry guns he felt safe
in legging it.He lived in the same apartment block as some ---------
suspects, but not in the same apartment. There is some question over whether
these guys were policemen, but if they were they were marksmen trained by
the SAS. Looks like they got him 7 times in the head and once in the
shoulder.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Billy Ray" <Billy_Ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
news:9546c$42e6b7e5$42a1cc8c$19525@FUSE.NET...
> Dave,
>
> I was sporadically listening to these reports during my camping /
> off-roading visit to Canada. Part of the time the only radio reception
was
> a French station so I had some difficulty following their rapid speech
>
> Several questions came to mind when this occurred.
>
> It "seemed odd" that there was such a delay in the identification of the
> man.
>
> The contents of his rucksack and if anything was inside his coat was not
> mentioned.
>
> The following day's brief report that the man was "completely innocent"
did
> not address (or even mention) why he was in a house full of terrorists or
> was wearing a winter coat in July, or that the police were acting within
> current security rules of engagement.
>
> No further mention of the victim's failure to comply with the 'police'
order
> to stop, his running away, or his jumping onto a train to elude the
> 'police'
>
> The victims brother (also supposedly Brazilian) ,in an interview, did not
> sound like any Brazilian (Portuguese) accent I have ever heard.
>
> The whole story sounds fishy. Will we hear in a few days or weeks that
this
> --------- cell suspected they were being watched and sent a 'blocker' to
> gauge the 'police' response while the real terrorists went out the back
> door?
>
> The truth may never be known. He may have been innocent. He may have
been
> a red herring. He may have been used by the 'police' as a warning or
example
> to terrorists. Hopefully he was not innocent and selected at random by
the
> police to be used as a warning.
>
>
> For what it is worth I was happy to hear that the 'police' in a country
> where the police do not carry guns were able to hit a target with 100%
> accuracy.
>
>
>
>
>
> "Dave Milne" <jeep@_nospam_milne.info> wrote in message
> news:fizEe.75965$G8.66732@text.news.blueyonder.co. uk...
> > Operation Kratos (the authority on which we have a shoot to the head
> > policy
> > to avoid hitting a bomb strapped round the torso), is an
intelligence-led
> > system which requires them to identify the target in advance and take
them
> > out. Clearly they took out their target very professionally (no
criticism
> > of
> > the officers at all), but someone in intell cocked up.
> >
> > Dave Milne, Scotland
> > '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
> >
> > "DougW" <post.replies@invalid.address> wrote in message
> > news:w6zEe.27333$mC.24246@okepread07...
> >> Dave Milne did pass the time by typing:
> >> > OTOH, it seems our intelligence is crap, as they admit they shot the
> > wrong
> >> > guy, and
> >> > there is some debate as to whether they gave any warning.
> >> >
> >> > http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4711021.stm
> >> >
> >>
> >> The guy vaulted the ticket barrier and ran straight for the train.
> >>
> >> Given all that's gone on there I'd have shot him too.
> >>
> >> Then again if you go to any metro you find the odd person that
> >> jumps the gate. Some subways now use a checkpoint you can't jump.
> >>
> >> Some people feel the need to do stupid things at the wrong time.
> >> These days being stupid can get you killed.
> >>
> >> It's like security where I work. The signs that say "Deadly Force
> >> Authorized" used to be a laugh. Now it's no joke.
> >>
> >> --
> >> DougW
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
>
#264
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: multi-culturalism
It seems that he was an illegal immigrant (and immigrant checks are often
done on tube stations). As our police don't normally carry guns he felt safe
in legging it.He lived in the same apartment block as some ---------
suspects, but not in the same apartment. There is some question over whether
these guys were policemen, but if they were they were marksmen trained by
the SAS. Looks like they got him 7 times in the head and once in the
shoulder.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Billy Ray" <Billy_Ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
news:9546c$42e6b7e5$42a1cc8c$19525@FUSE.NET...
> Dave,
>
> I was sporadically listening to these reports during my camping /
> off-roading visit to Canada. Part of the time the only radio reception
was
> a French station so I had some difficulty following their rapid speech
>
> Several questions came to mind when this occurred.
>
> It "seemed odd" that there was such a delay in the identification of the
> man.
>
> The contents of his rucksack and if anything was inside his coat was not
> mentioned.
>
> The following day's brief report that the man was "completely innocent"
did
> not address (or even mention) why he was in a house full of terrorists or
> was wearing a winter coat in July, or that the police were acting within
> current security rules of engagement.
>
> No further mention of the victim's failure to comply with the 'police'
order
> to stop, his running away, or his jumping onto a train to elude the
> 'police'
>
> The victims brother (also supposedly Brazilian) ,in an interview, did not
> sound like any Brazilian (Portuguese) accent I have ever heard.
>
> The whole story sounds fishy. Will we hear in a few days or weeks that
this
> --------- cell suspected they were being watched and sent a 'blocker' to
> gauge the 'police' response while the real terrorists went out the back
> door?
>
> The truth may never be known. He may have been innocent. He may have
been
> a red herring. He may have been used by the 'police' as a warning or
example
> to terrorists. Hopefully he was not innocent and selected at random by
the
> police to be used as a warning.
>
>
> For what it is worth I was happy to hear that the 'police' in a country
> where the police do not carry guns were able to hit a target with 100%
> accuracy.
>
>
>
>
>
> "Dave Milne" <jeep@_nospam_milne.info> wrote in message
> news:fizEe.75965$G8.66732@text.news.blueyonder.co. uk...
> > Operation Kratos (the authority on which we have a shoot to the head
> > policy
> > to avoid hitting a bomb strapped round the torso), is an
intelligence-led
> > system which requires them to identify the target in advance and take
them
> > out. Clearly they took out their target very professionally (no
criticism
> > of
> > the officers at all), but someone in intell cocked up.
> >
> > Dave Milne, Scotland
> > '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
> >
> > "DougW" <post.replies@invalid.address> wrote in message
> > news:w6zEe.27333$mC.24246@okepread07...
> >> Dave Milne did pass the time by typing:
> >> > OTOH, it seems our intelligence is crap, as they admit they shot the
> > wrong
> >> > guy, and
> >> > there is some debate as to whether they gave any warning.
> >> >
> >> > http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4711021.stm
> >> >
> >>
> >> The guy vaulted the ticket barrier and ran straight for the train.
> >>
> >> Given all that's gone on there I'd have shot him too.
> >>
> >> Then again if you go to any metro you find the odd person that
> >> jumps the gate. Some subways now use a checkpoint you can't jump.
> >>
> >> Some people feel the need to do stupid things at the wrong time.
> >> These days being stupid can get you killed.
> >>
> >> It's like security where I work. The signs that say "Deadly Force
> >> Authorized" used to be a laugh. Now it's no joke.
> >>
> >> --
> >> DougW
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
>
done on tube stations). As our police don't normally carry guns he felt safe
in legging it.He lived in the same apartment block as some ---------
suspects, but not in the same apartment. There is some question over whether
these guys were policemen, but if they were they were marksmen trained by
the SAS. Looks like they got him 7 times in the head and once in the
shoulder.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Billy Ray" <Billy_Ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
news:9546c$42e6b7e5$42a1cc8c$19525@FUSE.NET...
> Dave,
>
> I was sporadically listening to these reports during my camping /
> off-roading visit to Canada. Part of the time the only radio reception
was
> a French station so I had some difficulty following their rapid speech
>
> Several questions came to mind when this occurred.
>
> It "seemed odd" that there was such a delay in the identification of the
> man.
>
> The contents of his rucksack and if anything was inside his coat was not
> mentioned.
>
> The following day's brief report that the man was "completely innocent"
did
> not address (or even mention) why he was in a house full of terrorists or
> was wearing a winter coat in July, or that the police were acting within
> current security rules of engagement.
>
> No further mention of the victim's failure to comply with the 'police'
order
> to stop, his running away, or his jumping onto a train to elude the
> 'police'
>
> The victims brother (also supposedly Brazilian) ,in an interview, did not
> sound like any Brazilian (Portuguese) accent I have ever heard.
>
> The whole story sounds fishy. Will we hear in a few days or weeks that
this
> --------- cell suspected they were being watched and sent a 'blocker' to
> gauge the 'police' response while the real terrorists went out the back
> door?
>
> The truth may never be known. He may have been innocent. He may have
been
> a red herring. He may have been used by the 'police' as a warning or
example
> to terrorists. Hopefully he was not innocent and selected at random by
the
> police to be used as a warning.
>
>
> For what it is worth I was happy to hear that the 'police' in a country
> where the police do not carry guns were able to hit a target with 100%
> accuracy.
>
>
>
>
>
> "Dave Milne" <jeep@_nospam_milne.info> wrote in message
> news:fizEe.75965$G8.66732@text.news.blueyonder.co. uk...
> > Operation Kratos (the authority on which we have a shoot to the head
> > policy
> > to avoid hitting a bomb strapped round the torso), is an
intelligence-led
> > system which requires them to identify the target in advance and take
them
> > out. Clearly they took out their target very professionally (no
criticism
> > of
> > the officers at all), but someone in intell cocked up.
> >
> > Dave Milne, Scotland
> > '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
> >
> > "DougW" <post.replies@invalid.address> wrote in message
> > news:w6zEe.27333$mC.24246@okepread07...
> >> Dave Milne did pass the time by typing:
> >> > OTOH, it seems our intelligence is crap, as they admit they shot the
> > wrong
> >> > guy, and
> >> > there is some debate as to whether they gave any warning.
> >> >
> >> > http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4711021.stm
> >> >
> >>
> >> The guy vaulted the ticket barrier and ran straight for the train.
> >>
> >> Given all that's gone on there I'd have shot him too.
> >>
> >> Then again if you go to any metro you find the odd person that
> >> jumps the gate. Some subways now use a checkpoint you can't jump.
> >>
> >> Some people feel the need to do stupid things at the wrong time.
> >> These days being stupid can get you killed.
> >>
> >> It's like security where I work. The signs that say "Deadly Force
> >> Authorized" used to be a laugh. Now it's no joke.
> >>
> >> --
> >> DougW
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
>
#265
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: multi-culturalism
It seems that he was an illegal immigrant (and immigrant checks are often
done on tube stations). As our police don't normally carry guns he felt safe
in legging it.He lived in the same apartment block as some ---------
suspects, but not in the same apartment. There is some question over whether
these guys were policemen, but if they were they were marksmen trained by
the SAS. Looks like they got him 7 times in the head and once in the
shoulder.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Billy Ray" <Billy_Ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
news:9546c$42e6b7e5$42a1cc8c$19525@FUSE.NET...
> Dave,
>
> I was sporadically listening to these reports during my camping /
> off-roading visit to Canada. Part of the time the only radio reception
was
> a French station so I had some difficulty following their rapid speech
>
> Several questions came to mind when this occurred.
>
> It "seemed odd" that there was such a delay in the identification of the
> man.
>
> The contents of his rucksack and if anything was inside his coat was not
> mentioned.
>
> The following day's brief report that the man was "completely innocent"
did
> not address (or even mention) why he was in a house full of terrorists or
> was wearing a winter coat in July, or that the police were acting within
> current security rules of engagement.
>
> No further mention of the victim's failure to comply with the 'police'
order
> to stop, his running away, or his jumping onto a train to elude the
> 'police'
>
> The victims brother (also supposedly Brazilian) ,in an interview, did not
> sound like any Brazilian (Portuguese) accent I have ever heard.
>
> The whole story sounds fishy. Will we hear in a few days or weeks that
this
> --------- cell suspected they were being watched and sent a 'blocker' to
> gauge the 'police' response while the real terrorists went out the back
> door?
>
> The truth may never be known. He may have been innocent. He may have
been
> a red herring. He may have been used by the 'police' as a warning or
example
> to terrorists. Hopefully he was not innocent and selected at random by
the
> police to be used as a warning.
>
>
> For what it is worth I was happy to hear that the 'police' in a country
> where the police do not carry guns were able to hit a target with 100%
> accuracy.
>
>
>
>
>
> "Dave Milne" <jeep@_nospam_milne.info> wrote in message
> news:fizEe.75965$G8.66732@text.news.blueyonder.co. uk...
> > Operation Kratos (the authority on which we have a shoot to the head
> > policy
> > to avoid hitting a bomb strapped round the torso), is an
intelligence-led
> > system which requires them to identify the target in advance and take
them
> > out. Clearly they took out their target very professionally (no
criticism
> > of
> > the officers at all), but someone in intell cocked up.
> >
> > Dave Milne, Scotland
> > '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
> >
> > "DougW" <post.replies@invalid.address> wrote in message
> > news:w6zEe.27333$mC.24246@okepread07...
> >> Dave Milne did pass the time by typing:
> >> > OTOH, it seems our intelligence is crap, as they admit they shot the
> > wrong
> >> > guy, and
> >> > there is some debate as to whether they gave any warning.
> >> >
> >> > http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4711021.stm
> >> >
> >>
> >> The guy vaulted the ticket barrier and ran straight for the train.
> >>
> >> Given all that's gone on there I'd have shot him too.
> >>
> >> Then again if you go to any metro you find the odd person that
> >> jumps the gate. Some subways now use a checkpoint you can't jump.
> >>
> >> Some people feel the need to do stupid things at the wrong time.
> >> These days being stupid can get you killed.
> >>
> >> It's like security where I work. The signs that say "Deadly Force
> >> Authorized" used to be a laugh. Now it's no joke.
> >>
> >> --
> >> DougW
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
>
done on tube stations). As our police don't normally carry guns he felt safe
in legging it.He lived in the same apartment block as some ---------
suspects, but not in the same apartment. There is some question over whether
these guys were policemen, but if they were they were marksmen trained by
the SAS. Looks like they got him 7 times in the head and once in the
shoulder.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Billy Ray" <Billy_Ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
news:9546c$42e6b7e5$42a1cc8c$19525@FUSE.NET...
> Dave,
>
> I was sporadically listening to these reports during my camping /
> off-roading visit to Canada. Part of the time the only radio reception
was
> a French station so I had some difficulty following their rapid speech
>
> Several questions came to mind when this occurred.
>
> It "seemed odd" that there was such a delay in the identification of the
> man.
>
> The contents of his rucksack and if anything was inside his coat was not
> mentioned.
>
> The following day's brief report that the man was "completely innocent"
did
> not address (or even mention) why he was in a house full of terrorists or
> was wearing a winter coat in July, or that the police were acting within
> current security rules of engagement.
>
> No further mention of the victim's failure to comply with the 'police'
order
> to stop, his running away, or his jumping onto a train to elude the
> 'police'
>
> The victims brother (also supposedly Brazilian) ,in an interview, did not
> sound like any Brazilian (Portuguese) accent I have ever heard.
>
> The whole story sounds fishy. Will we hear in a few days or weeks that
this
> --------- cell suspected they were being watched and sent a 'blocker' to
> gauge the 'police' response while the real terrorists went out the back
> door?
>
> The truth may never be known. He may have been innocent. He may have
been
> a red herring. He may have been used by the 'police' as a warning or
example
> to terrorists. Hopefully he was not innocent and selected at random by
the
> police to be used as a warning.
>
>
> For what it is worth I was happy to hear that the 'police' in a country
> where the police do not carry guns were able to hit a target with 100%
> accuracy.
>
>
>
>
>
> "Dave Milne" <jeep@_nospam_milne.info> wrote in message
> news:fizEe.75965$G8.66732@text.news.blueyonder.co. uk...
> > Operation Kratos (the authority on which we have a shoot to the head
> > policy
> > to avoid hitting a bomb strapped round the torso), is an
intelligence-led
> > system which requires them to identify the target in advance and take
them
> > out. Clearly they took out their target very professionally (no
criticism
> > of
> > the officers at all), but someone in intell cocked up.
> >
> > Dave Milne, Scotland
> > '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
> >
> > "DougW" <post.replies@invalid.address> wrote in message
> > news:w6zEe.27333$mC.24246@okepread07...
> >> Dave Milne did pass the time by typing:
> >> > OTOH, it seems our intelligence is crap, as they admit they shot the
> > wrong
> >> > guy, and
> >> > there is some debate as to whether they gave any warning.
> >> >
> >> > http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4711021.stm
> >> >
> >>
> >> The guy vaulted the ticket barrier and ran straight for the train.
> >>
> >> Given all that's gone on there I'd have shot him too.
> >>
> >> Then again if you go to any metro you find the odd person that
> >> jumps the gate. Some subways now use a checkpoint you can't jump.
> >>
> >> Some people feel the need to do stupid things at the wrong time.
> >> These days being stupid can get you killed.
> >>
> >> It's like security where I work. The signs that say "Deadly Force
> >> Authorized" used to be a laugh. Now it's no joke.
> >>
> >> --
> >> DougW
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
>
#266
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: multi-culturalism
We had several conventional wars over it. Ireland is a bit different; the
northern irish (protestant) don't want to be one country with the southern
irish (catholic). That's the conventional line; the truth is that the IRA
and the ulster lot ran protection rackets using the above as an excuse. As
long as everyone paid up to one side or the other, they were happy. Not
really about occupation or religion.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Billy Ray" <Billy_Ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
news:bc862$42e6bc72$42a1cc8c$20400@FUSE.NET...
>
> 'political prisoners' ; they swiftly realised that they had better stop or
> > else, and the misty-eyed "my great grandpappy was a leprechaun"
> > Irish-Americans stopped funding them).
> >
>
> Weren't the Scots kinda upset about the British occupation of their
country
> for a while?
>
>
northern irish (protestant) don't want to be one country with the southern
irish (catholic). That's the conventional line; the truth is that the IRA
and the ulster lot ran protection rackets using the above as an excuse. As
long as everyone paid up to one side or the other, they were happy. Not
really about occupation or religion.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Billy Ray" <Billy_Ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
news:bc862$42e6bc72$42a1cc8c$20400@FUSE.NET...
>
> 'political prisoners' ; they swiftly realised that they had better stop or
> > else, and the misty-eyed "my great grandpappy was a leprechaun"
> > Irish-Americans stopped funding them).
> >
>
> Weren't the Scots kinda upset about the British occupation of their
country
> for a while?
>
>
#267
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: multi-culturalism
We had several conventional wars over it. Ireland is a bit different; the
northern irish (protestant) don't want to be one country with the southern
irish (catholic). That's the conventional line; the truth is that the IRA
and the ulster lot ran protection rackets using the above as an excuse. As
long as everyone paid up to one side or the other, they were happy. Not
really about occupation or religion.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Billy Ray" <Billy_Ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
news:bc862$42e6bc72$42a1cc8c$20400@FUSE.NET...
>
> 'political prisoners' ; they swiftly realised that they had better stop or
> > else, and the misty-eyed "my great grandpappy was a leprechaun"
> > Irish-Americans stopped funding them).
> >
>
> Weren't the Scots kinda upset about the British occupation of their
country
> for a while?
>
>
northern irish (protestant) don't want to be one country with the southern
irish (catholic). That's the conventional line; the truth is that the IRA
and the ulster lot ran protection rackets using the above as an excuse. As
long as everyone paid up to one side or the other, they were happy. Not
really about occupation or religion.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Billy Ray" <Billy_Ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
news:bc862$42e6bc72$42a1cc8c$20400@FUSE.NET...
>
> 'political prisoners' ; they swiftly realised that they had better stop or
> > else, and the misty-eyed "my great grandpappy was a leprechaun"
> > Irish-Americans stopped funding them).
> >
>
> Weren't the Scots kinda upset about the British occupation of their
country
> for a while?
>
>
#268
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: multi-culturalism
We had several conventional wars over it. Ireland is a bit different; the
northern irish (protestant) don't want to be one country with the southern
irish (catholic). That's the conventional line; the truth is that the IRA
and the ulster lot ran protection rackets using the above as an excuse. As
long as everyone paid up to one side or the other, they were happy. Not
really about occupation or religion.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Billy Ray" <Billy_Ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
news:bc862$42e6bc72$42a1cc8c$20400@FUSE.NET...
>
> 'political prisoners' ; they swiftly realised that they had better stop or
> > else, and the misty-eyed "my great grandpappy was a leprechaun"
> > Irish-Americans stopped funding them).
> >
>
> Weren't the Scots kinda upset about the British occupation of their
country
> for a while?
>
>
northern irish (protestant) don't want to be one country with the southern
irish (catholic). That's the conventional line; the truth is that the IRA
and the ulster lot ran protection rackets using the above as an excuse. As
long as everyone paid up to one side or the other, they were happy. Not
really about occupation or religion.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Billy Ray" <Billy_Ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
news:bc862$42e6bc72$42a1cc8c$20400@FUSE.NET...
>
> 'political prisoners' ; they swiftly realised that they had better stop or
> > else, and the misty-eyed "my great grandpappy was a leprechaun"
> > Irish-Americans stopped funding them).
> >
>
> Weren't the Scots kinda upset about the British occupation of their
country
> for a while?
>
>
#269
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: multi-culturalism
We had several conventional wars over it. Ireland is a bit different; the
northern irish (protestant) don't want to be one country with the southern
irish (catholic). That's the conventional line; the truth is that the IRA
and the ulster lot ran protection rackets using the above as an excuse. As
long as everyone paid up to one side or the other, they were happy. Not
really about occupation or religion.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Billy Ray" <Billy_Ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
news:bc862$42e6bc72$42a1cc8c$20400@FUSE.NET...
>
> 'political prisoners' ; they swiftly realised that they had better stop or
> > else, and the misty-eyed "my great grandpappy was a leprechaun"
> > Irish-Americans stopped funding them).
> >
>
> Weren't the Scots kinda upset about the British occupation of their
country
> for a while?
>
>
northern irish (protestant) don't want to be one country with the southern
irish (catholic). That's the conventional line; the truth is that the IRA
and the ulster lot ran protection rackets using the above as an excuse. As
long as everyone paid up to one side or the other, they were happy. Not
really about occupation or religion.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Billy Ray" <Billy_Ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
news:bc862$42e6bc72$42a1cc8c$20400@FUSE.NET...
>
> 'political prisoners' ; they swiftly realised that they had better stop or
> > else, and the misty-eyed "my great grandpappy was a leprechaun"
> > Irish-Americans stopped funding them).
> >
>
> Weren't the Scots kinda upset about the British occupation of their
country
> for a while?
>
>
#270
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: multi-culturalism
My thought all along was it was a SAS operation not 'police'. Such
operations also happen in the US where law enforcement agencies will....
'borrow'... military personnel on detached duty or members of the state's
'National Guard' as it is 'illegal' in most cases for the US military to be
used against American Citizens within the borders of the US.
"Dave Milne" <jeep@_nospam_milne.info> wrote in message
news:ETGFe.77876$G8.26215@text.news.blueyonder.co. uk...
> It seems that he was an illegal immigrant (and immigrant checks are often
> done on tube stations). As our police don't normally carry guns he felt
> safe
> in legging it.He lived in the same apartment block as some ---------
> suspects, but not in the same apartment. There is some question over
> whether
> these guys were policemen, but if they were they were marksmen trained by
> the SAS. Looks like they got him 7 times in the head and once in the
> shoulder.
>
> Dave Milne, Scotland
> '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
>
> "Billy Ray" <Billy_Ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
> news:9546c$42e6b7e5$42a1cc8c$19525@FUSE.NET...
>> Dave,
>>
>> I was sporadically listening to these reports during my camping /
>> off-roading visit to Canada. Part of the time the only radio reception
> was
>> a French station so I had some difficulty following their rapid speech
>>
>> Several questions came to mind when this occurred.
>>
>> It "seemed odd" that there was such a delay in the identification of the
>> man.
>>
>> The contents of his rucksack and if anything was inside his coat was not
>> mentioned.
>>
>> The following day's brief report that the man was "completely innocent"
> did
>> not address (or even mention) why he was in a house full of terrorists or
>> was wearing a winter coat in July, or that the police were acting within
>> current security rules of engagement.
>>
>> No further mention of the victim's failure to comply with the 'police'
> order
>> to stop, his running away, or his jumping onto a train to elude the
>> 'police'
>>
>> The victims brother (also supposedly Brazilian) ,in an interview, did not
>> sound like any Brazilian (Portuguese) accent I have ever heard.
>>
>> The whole story sounds fishy. Will we hear in a few days or weeks that
> this
>> --------- cell suspected they were being watched and sent a 'blocker' to
>> gauge the 'police' response while the real terrorists went out the back
>> door?
>>
>> The truth may never be known. He may have been innocent. He may have
> been
>> a red herring. He may have been used by the 'police' as a warning or
> example
>> to terrorists. Hopefully he was not innocent and selected at random by
> the
>> police to be used as a warning.
>>
>>
>> For what it is worth I was happy to hear that the 'police' in a country
>> where the police do not carry guns were able to hit a target with 100%
>> accuracy.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> "Dave Milne" <jeep@_nospam_milne.info> wrote in message
>> news:fizEe.75965$G8.66732@text.news.blueyonder.co. uk...
>> > Operation Kratos (the authority on which we have a shoot to the head
>> > policy
>> > to avoid hitting a bomb strapped round the torso), is an
> intelligence-led
>> > system which requires them to identify the target in advance and take
> them
>> > out. Clearly they took out their target very professionally (no
> criticism
>> > of
>> > the officers at all), but someone in intell cocked up.
>> >
>> > Dave Milne, Scotland
>> > '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
>> >
>> > "DougW" <post.replies@invalid.address> wrote in message
>> > news:w6zEe.27333$mC.24246@okepread07...
>> >> Dave Milne did pass the time by typing:
>> >> > OTOH, it seems our intelligence is crap, as they admit they shot the
>> > wrong
>> >> > guy, and
>> >> > there is some debate as to whether they gave any warning.
>> >> >
>> >> > http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4711021.stm
>> >> >
>> >>
>> >> The guy vaulted the ticket barrier and ran straight for the train.
>> >>
>> >> Given all that's gone on there I'd have shot him too.
>> >>
>> >> Then again if you go to any metro you find the odd person that
>> >> jumps the gate. Some subways now use a checkpoint you can't jump.
>> >>
>> >> Some people feel the need to do stupid things at the wrong time.
>> >> These days being stupid can get you killed.
>> >>
>> >> It's like security where I work. The signs that say "Deadly Force
>> >> Authorized" used to be a laugh. Now it's no joke.
>> >>
>> >> --
>> >> DougW
>> >>
>> >>
>> >
>> >
>>
>>
>
>
operations also happen in the US where law enforcement agencies will....
'borrow'... military personnel on detached duty or members of the state's
'National Guard' as it is 'illegal' in most cases for the US military to be
used against American Citizens within the borders of the US.
"Dave Milne" <jeep@_nospam_milne.info> wrote in message
news:ETGFe.77876$G8.26215@text.news.blueyonder.co. uk...
> It seems that he was an illegal immigrant (and immigrant checks are often
> done on tube stations). As our police don't normally carry guns he felt
> safe
> in legging it.He lived in the same apartment block as some ---------
> suspects, but not in the same apartment. There is some question over
> whether
> these guys were policemen, but if they were they were marksmen trained by
> the SAS. Looks like they got him 7 times in the head and once in the
> shoulder.
>
> Dave Milne, Scotland
> '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
>
> "Billy Ray" <Billy_Ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
> news:9546c$42e6b7e5$42a1cc8c$19525@FUSE.NET...
>> Dave,
>>
>> I was sporadically listening to these reports during my camping /
>> off-roading visit to Canada. Part of the time the only radio reception
> was
>> a French station so I had some difficulty following their rapid speech
>>
>> Several questions came to mind when this occurred.
>>
>> It "seemed odd" that there was such a delay in the identification of the
>> man.
>>
>> The contents of his rucksack and if anything was inside his coat was not
>> mentioned.
>>
>> The following day's brief report that the man was "completely innocent"
> did
>> not address (or even mention) why he was in a house full of terrorists or
>> was wearing a winter coat in July, or that the police were acting within
>> current security rules of engagement.
>>
>> No further mention of the victim's failure to comply with the 'police'
> order
>> to stop, his running away, or his jumping onto a train to elude the
>> 'police'
>>
>> The victims brother (also supposedly Brazilian) ,in an interview, did not
>> sound like any Brazilian (Portuguese) accent I have ever heard.
>>
>> The whole story sounds fishy. Will we hear in a few days or weeks that
> this
>> --------- cell suspected they were being watched and sent a 'blocker' to
>> gauge the 'police' response while the real terrorists went out the back
>> door?
>>
>> The truth may never be known. He may have been innocent. He may have
> been
>> a red herring. He may have been used by the 'police' as a warning or
> example
>> to terrorists. Hopefully he was not innocent and selected at random by
> the
>> police to be used as a warning.
>>
>>
>> For what it is worth I was happy to hear that the 'police' in a country
>> where the police do not carry guns were able to hit a target with 100%
>> accuracy.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> "Dave Milne" <jeep@_nospam_milne.info> wrote in message
>> news:fizEe.75965$G8.66732@text.news.blueyonder.co. uk...
>> > Operation Kratos (the authority on which we have a shoot to the head
>> > policy
>> > to avoid hitting a bomb strapped round the torso), is an
> intelligence-led
>> > system which requires them to identify the target in advance and take
> them
>> > out. Clearly they took out their target very professionally (no
> criticism
>> > of
>> > the officers at all), but someone in intell cocked up.
>> >
>> > Dave Milne, Scotland
>> > '91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
>> >
>> > "DougW" <post.replies@invalid.address> wrote in message
>> > news:w6zEe.27333$mC.24246@okepread07...
>> >> Dave Milne did pass the time by typing:
>> >> > OTOH, it seems our intelligence is crap, as they admit they shot the
>> > wrong
>> >> > guy, and
>> >> > there is some debate as to whether they gave any warning.
>> >> >
>> >> > http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4711021.stm
>> >> >
>> >>
>> >> The guy vaulted the ticket barrier and ran straight for the train.
>> >>
>> >> Given all that's gone on there I'd have shot him too.
>> >>
>> >> Then again if you go to any metro you find the odd person that
>> >> jumps the gate. Some subways now use a checkpoint you can't jump.
>> >>
>> >> Some people feel the need to do stupid things at the wrong time.
>> >> These days being stupid can get you killed.
>> >>
>> >> It's like security where I work. The signs that say "Deadly Force
>> >> Authorized" used to be a laugh. Now it's no joke.
>> >>
>> >> --
>> >> DougW
>> >>
>> >>
>> >
>> >
>>
>>
>
>