David Hughes has a list of recent events showing the modern British police attitude:
Last week, this newspaper carried a striking photograph of a passer-by at the Notting Hill Carnival trying to trip up a young knifeman who appeared to have just stabbed someone.
At the back of the picture, a man was clutching a bleeding stomach wound. On the left were two uniformed police officers, watching events unfold. They appear to have made no attempt to intercept the man: indeed, he seems to have run right past them. It was left to the sightseer — later identified as Valentine Simatchenko, a former Russian policeman — to try to intervene. Fortunately, the man with the knife was later arrested and charged.
[. . .]
The common theme in all these cases — and many more — is the institutional petulance displayed by some police officers. They throw their weight around because they can; they go for the easy, not the hard, arrests; they act as though they are the law, rather than its upholders. Such officers may be a small minority, but they have a disproportionately damaging impact on the image of the police. It has helped sour the force’s relationship with those who should be its natural allies.
As you can see, this isn’t new, although it seems much more prevalent than back in the day:
H/T to Chris Greaves for the original link.
We’re public guardians, bold but wary,
And of ourselves, we take good care,
To risk our precious lives, we’re chary,
When danger looms, we’re never there
But when we meet some helpless woman,
Or little boys that do no harm
Chorus:
We run them in, We run them in,
We run them in, We run them in,
We show them, we’re the bold gendarmes,
We run them in, We run them in,
We run them in, We run them in,
We show them, we’re the bold gendarmes!
Comment by Nicholas — September 8, 2011 @ 10:34