• HeartyBeast
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    -98 months ago

    The analyst told her friend that the police could access what was thought of as private. That was the crime. Being honest about what the police can do.

    Do you suggest police analysts should be fully transparent all the time, as in “Hey bob, the cops know you are going to raid the bank tomorrow, better re-arrange”?

    • @ChicoSuave@lemmy.world
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      398 months ago

      Yes. The police, like any government agency, needs to state both the scope of its work and provide metrics for how taxpayers can expect their money spent. This expenditure should include how it achieve its goals and what progress should look like. Then let the people judge the methods are consistent with public expectations of accountability.

      Police have repeatedly shown an incapability to behave, respect, or function as a person who has to be responsible for their actions. They cannot be allowed to operate without oversight.

      • HeartyBeast
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        08 months ago

        The police, like any government agency, needs to state both the scope of its work and provide metrics for how taxpayers can expect their money spent.

        That would be in the charter as set out by the UK parliament. It doesn’t include the requirement that suspects be tipped off about ongoing investigations.

    • @jonne
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      118 months ago

      They should be open about how investigative tools work, and what the current privacy expectations are, yes. In the end they have to present their evidence in court, and that includes things like this.

    • @PineRune@lemmy.world
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      68 months ago

      Should they prevent a crime or watch it happen knowing they could have stopped it just to get an arrest? What will happen in cases of murder?

      • @chemical_cutthroat@lemmy.world
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        238 months ago

        Allowing the police to make up the rules as they go and then justify them later is not the answer to a civilized society. That’s how you end up with a police state. We have privacy laws and basic human rights for a reason. If the cops want to circumvent them, then the laws change first. We are not a society that should accept shooting first and asking questions later.

        • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          One of the reasons the Brexiters - who are still in Government - openly stated for Leaving the EU was so that they could leave the European Convention Of Human Rights, since being a signatory of that Convention is a requirement of EU membership.

          The British “elites” are very much not believers in the riff-raff having Rights that superceed their mechanisms for controlling the masses if there is an ultimate genuinelly independent enforcer of those Rights (such as the European Court of Human Rights) - the most favored control mechanisms in the UK have an appearence of fairness whilst being de facto designed for operating differently or being easy to subvert, so a trully independent Human Rights mechanism whose judges didn’t went to the same very expensive and very select private schools as the English power elites is borderline unnacceptable (clearly in the case of Brexiter leaders, absolutelly so) for said power elites.

          PS: All this to say that in Britain the problem is a lot deeper than merelly the police, who to a large extent are just hired enforcers in a system designed to “keep people in their place”, a mindset probably derived from the horror of the British Elites at what happenned next door in France during the Revolution Française (the political British system is one of the ones in Europe whoch has change the least for over a century).