Police may ban future marches to prevent disorder Police may ban anti-Government marches through central London to prevent further disorder and strain on officer numbers.
By Martin Beckford, Heidi Blake and Steven Swinford The Metropolitan Police Commissioner, Sir Paul Stephenson, said that outlawing the demonstations was an option for the authorities but conceded it could anger protestors further.
He admitted he was “very worried” about the effect on law and order in town centres and suburbs caused by large numbers of officers being sent to the centre of the capital.
Despite widespread criticism over the policing of the protests, and warnings that the Met’s tactics risk leading to the death of an innocent bystander, Sir Paul said he was proud of the professionalism of the 3,000 officers on duty last week.
It emerged that 182 people, most aged between 17 and 25, have been arrested in four demonstrations against state spending cuts and the planned rise in university tuition fees over the past month, with many of them described as ordinary students who did not set out to take part in riots and had not been in trouble before.
Detective Chief Superintendent Matt Horne said the number arrested could grow considerably as 80 officers study video footage.
Police will soon be able to use a person's race as a basis to carry out a stop and search under draft guidance which threatens a row with civil liberties groups. Published: 7:00AM BST 16 Oct 2010
Liberty said the draft proposal ''flies in the face of recommendations in Sir William Macpherson's Inquiry'' into the 1993 murder of black teenager Stephen Lawrence.
The proposed changes to the Police and Criminal Evidence Act (Pace) guidance, which governs the exercise of police powers, said that while officers must take particular care not to discriminate on the grounds of race, it may be appropriate ''in response to a specific threat or incident''.
It read: ''Officers must also take particular care not to discriminate against members of minority ethnic groups in exercising the powers.
''There may be circumstances, however, where it is appropriate for officers to take account of an individual's ethnic origin in selecting persons and vehicles to be stopped in response to a specific threat or incident, but this must not be the sole reason for the stop.''
This could include ''when the authorising officer reasonably believes that those likely to be responsible are associated with particular ethnic identities and passes that information on to the officers exercising the powers'', the draft proposals said.
FROM CBC N.L. police need no reason to stop drivers Province's Highway Traffic Act changes Friday Last Updated: Thursday, September 30, 2010 | 6:43 PM NT CBC News
Police in Newfoundland and Labrador will be able to pull over drivers without having to give a reason beginning Friday. Legislative changes made to the Highway Traffic Act to address safety on the province's highways come into effect Oct. 1. Government Services Minister Kevin O'Brien said it's part of an effort to crack down on impaired driving.
"We brought that forward because the police were having a problem in regards to having a specific item to pull a driver over, had to be visual and if you didn't have a specific item to pull them over and they were impaired or under the influence of drugs, or whatever, there is a perception that it wouldn't hold up in court," O'Brien said Thursday.
When the change was proposed last spring, St. John's criminal lawyer Bob Simmons said it would give police too much power and could lead to abuse.
"Right now for police to stop people, they have to have a justifiable objective cause. Why is that? Because if we don't have a reasonable rational reason for police to stop someone then the powers can be misused. That's the law as it presently sits," he said in June.
Beginning Friday, texting with a hand-held device while driving will also be illegal. Fines will range from $100 to $400.
PARIS, Sept. 21 (UPI) -- International police networks are needed to thwart the radicalization of the world's youth, the head of Interpol said Tuesday in Paris.
Interpol Secretary-General Ronald K. Noble told those attending the Association of Chiefs of Police summit the Internet has made it easier for terrorist organizations to radicalize youth. And the worldwide nature of the Internet, he said, requires a global law enforcement response.
"The advent of the Internet has made the process of radicalization easier to achieve and the process of combating it that much more difficult, because many of the behaviors associated with it are not in and of themselves criminal," Noble said in an Interpol release.
"The threat is global; it is virtual; and it is on our doorsteps."
Noble said the number of extremist Web sites has skyrocketed from 12 in 1998 to 4,500 just eight years later.
He said Interpol's ability to link police worldwide through its communications system, global databases and network of bureaus helps front-line officers get the information they need to establish the links between terrorism and other criminal activities.
"It is only through Interpol's network that this type of information can be disseminated quickly throughout the world in order for law enforcement to effectively counter the virtual base of operations which extremists exploit on the Internet," Noble said.
FROM CBC "NEWS" Facebook speeding boast leads to conviction Last Updated: Tuesday, August 10, 2010 | 3:59 PM ET
A 19-year-old man from a Toronto suburb has pleaded guilty to careless driving after boasting on Facebook that he drove 100 kilometres an hour over the speed limit on a residential street.
Vladimir Rigenco was banned from driving for six months and sentenced to 12 months' probation after entering his plea Aug. 5, York Regional Police said in a statement released Tuesday.
York police were approached by an American man on April 9 who informed them of a post made on a Facebook group in which Rigenco described how he drove his 2006 BMW M5S in excess of 100 km/h over the speed limit on Apple Blossom Drive in Vaughan, just north of Toronto.
According to the police release, several of those who follow the BMW 5 Series Facebook group "lambasted" him and "proved themselves responsible by not encouraging the suspect's behaviour."
Police investigated the case and arrested Rigenco on April 16 and charged him with careless driving.
As part of his sentence, Rigenco also has to complete a remedial driving course and pay a $1,000 fine.