Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

What can you ask the police

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • What can you ask the police

    Hi I

    I have a habit of phoning up the my OIC's and asking them questions. Generally they are polite and answer however Ii want to know what they have to tell me. My FA has mental health issues and I was advised that the ABE interview would take place last week. As my FA made the first report to social service rather than the police and knowing her nature, I was wondering if the she actually attend for an ABE at all. So I rang today and asked my OIC did it take place. He said that he could not tell me. Why not I thought? I did not ask for details of what was said but just to see if she attended. I hoping that she decided that going to the police with a false accusation was a step too far. So can I ask if the ABE has taken place or is this top secret?

    I also asked a question about the directions of questions they were asking when I arrest. They questions appear to be saying that Ii was some predator who targeted women via dating websites, as this is how I meet this FA. So Ii asked them where did they get this idea from? The OIC said that he thought of it and it is a 'legitimate line of inquiry@2. I just thought the OIC is going to spend months wasting time up a theory he plugged out of the thing air and I am the one going to suffer for it.

    It does appear to me that it is either illegal or against policy to use your brain in the police. I know they are going to spend months speaking to people to gather evidence against me when I know there is none. If everyone tells the truth then all the police will gather is normal relationship stuff and normal breakup stuff. I wish they could triage these case better so they do not waste months or even years on them.

  • #2
    I'm sorry to hear of your issues.

    I can't answer the question, however, I once emailed my detective and he replied to my solicitor saying he will not speak to my directly as I am a suspect and all questions should go through my solicitor.

    Comment


    • #3
      The police declined the offer of evidence

      After the police took my phone I knew they would have access to text messages that seriously cast doubt on my FA cases. I was keeping these quiet in case I needed them for my defence if I went to court. I was able to recover my old number by buying a new phone and contacting my mobile provider. I restored my app's and recovered my cloud based backups.

      Anyway as the police would have access to the 300+ texts when the IT Forensic Team had done their job, I decided to offer them copies of the text to save time but for some reason they declined the offer. They said they would rather wait. Why would they rather wait? Why wouldn't they want evidence from me?

      I cannot think of a valid legal reason that they declined the offer. I think the are simply trying to save a dying case but unfortunately it is terminal.

      Comment

      Working...
      X