Steven @ Tue, 2007-09-18 13:06
An investigation into police officers who removed their name badges during the Saturday 8th APEC protest have been cleared, citing the badges compromised the safety of the officers as they could be used against them. This is despite protesters claiming that many of the officers wore badges attached with velcro. The clearing comes after public criticism that name tags were removed so that the officers could not be identified.
Human Rights Monitors member Dale Mills took over 200 photographs [2] of officers with removed name badges. The Sydney Morning Herald [2] reports that a video clip taken by Drew Bowie has one officer saying "It's one of the policies the bosses have this week".
I find the explanation given by officers to be false, deliberately misleading, and illogical. There are a number of reasons this:
- It would be extremely difficult to remove a name tag during a scuffle with a strong, well-equipped officer.
- The pins in the name tag would have to be bent 90 degrees in order to be used as a stabbing weapon. This could not happen during a scuffle.
- If the pins were on a hinge, they would need to be rotated out 90 degrees and held at that angle. This highly dexterous task could not be achieved during a scuffle.
- Removing an officer's pin would be just as difficult as unclipping and removing any of the officer's other weapons. It would illogical for a protester to go for such an ineffective weapon
- The pin metal is too weak and prone to bending to be an effective weapon
- There are far more dangerous implements that could be used as weapons: rocks, rings, protester poster sticks.
- Officers were not searching protesters, as indicated by officers being hit by darts and an iron bar. If the use of weapons was a concern, protesters would have been more carefully inspected.
- If this was a valid concern, police badges used in normal street duties would have been replaced with velcro substitutes prior to this. The long-standing practise of retention security on police belts indicates this policy.
Police Commissioner Andrew Scipione originally stated that "There are times when officers might lose those badges in a scuffle." However, as the protests were largely peaceful, it became apparent that this could not be the case for so many officers. The linked video is soft and of low-quality. It would need to undergo forensic video analysis for it to be taken seriously.



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