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Peter Rosengard

By

Peter Rosengard,

Peter Rosengard

Opinion

Wrong arm (and wrist) of the law

May 6, 2013 08:40
2 min read

The editor has had quite a week. He tweeted: "I've had car vandalised, been pick-pocketed and had pram stolen from locked car. In leafy suburbia." And "the police don't give a damn".

I am of course hugely sympathetic but it could have been worse. It did at least ebb and flow over the whole week and didn't erupt in one great, cataclysmic, criminal episode.

And it's not just media folk like my editor they're after. Just last Saturday morning, I was standing in Clifton Road, Maida Vale, waiting for my friend Toby who, for 10 minutes, had been trying to master the complexities of text-parking in Westminster, when he suddenly took off at speed like an enraged hippo - that is to say as rapidly as a large, very overweight, red-faced man in his 60s can manage while running across the road bellowing: "Stop! Thieves!"

Two tough-looking Eastern European men in their 20s were walking casually towards me carrying two fully laden Harrods bags remarkably like the two bags I had loaded half-an-hour earlier into the boot of Toby's car. So I, too, started shouting: "Put those bags down!" (I admit I embellished this slightly with a suitable expletive just to show that I really meant it.)

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