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01-05-2011, 10:21 AM | #1 | |||
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then there's no wondering why the union doesn't want members being exposed to further action. Maybe WA police should start following their own rules and using use proper speed detectors. |
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01-05-2011, 12:01 PM | #2 | ||
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If you believe the mantra that speed kills, then this is a logical conclusion. Not only will the crim be putting lives at risk, but so will the coppers doing the chasing. If they "wiped off five" how many lives will be saved???? So I think that while they believe their own rubbish about the irresponsisbility and outright danger associated with exceeding the speed limit, then they must not exceed it themselves. (ps. this also applies to all emergency service vehicles).
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XA coupe 8.8sec @ 150mph http://www.fordforums.com.au/showthr...coupe+drag+car BA GT-P for the shed Mustang GT for the other half E3 chubsport - fully fat (and slow), sitting there waiting for me to get sick of it and sell it. BA XR6T for a daily NT Pajero for the bush XB 4 door project- swallows a BF xr6 turbo My dad is a generous bloke. He gave away his dead car batteries free of charge.... |
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01-05-2011, 12:12 PM | #3 | |||
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02-05-2011, 01:05 AM | #4 | |||
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The crook is speeding away, and the police obey the speed limit, and the crook gets away. While this is happening the ambulance is plodding along at the speed limit, taking however long it would take to get there... She dies. The alternative - Police and emergency service vehicle drivers are trained to drive to the conditions at the time, and are given the power to break the road rules therefore the police catch the crook and the ambulance gets there in time to save her life. Don't you think it's a bit better that way? The amount of lives saved by Police and emergency vehicles speeding, as opposed to the minuscule amount of lives lost is astounding. It's usually the crook smashing into someone else - which in many cases they would have been doing regardless of if they were being pursued or not. There are pursuit controllers for police pursuits and as soon as ANYTHING becomes less than controlled it's called off. You sound like a whining 18 year old who has been given a ticket or two. |
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02-05-2011, 01:11 AM | #5 | |||
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Daniel |
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02-05-2011, 04:33 AM | #6 | |||
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In the scenario it is not the patient loaded time and travel to the hospital that requires the most urgency, it is the ambulance arriving on scene that does. Once on scene we have many procedures for many patient situations that can negate the need for a lights and sirens transport to hospital. In fact, of all the 1000's of lights and sirens responses I have done, I have gone lights and sirens to hospital less than 50 times. Also with the patient loaded their is no ruling under state road law or our own code of conduct in regard to what speed we can do under lights and sirens (except our normal limit of no more than 30 over that applies to all code 1 drives). We may exceed the speed limit if appropriate in the current conditions but we are responsible for the safety for all on board and an accident resulting from excess speed for the conditions will result in criminal charges on the driver. This is a situation that may even occur under the speed limit.
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02-05-2011, 09:48 AM | #7 | |||
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02-05-2011, 06:07 AM | #8 | |||
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Pretty pathetic story though - but it would be perfect for Alan Jones on his radio program. Nothing beats a hyped up scare campaign eh?
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XA coupe 8.8sec @ 150mph http://www.fordforums.com.au/showthr...coupe+drag+car BA GT-P for the shed Mustang GT for the other half E3 chubsport - fully fat (and slow), sitting there waiting for me to get sick of it and sell it. BA XR6T for a daily NT Pajero for the bush XB 4 door project- swallows a BF xr6 turbo My dad is a generous bloke. He gave away his dead car batteries free of charge.... |
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02-05-2011, 08:24 AM | #9 | |||
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02-05-2011, 11:48 AM | #10 | |||
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Yes I agree with the lights and sirens making the vehicles noticeable,but my point is still that if we agree that speed above the posted limit puts lives in danger, everyone should obey them, no exceptions. As for the example of the kid you saved by getting there on time, great. But how many people did you endanger getting there? Kids walking onto the road without looking? Kids chasing balls onto the street? Kids on pushbikes without full control? That is the fear campaign used to stop us from exceeding nominal posted limits. So why would it be any different for a vehicle with flashing lights? But back to the topic more specifically, the issue is with the discrepancy between stated speeds being used in pursuits and measured speeds, via possibly faulty equipment. Faulty equipment never stopped Victorian Police from issuing speeding infringement notices. I think that is Karma
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XA coupe 8.8sec @ 150mph http://www.fordforums.com.au/showthr...coupe+drag+car BA GT-P for the shed Mustang GT for the other half E3 chubsport - fully fat (and slow), sitting there waiting for me to get sick of it and sell it. BA XR6T for a daily NT Pajero for the bush XB 4 door project- swallows a BF xr6 turbo My dad is a generous bloke. He gave away his dead car batteries free of charge.... |
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01-05-2011, 12:06 PM | #11 | ||
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Chalk one up for the bad guys!! But like GTP Owner said, goes along with the safety mantra.
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01-05-2011, 12:17 PM | #12 | ||
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Who on earth could support such a rediculous idea?!
For christs sake, what do people think will happen to the crime rates and car theft if a crook knows all they have to do is drive fast and the police have to let them go? If a bad guy drives the other way even just doing the speed limit, how are police supposed to catch him? If you can't go fast to catch up, how can you set up roadblocks ahead...or are they dangerous as well to the poor gentle little criminals? In this case they're talking about police getting into trouble for going fast chasing criminals...isn't that what they're supposed to damn well do? There have been suggestions before that police shouldn't chase criminals because they shouldn't pay with thier life for stealing a car if they crash. Why do we have to do things to make it safer for criminals? It's like the stupid requests to take guns away from armoured car guards. Who'd take a job where you drive a huge truck full of cash and you have no way of defending yourself? Trucks would be knocked over once or twice a week. |
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01-05-2011, 12:15 PM | #13 | ||
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Don't wanna be a hijacker but, OT - you can drink and drive in WA, get sprung, and still have a license ! Repeatedly !!!
When I came over here I noticed utes with an 'E' plate like a 'P' plate and thought they were carrying explosives or something, but no, 'E' is for 'extraordinary license' which is given to you to drive to and from work so that the kiddies don't starve to death. And you can mess up again and get another one. That's just wrong. Strange ways in the west - like a watered-down NT. |
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01-05-2011, 12:21 PM | #14 | |||
Jezza
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Goody 2 shoes worried about poor johnny dieing in car crash. Coppers getting blamed everytime.
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Jeremy Clarkson: "Speed has never killed anyone, suddenly becoming stationary….That's what gets you." |
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01-05-2011, 12:35 PM | #15 | ||
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The Police Union is sticking up for their workers and so they should.
Banning the chases is an unfortunate course of action. As much as anything I just think it is an ambit / bargaining strategy to stop the use of AVL to persecute WA Officers. Most likely, the 'original stated intention' by the bureaucrats that got the AVL's in the cars was to have it for determining police resource locations for emergencies. Not some punitive procedural adherance device. Good on the cops for taking a stand. It will be the general public that cops (no pun intended) this mandatory satelite tracking next if the do-gooders get their way. This is one for the memory banks then. The Police Union say this satelite technology is innacurate at tracking vehicle speed in certain circumstances.
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BA2 XR8 Rapid M6 Ute - Lid - Tint -18s 226.8rwkW@178kmh/537Nm@140kmh 1/9/2013 14.2@163kmh 23/10/2013 Boss349 built. Not yet run. Waiting on a shell. Retrotech thread http://www.fordforums.com.au/showthr...1363569&page=6 |
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01-05-2011, 01:11 PM | #16 | ||
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Whilst I am normally pretty pro-police, I disagree with the WA Police Union's position here whole heartedly. AVL is not inaccurate at all, it can give an accurate location at any given time. Record that data. Compare distance over time. You get speed. It's pretty simple, and as with most things simple - they are usually some of the most accurate. At the end of the day, all 'speed' is is a measure of distance over a unit of time. If you can accurately record both, you accurately get speed. Time is easy to record. AVL gives an accurate location. Get more than one location, you have distance. Easy.
Trying to argue that the speed ascertained from AVL data is inaccurate because it's not a "certified speed detector" is just legal spin. Certified or not, it's accurate. Police disciplinary hearings (just as any other job where you get in trouble) are not courts of law... as such some of the ridiculous rules of evidence that have lead to some ridiculous outcomes from the courts don't apply. Coppers love to have their cake and eat it too. When a crook get's off a charge on a technicality - it's a miscarriage of Justice and an example of the "System" failing. When a copper gets off on a technicality - he's innocent. No questions asked. This is just another example of this ridiculous mindset. Some coppers have gotten in trouble for inaccurately reporting their speed & have been caught out after the fact. Now the police union get's all shirty that they have been caught out and tells everyone else not to chase because some of their colleagues are throbs who don't do the right thing so their supervising Sgt doesn't abandon the pursuit? Great logic there. They should be standing up and making sure their members are doing the right thing in the first place - not trying to cover up for them. |
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01-05-2011, 01:42 PM | #17 | ||
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The whole premise of the ban is because officers are apparently going too fast according to
some GPS tracker that may or may not be accurate, this cat fight shouldn't be done in public. At the very least, any decisions on pursuits and regulations should remain confidential, what's the point of telling potential criminals how far the police will go before breaking off pursuit. Get a helicopter after someone fleeing and pepper the thing with bullets, send a message... shoot a few of these little scoobies dead and let the rest think about fleeing then... |
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01-05-2011, 07:39 PM | #18 | |||
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Put more simply; - an AVL no longer allows for false reporting of pursuit vehicle speed - The police union should be ensuring that their members do the right thing so as to keep them out of trouble. Well said Dave3911 |
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02-05-2011, 04:15 AM | #19 | |||
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We have AVL's on our vehicles, just like the cops they are a part of a Computer Aided Dispatch (CAD) system. The aided part should be a hint here in how accurate these things are. The guarantee of accuracy in good reception conditions is only 500m, many areas get little to no reception at all. The area in which I live is a system black hole, our vehicles frequently drop the signal and according to the comms centre we have been in one place for hours when in actual fact we are across the other side of town. I have had many occasions where the CAD had selected me for a lights and sirens response as the closest available unit, but the dispatcher has had to reassign the case to another vehicle because my vehicle is not tracking properly. They are not accurate, not to any level that could prove an offence.
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01-05-2011, 01:48 PM | #20 | |||
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They get no sympathy from me. |
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01-05-2011, 05:04 PM | #21 | |||
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As for thieves dying in a high speed pursuit, I have one word: "good". There is an old cliche about "we can't let the criminals know they've won"...but if you ban chases...for whatever reason...then they have won, and I would bet my lefty that high speed getaways in whatever hot car they could steal will become the norm, if they know police can't chase them. Radio waves are just a part of the light spectrum, and do travel at the speed of light. Last edited by 2011G6E; 01-05-2011 at 05:10 PM. |
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01-05-2011, 12:15 PM | #22 | ||
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agree toatally with chevy
speed is relative to the conditions at hand, the vehicle and the experience of the driver. Speed does not kill inexperience and fatigue do!
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If life deals you lemons dont complain just get on with it and make lemonade 2006 SY Territory Ghia AWD in ego with roof mount DVD, tints, 7 seats, iPod input 2005 Crewman Cross 8 with 350 cubic inches, AWD, black on black rims on black leather, tints and polished racks NEW TOY Bayliner 185, inboard 3L 4 cylinder pushing us along at 50MPH whenever i get a chance I love Aussie cars and are gonna really miss them soon....... |
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01-05-2011, 12:26 PM | #23 | ||
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It all stems from a couple of indigenous Australians getting clocked by WAPOL doing 30km/h over the speed limit. The officers turned their car around and went into pursuit mode. The officers stopped at a red light and the stolen car continued on eventually crashing a killing one person in the stolen vehicle.
The mother of the deceased claimed "he was a good boy who got mixed up with the wrong people and I don't blame the Police, but they should have used an unmarked car to follow them" 1. He was not a good boy, he was a thief, his choice no one elses 2. You shouldn't blame the Police, they were acting within the law. 3. How much more panicked would they become if they were being followed by an unmarked commodore or falcon? A guy got of a speeding charge because of being followed by an unmarked car for too long. Time certain peopl in the community accept responsibility. |
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01-05-2011, 12:34 PM | #24 | ||
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My concern with the 'gloves-off' 'gently-gently' PC approach is that if times get much tougher in terms of criminal behaviour, then society will jump to support fascist / draconian controls, whereas if a more realistic approach to law enforcement had been adopted much earlier, then it wouldn't be necessary to swing too far the other way.
Yes, it is awful when some poor innocent person(s) get T-boned in a chase, but the alternative is worse imho. |
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01-05-2011, 02:40 PM | #25 | ||
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So when a cop stops chasing a criminal, does the criminal immediately slow down to the speed limit and obey all laws?
I doubt it. They will still be shitting themselves and continue driving at a high rate of speed to get as far from the cops as possible. So whats better. A Criminal alone doing 150 down the road towards a red light. Or the same criminal still doing 150 towards the red light but with a cop behind them with the siren blaring and flashing lights everywhere. At least if the cop is there, the other drivers at the intersection will be more aware earlier there is a situation. |
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01-05-2011, 03:39 PM | #26 | |||
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It is interesting that you use the "sudszyesqe" mentality that the person being chased must be a CRIMINAL. A rather large percentage of those being chased have no idea that they are actually being chased at all. (and I do have many first hand examples of this) e.g. Driving at 120 out in woop woop. Unmarked car going other way, puts on lights too late. It is hilly double lines so he cannot do a U turn safely for about 1 or 2 km. He does his U turn and takes off, by this time is at least 5 km behind. Scenario 1) Copper does 140km/h, the maximum legal speed he can do. It will take him at least 15 minutes to catch up (5km @ 20km/hr) by which time they are at least 30km down the road. So this chase car has been doing this "extremely dangerous" speed for all this time for what......a $300 ticket. Scenario 1a) The chasee spotted the copper and winds up to 130. Now it takes 30 minutes to catch up and it is over 50km down the road. Scenario 2) Copper goes full tilt, 200km/h. It still takes him about 4 minutes and he covers about 10km at this, as we are told by EVERY expert, suicidal speed endangering every other road user for what....oh thats right a $300 speeding ticket. Scenario 2a) chasee winds up and all those numbers are extended. Win at all costs is a VERY dangerous mindset. If Osama bin Laden was cornered in a school full of kids would it be ok to gas the school knowing that maybe, just maybe a couple of kids would be killed? The end does not always justify the means and NOTHING goes faster than a radio...... |
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01-05-2011, 03:45 PM | #27 | |||
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Not someone who is breaking the speed limit by 10-20kmh |
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01-05-2011, 04:09 PM | #28 | |||
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Also, when they are chasing the crims, the gloves do not come off - they have to radio back to base to get approval for a high speed pursuit. They are also given an indication of appropriate speeds. When they are exceeding those speeds they are instructed to pull back and slow down. The most important bit that most people forget is that it is very hard to outrun the radio
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XA coupe 8.8sec @ 150mph http://www.fordforums.com.au/showthr...coupe+drag+car BA GT-P for the shed Mustang GT for the other half E3 chubsport - fully fat (and slow), sitting there waiting for me to get sick of it and sell it. BA XR6T for a daily NT Pajero for the bush XB 4 door project- swallows a BF xr6 turbo My dad is a generous bloke. He gave away his dead car batteries free of charge.... |
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02-05-2011, 04:25 AM | #29 | |||
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I think some people around here need to try and understand the level of scrutiny and the amount of clearance required for any emergency vehicle to exceed the speed limit, it is mind numbing. By the way, if you truly believe that no emergency vehicle should exceed the speed limit by any margin for any reason, try holding your breath for 5 minutes, your time starts now. I am sure in 5 minutes time you will have other ideas.
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01-05-2011, 04:12 PM | #30 | |||
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It is unlikely that the coppers would stop and would actually use other resources such as air etc. The trick is realising that the world is not black and white and TV and movies are fiction. Any crim with half a brain would not speed away from a crime as it would draw attention. (and the clever crims are the ones who do not get caught). |
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