Daily Stormer
June 2, 2014
Timed to coincide with peak offending by the Black gangs, Scotland Yard Police are looking at rewarding the thugs for their violence, murders and drug dealing, with free sports events and barbecues. These events, designed to draw as many undermen as possible, will be held at ‘pleasant,neutral locations’ such as public buildings or parks. You know the sort of places, the ones that people go to so that they can get away from drug dealing violent Black gangs. The report has been funded by the ‘Winston Churchill Memorial Trust’, a rather apt name, since if Churchill had not gone to war against Hitler, then they never would have been allowed into Europe in the first place.
From the Standard:
Police in London could host neighbourhood barbecues and stage sports events in a radical plan to engage with communities beset by gang violence.
Senior Scotland Yard officers are examining the possibility of holding such activities in public parks at times of peak offending.
The idea is based on a highly successful Los Angeles project included in a report on tackling gangs by a Scotland Yard detective.
Detective Superintendent Damian Allain, a senior officer in the Met’s Trident Gang Crime Command, says the Summer Night Lights Project led to a 33 per cent reduction in gang crime. The scheme, run by the city’s mayor, takes over 32 open spaces in gang districts and offers meals, activities including basketball and dancing, and classes in parenting and car maintenance.
Det Supt Allain told the Standard: “I have seen this in action in Los Angeles and it is a fantastic concept. I think in London it would be an opportunity to build more trust and confidence between the police and communities. These events create a real community feeling and they take over urban spaces in areas where there are normally high levels of crime.”
The events are funded by the mayor and corporate donations in Los Angeles but Det Supt Allain says the costs are probably cheaper than dealing with the consequences of gang violence.
In his report, funded by a travel grant from the Winston Churchill Memorial Trust, the detective outlines anti-gang initiatives conducted by police forces in the US, Australia and New Zealand.
His recommendations include a London-wide summertime event, better co-operation between local and national police and the use of GPS technology to supervise offenders. His study, now being examined by top Yard officers, also notes the success of gang call-ins in Chicago where gang members are invited to attend sessions involving the police and victims.
Det Supt Allain said the call-ins are held in “pleasant, neutral locations” such as public buildings or parks. By comparison, some in London are held in courtrooms. He said: “The communication style is relaxed with everyone, those in authority as well as gang members, treated as equals all sat around the same table at the same level.”
He also highlights the “power of food to act as an initial draw and subsequently as a social ice breaker”, adding: “I believe the use of food as an enabler for communities to engage with police … has real potential.”