Can't deny it seems to be getting worse and worse thoughSorry to burst your bubble but questionable Landrover reliability is not a new thing...
Can't deny it seems to be getting worse and worse thoughSorry to burst your bubble but questionable Landrover reliability is not a new thing...
Can't deny it seems to be getting worse and worse though
you can't get there with your vehicle and whilst it would be legal to walk there with a rifle if you had legitimate business being there with a rifle i would guess one of the many armed police would stop you and ask what your legitimate reason is.what about outside Number 10 lol.
I bet you would be on the ground quick smart, arms up back and all.you can't get there with your vehicle and whilst it would be legal to walk there with a rifle if you had legitimate business being there with a rifle i would guess one of the many armed police would stop you and ask what your legitimate reason is.
I was once going into Kinross services after stalking. Had forgotten to take the knife off my belt. Policeman came out the door as I was going in. He just cocked an eyebrow at me and pointed at my belt.I had a mate that stopped off for a mc Donald's after a stalk, five miles later he was stopped by armed police as someone had seen his knife sheaf on his belt ( it was luckily empty ) and reported it . Police turned up at mc donalds saw his vehicle reg on the the stores camera and tracked him down. If reported that have to show to respond I would have done the same as the op just to save any hassle.
I've actually yet to find any police officer who was anything other than sensible and practical when it comes to things like this. I know many malign them, but for my own part every single interaction I've ever had with the police over the years has been positive.I was once going into Kinross services after stalking. Had forgotten to take the knife off my belt. Policeman came out the door as I was going in. He just cocked an eyebrow at me and pointed at my belt
I even once had some woman mutter 'murderer' at me as she walked past me unlocking a forestry gate
You should have responded back by muttering -dogger.![]()
I've yet to find any police officer who's even noticed that I always (and I mean always) have a knife on my belt.I've actually yet to find any police officer who was anything other than sensible and practical when it comes to things like this. I know many malign them, but for my own part every single interaction I've ever had with the police over the years has been positive.
The general public, howeverI even once had some woman mutter 'murderer' at me as she walked past me unlocking a forestry gate
Did as you did an called the police. And if necessary as them to take possession of the rifle.Found myself in a bit of a pickle last night. On the way out to go for a stalk the clutch pedal on the (old) defender got stuck down. Managed to unstick it and a good chunk of the way home before if gave out altogether. AA recovery would take the car home, or to a garage, but wouldn’t take me home afterwards. Having an immobile car at home was no use so got dropped off at a garage but was then faced with a taxi ride home with a rifle. This was around midnight in a major city.
Being a bit unsure how best to proceed I elected to phone the police non-emergency number and log a report, fearing a well meaning member of the public might see me getting in or out of a car with rifle slip and call the police themselves, especially given recent events in the states. The girl on the phone knew nothing about firearms but didn’t express any concern, took some details, and I made it home by about 1am.
My question, what would you have done in this situation? Anything else I should have considered?
More likely in some districts of the latter to ask "Do you need any ammunition for that mate 'cos I've got a friend...."A taxi in the middle of Leeds or London, maybe not.
Oh on a joint agency during performance inspection of a night club I took my knife out to cut a sample of a material and a female police officer who was acting as "my bodyguard" wanted to arrest me or at least take my knife off me. The senior police licensing officer told her to p*ss off and not to be so bloody stupid as I was the one with the warrant and that I was only carrying out my job. He added that they wouldn't be on the premise if it wasn't for me.I've yet to find any police officer who's even noticed that I always (and I mean always) have a knife on my belt.
Trollop.I even once had some woman mutter 'murderer' at me
Holy schitt,I cant ever remember reading of that one. Hounds baying for more blood in a frenzy.Copied from Wikipedia with their highlight in green ink.
If I remember right the standard of marksmanship from very short distances was astoundingly abysmal, the most serious injury to the innocent person was caused by the pistol whipping.I personally think you did the right thing in this instance……..as sometimes doing nothing….. just sitting in a car…………
can be problematic in itself.
More than one person having a very very bad day ……….I remember being told about this one !!!
Stephen Waldorf was a 26-year-old man who was shot and seriously injured by police officers in London on 14 January 1983 after they mistook him for David Martin, an escaped criminal. The shooting caused a public outcry and led to a series of reforms to the training and authorisation of armed police officers in the United Kingdom. Martin was a cross-dressing thief and fraudster who was known to carry firearms and had previously shot a police officer. He escaped from custody in December 1982 and the police placed his girlfriend under surveillance. On the day of the shooting, they followed her as she travelled in a car whose front-seat passenger (Waldorf) resembled Martin. When the car stopped in traffic, Detective Constable Finch—the only officer present who had met Martin—was sent forward on foot to confirm the passenger's identity.
Finch, an armed officer, incorrectly believed that Waldorf was Martin and that he had been recognised. He fired all six rounds from his revolver, first at the vehicle's tyres and then at the passenger. Another officer, believing that Finch was being shot at, fired through the rear windscreen. As the passenger slumped across the seats and out of the driver's door, a third officer, Detective Constable Jardine, opened fire. Finch, having run out of ammunition, began pistol-whipping the man. Only after he lost consciousness did the officers realise that the man was not Martin. Waldorf suffered five bullet wounds (from fourteen shots fired) and a fractured skull. Finch and Jardine were charged with attempted murder and causing grievous bodily harm. They were acquitted in October 1983 and later reinstated, though their firearms authorisations were revoked.
Copied from Wikipedia with their highlight in green ink.
She came stomping past me in her yoga gear with both her cameltoe and prejudice in full view. I would've been glad to see the back of her if it wasn't for the celluliteTrollop.
I might have mentioned that the toe was that big that if she had sat on a cane chair there be enough hanging down to feed a terrier for a week.She came stomping past me in her yoga gear with both her cameltoe and prejudice in full view. I would've been glad to see the back of her if it wasn't for the cellulite![]()
ThisPlenty of people in big cities will use Taxis to go to and from a gun-shop, or to the station or an airport.