Police are bing accused of more abuses by G20 protesters and media. The recent abuse is clearly a reflection of police behavior as a whole. ( 'Shame on you' is being shouted by various protesters. Some of them regulars, no doubt.) Here's another video, showing police piling in to peaceful protesters.
Police seem indifferent to the death recently experienced at their hands during the G20 protests. We now learn that Mr. Tomlinson, the police victim who died, suffered abdominal bleeding rather than a heart attack, and that a police officer is likely to be up on a manslaughter charge. Here.
Why is a manslaughter charge being expected, rather than a murder charge? The CPS do not appear to be releasing an explanation about this.
Where do abusive police get their confidence from when they're not getting it from media strategists, British courts and abusive members of the British public? ( Each other, of course. And abusive puerile members of the CPS and their associates.)
Mr. Tomlinson, a poor man who died during the G20 protests, was an innocent bystander. He may have been a vulnerable adult. The video below, obtained by the Guardian, shows him being beaten and assaulted by police, then collapsing to the ground.
The very revealing video here (Mr Tomlinson). Viewing recommended.
Police attempted to state that protesters had stood in the way of their obtaining medical aid for the victim Tomlinson; however, it later transpired that police probably wounded him to the point that they caused him to later die, and then did nothing while he died, even though he requested their help, and tried to explain his predicament to them, in what looks like a very gentle manner.
Having violently abused him, police refused him help, and he died.
This sort of incidence is not untypical of British police.
As for police being concerned about anyone's medical health, observe the video below, which seems to speak for itself. A police medic appears to be bashing his baton about as if there were no tomorrow.

Many British police appear to be programmed to despise and abuse accused people whom they do not know, whose cases they frequently do not investigate. Police 'training' , socalled, usually translates into subjecting individuals of all backgrounds ( usually, defendants) to varieties of mental and physical abuse. This abuse is regularly evidenced in day to day police behaviors. Often regular police attitudes spill over into abuse of other members of the public: poor Mr. Tomlinson was simply a man who found himself near a rowdy scene.
It often transpires that the worse thing a genuinely vulnerable person can do, is go to a British policeman for help. Often enough. British Police enjoy abusing the vulnerable.
British police often appear to act in the knowledge that they are likely to pass their 'versions of events' off to biased British courts, to prejudiced and abusive magistrates who are all to often unchallenged by a prejudiced British public, who are encouraged by an abusive media system that enjoys exercising vindictive behavior towards vulnerable defendants ( and anyone else it can find) whenever it can.


