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When I joined the Metropolitan police in London in 1989, I soon became familiar with the often-repeated gripe by officers that "The Job's F*cked". That expression, always shortened in conversation simply to 'TJF', has been in constant usage since I joined.
Early in my service, I met a lovely, very elderly gent, who to my delight, told me some great stories about how he had served thirty years in the police in London and had retired in the 1950s, serving throughout the London Blitz. Quick as a flash, he asked me, 'Is the job still f*cked?' I laughingly confirmed that yes, it was.
Police officers seemingly therefore have always claimed that 'The Job's Fcked'. However, there is now a very real belief by officers right across almost every part of England and Wales, that The Job is now actually Fcked
My book, Tango Juliet Foxtrot sounds an urgent warning that unless something changes very quickly, many more members of the British public are going to come to serious harm, and the people who harmed them will have little to fear from the police. Even if the changes started today, it's likely that it will take at least a generation to undo the damage of the last ten years.
In February 1989 I swore a solemn oath to Her Majesty the Queen that I would "Cause the peace to be kept and preserved, and prevent all offences against the persons and properties of Her Majesty's subjects". My loyalty now is to my family, friends and to law-abiding members of the British public. My loyalty is not, and never has been, to politicians of any colour or party, and particularly not to the reckless individuals who got the police service into the horrible mess that it now appears to be in
Everything that I write and say is motivated by a deep love for British policing and police officers, who have been treated very badly now for far too long by politicians and certain parts of the media. They deserve so much better.