Met Police Officers ‘Said Immigrants Should Be Shot’ During Pints At The Pub

The Metropolitan police are under enough scrutiny already, so the last thing they needed was for the BBC to air an entire Panorama exposé last night featuring hidden recordings from an undercover journalist. Sure enough, the episode showed officers calling for immigrants to be shot, saying Islam is a ‘problem’, shrugging off rape allegations, and more.

Officers such as PC Phil Neilson were filmed making anti-immigrant comments at the pub:

Uncleared grabs / 2: Scotland Yard chief forced to apologise over alleged 'racist' comments by officers at scandal hit Charing Cross station

PC Neilson, of the West End team, described what he would do to a detainee who had overstayed their visa.

In the footage, he says: ‘F***ing, either put a bullet through his head or deport him. Because we’re paying for it. He was an overstayer.

Neilson said that ‘a revolver would be so nice’, adding that the ‘ones that shag, rape women, you’d do the c**k and let them bleed out’.

He added that Algerians were ‘scum’, Somalians were ‘f**king ugly’ and added: ‘I think any foreign person is the worst to deal with.’ 

Meanwhile, Sgt Joe McIlvenny was also filmed saying things he probably shouldn’t be saying:

On a woman who had been arrested for being drunk and disorderly while wearing a fancy dress police costume, Sgt McIlvenny said: ‘I’ve paid money to go to clubs and see women dressed like this.’

In another clip, he told staff at the custody suite he had a sex with a woman ‘so fat, she had two p*****s’. 

When asked by a female detention officer why a man accused of raping and stamping on his pregnant girlfriend had been released, McIlvenny replied: ‘That’s what she says.’

A hidden camera shot taken at chest height looking slightly upwards at PC Martin Borg, a white man with dark hair and a short, dark beard, standing in what appears to be an alleyway outside a pub, wearing a dark T-shirt and a black leather jacket

PC Martin Borg (above) was asked which ethnic group causes him the most ‘grief’.

He answered: ‘Muslims. Hate us. They f***ing hate us. Proper hate us. Islam is a problem. A serious problem, I think.’

Borg also told a story about Sgt Steve Stamp, known to colleagues as ‘Stampy’, twice stamping the leg of a detainee who had spat at officers and urinated on the door of his cell.

Borg explained; ‘He had a lump on his foot that looked like a f**king tumour, mate, afterwards.’

Journalist Rory Bibb spent seven months undercover at the Charing Cross police station, hanging out with top brass during the day and drinking with rank-and-file officers at night, and capturing all this footage.

Even while making these comments, some officers admitted they could ‘lose their jobs’ over it. Little did they know, eh?

Nine officers and one staff member have been suspended following the investigation, while two more officers taken off front-line duties.

The Met has since put out a lengthy statement on their website explaining how the behaviour of their officers is ‘completely unacceptable’, assuring the officers will be dismissed, announcing that they’ve made changes in leadership at Charing Cross, and noting how they’ve conducted the largest anti-corruption clear-out in British police history over the last three years.

Clearly they’ve got a bit more work to do on that front, but in fairness, it’s hardly surprising that out of over 150,000 police officers operating in the UK, you’re going to get a fair amount of bad apples. It shouldn’t negate all the good work that the police do on a daily basis.

Still, it’s quite shocking to see some people defending the officers’ comments on social media. Get a load of the caption on this one – lol:

Incredible.

For the Dorset police officer who was sacked after telling a teenager to ‘stop crying like a little b****’, click HERE.

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