fredag 7. oktober 2011

Jeg sendte en klage paa Northumbria Police Professional Standards Department til IPCC

fromErik Ribsskog eribsskog@gmail.com
to!enquiries

ccTAYLORG@unhcr.org,
eftacourt@eftacourt.int

dateFri, Oct 7, 2011 at 2:44 PM
subjectComplaint about the PSD/Fwd: IPCC reference: 2011/016499
mailed-bygmail.com

hide details 2:44 PM (0 minutes ago)


Hi,

this morning the Northumbria Police Professional Standards Department called the hostell, (Azalead Lodge aka. Sampro), I live in, (where the Sunderland Council placed me after a police officer chatted with them about me behind my back), and got the manager there, (Nel), to give me the phone, belonging to the hostell.

The person calling was Malcolm Herbert.

He wanted to have a meeting with me at the hostell.

I answered that there wasn't much room at the hostell, and a meeting was agreed at the Gilbert Avenue police-station on monday morning.

This call/Nel woke me up, and now after I've woken more up today I think the PSD should have called me on my mobile or sent an e-mail about this.

The Landlady at the hostell told me on the first day that they are 'very though and very friendly' there.

I don't want to find out how friendly or though they can be, and have complained about the manager Nel calling me 'dear'.

I think he has been to personal, so I don't want the Police to get him to knock on my door.

Send an e-mail or use ring my mobile-number, not the hostell's.

I can't recall giving the PSD the phone-number to the hostel as my contact-number.

I suspect the Police and the Azalea Lodge are a bit to close.

Could it be like in movies, I wonder, where the Police threaten people they're going to be raped in jail, by a big criminal.

Are the Northumbria Police using corporal punishment, and are they calling the manager Nel, (instead of me), to give him a chance of flirting with me?

I'm very heterosexual, but the manager Nel calls me 'dear' and when I talk to other managers in the office, he sneaks up behind me and tickles me when I turn around, to walk out of the office-door-area.

The hostel didn't give me a key to the enterance-door for weeks, and I had to knock and ring to get in, and then Nel stood in his boxer-shorts-like shorts and almost tried to humb my leg, I think.

The manager Nel is a big guy on around 120 kilos at least I think.

The Northumbria Police probably got me in to this hotel by chatting with the case-worker at the Sunderland Council, it seems to me.

Is this a place the Police place people they want to punish outside of the justice-system I'm wondering.

I also send a copy to the UN about this.

I've lost confidence in the PSD now, since they contact me through the hostels contact-information, and not through mine.

Is it the hostel or me who has a police-complaint?

They mix up me and the hostell.

I think they are to close to the hostell.

I think the PSD's involvment in this case should be over with this mistake.

I want the IPCC to start their investigation now.

Another reason I update the UN is that the Manchester IPCC made my complaint against the Merseyside Police 'disappear' a few years back.

I'm also sending this to EFTA to make a point out of that I'm a Norwegian citizen.

(Who has applied to be a refugee in the UK, but anyway).

It seems like the Police in the UK have a vendetta against me, to me, and place me in funny hostells were they are to friendly and to though.

Is this a Police-mob/mafia?

This is a scandal I think.

Erik Ribsskog


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Erik Ribsskog
Date: Tue, Sep 27, 2011 at 2:40 PM
Subject: Re: IPCC reference: 2011/016499
To: !enquiries
Cc: TAYLORG@unhcr.org



Hi,

well, I haven't been given any explanation.

The PSD mix the new cases up with the first case.

This is harassment I think.

Erik Ribsskog


On Tue, Sep 27, 2011 at 12:20 PM, !enquiries wrote:

Dear Mr Ribsskog

Thank you for contacting the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC).

The IPCC is required to forward all complaints to the 'appropriate authority' which in the majority of cases is the Professional Standards Department (PSD) of the police force concerned. The PSD will consider how your complaint should be handled, including whether they must 'record' your complaint. Someone from the force may contact you at this stage in order to determine what you want to happen.
The decision whether to 'record' a complaint is about whether your complaint is able to be recorded and handled under the Police Reform Act 2002.

It is evident from your email correspondence that you have already contacted the Northumbria Police PSD, and so it is not necessary for the IPCC to take any action concerning your correspondence.

If you want to make a formal complaint about the conduct of a police officer or member of police staff, the PSD has a duty to 'record' it in this way. There are some circumstances where, even where you want to make a formal complaint, a complaint may not be recorded under the Police Reform Act 2002. This may simply be because the police are obliged to deal with it in some other way. The PSD will tell you if they are going to record your complaint and will explain why they have decided not to record it if this is the case. If your complaint is not recorded and you disagree with the explanation for this decision, you have a right of appeal to the IPCC.

Regards


Steven Ireland
Customer Contact Advisor
Independent Police Complaints Commission
Tel: 08453 002 002
Email: enquiries@ipcc.gsi.gov.uk



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