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Tree protest supporter labelled 'litter bug'

6:00am Wednesday 16th January 2008

comment Comments (56)   Have your say »

By Chris Kearney »

Police handcuffed a student and took his fingerprints and DNA after he tried to throw a bottle of water to tree protesters.

Jonathan Leighton, a student at St Anne's College, was arrested at 2am on Sunday in Bonn Square, Oxford, after he tried to give the water to tree protester Gabriel Chamberlain.

Mr Leighton's throw fell short of the sycamore, landing on the ground nearby - and the 18-year-old was arrested on suspicion of littering.

He said: "I shouted up to Gabriel that I was going to throw the water to him, but it was a bit of a rubbish throw and it didn't make it.

"The next thing I know, these police officers had run over to me and said they were arresting me.

"I said to them, 'what for?' and they said it was for littering. I couldn't really believe what was happening. I just remember shouting over to my friends: I'm being arrested'."

Chamberlain occupied the sycamore for 12 days to protest against Oxford City Council chopping down the trees to redevelop the area.

Mr Leighton was handcuffed and taken to St Aldate's police station, where he was held for three hours while he had his fingerprints, DNA and photograph taken.

He was eventually released without charge at 5.15am, but the student felt the arresting officers "abused their power" and said he was seeking legal advice.

Mr Leighton said: "The police need to be held accountable for their actions. I feel their actions were completely over the top and unnecessary. There was absolutely no need to arrest me.

"Even if I don't pursue legal action, I will still be reporting the matter to the Independent Police Complaints Commission. I think the whole thing has been ridiculous."

The student, from Reading, said he supported the protesters as he disagreed with the tree felling.

He said: "I don't think the plans for the site are very good. I'm up for improving Bonn Square, but I don't see the need to cut down trees that are more than 100 years old.

"Oxford is a historic city and it should try to keep that heritage, not destroy it."

Police would not comment about Mr Leighton's complaints.

Chief Supt Brendan O'Dowda confirmed a man was arrested for littering in Bonn Square and was released without charge.

He added: "I can't go into the whys and wherefores of the arrest itself."

He said he was not aware of an official complaint to Thames Valley Police about the arrest, but said there was a robust process for dealing with complaints.

In 2005, Oxford police arrested a student for calling a police horse gay'. He was charged with threatening words and behaviour, but the Crown Prosecution Service dropped the case.

Chamberlain and two other people, all arrested on suspicion of aggravated trespass over the Bonn Square demonstrations, have been released on police bail pending further inquiries.


Your Say YourOxford

l, Oxford says...
6:50am Wed 16 Jan 08

Good stuff it was a rubbish throw. I wonder where Oxford Mail found all these Gabriel supporters... I don't know anyone who doesn't think he's a parasite, but these people don't get to be in the paper.

Is Oxford Mail edited by Mr Chamberlain perhaps?

Great stuff St Anne's student's can't throw when they're drunk

oxfordone, oxford says...
7:16am Wed 16 Jan 08

Yet another student trying to tell the people of Oxford (who were born here/who have lived here all of our lives) how things should be done. I am glad he got arrested, maybe now he could go back to his studies like a good little student, and stop spouting nonsense about how Oxford needs its heritage etc. If they were talking of knocking down college buildings then fair enough, but Bonn Square is an eyesore and it is very intimidating walking past the drunks/drug addicts who sit there. The sooner it is redeveloped the better and the sooner the students get back to their studies and stop trying to prevent the people of Oxford getting better shopping facilities the better.

shrek, far,far away says...
8:00am Wed 16 Jan 08

if mr chamberlain is that thirsty, let him come down and get his own water. for crying out loud it is only a tree. new ones will be planted when work is finished, and this protest is wasting OUR council tax on the security. simple way to get him down, set fire to the bottom of the tree and watch him move then. if this was germany, the water cannon would have been deployed by now

Jock, Headington says...
8:35am Wed 16 Jan 08

Nothwithstanding that I disagree with the "tree protestors" and their supporters and that I hate littering, for me the key point about this story is that this young man's DNA and fingerprint records are now on file. Will they be destroyed because he was released without charge? I don't think so. The rules seem to say that if you are arrested for a criminal offense even if that charge is then dropped or no charges preferred they have the right to take it and keep it permanently. I hope someone will prove me wrong, but to me it seems they use any excuse to extend the reach of the state. I would argue that until his DNA is returned to him, they have not actually released all of him without charge, but held a bit of him on file as a suspect in every future crime they want to check him against. "Minority Report" has arrived!

Molly Walsh, says...
9:15am Wed 16 Jan 08

There are always the same small minded vitriolic individuals making derogatory comments on those who are concerned enough about the environment to make a stand. Perhaps one day they may care enough about something to make a protest themselves, though I imagine they would be too cowardly and gutless. These same spineless wonders also stand by and say nothing when the police become rather "enthusiastic" and abuse their powers. Mind you, in Nazi Germany similar spineless people stood by as the atrocities were carried out in the concentration camps. You are small minded cretins who have most likely seen nothing of life.

alan page, says...
9:22am Wed 16 Jan 08

Jock wrote:
Nothwithstanding that I disagree with the "tree protestors" and their supporters and that I hate littering, for me the key point about this story is that this young man's DNA and fingerprint records are now on file. Will they be destroyed because he was released without charge? I don't think so. The rules seem to say that if you are arrested for a criminal offense even if that charge is then dropped or no charges preferred they have the right to take it and keep it permanently. I hope someone will prove me wrong, but to me it seems they use any excuse to extend the reach of the state. I would argue that until his DNA is returned to him, they have not actually released all of him without charge, but held a bit of him on file as a suspect in every future crime they want to check him against. "Minority Report" has arrived!
I think that would only be an issue if it were the case that DNA samples were taken in this one case.

If it was merely part of a routine swipe it could be a case of a big noise made over nothing.

Dna technology has recently enabled a child murderer to finally be bought to justice after 20 years when one of these swabs we taken.

I don't think any rational person would argue that such routine swabs are the end of civilisation as we know it.

No a big fuss over nothing. No doubt he has the financial clout behind him to drag it through the courts.

I thought Oxford students were supposed to be some kind of "elite".

alan page, says...
9:27am Wed 16 Jan 08

Molly Walsh wrote:
There are always the same small minded vitriolic individuals making derogatory comments on those who are concerned enough about the environment to make a stand. Perhaps one day they may care enough about something to make a protest themselves, though I imagine they would be too cowardly and gutless. These same spineless wonders also stand by and say nothing when the police become rather "enthusiastic" and abuse their powers. Mind you, in Nazi Germany similar spineless people stood by as the atrocities were carried out in the concentration camps. You are small minded cretins who have most likely seen nothing of life.
Hitler was also a vegetarian animal lover.
Tree hugging is neccesarily not a sign of universal altruism.

Tarbatt, says...
9:34am Wed 16 Jan 08

Molly - good call. I think all these bullies and cowards who line up to shower spiteful abuse at environmental campaigners would have been very much at home in Berlin in 1936. Happy to take orders from the state, denouncing dissidents, beating up the weak - they would have loved it.

alan page, says...
9:39am Wed 16 Jan 08

Tarbatt wrote:
Molly - good call. I think all these bullies and cowards who line up to shower spiteful abuse at environmental campaigners would have been very much at home in Berlin in 1936. Happy to take orders from the state, denouncing dissidents, beating up the weak - they would have loved it.
And firebombing Animal labs?

And making racially dubious objections to halal killing?

I think it is pretty clear which side is the more fascistic.

alan page, says...
9:40am Wed 16 Jan 08

Taking of bullies and cowards by the way.
Is "Tarbatt" your real name?

Charles, Oxford says...
9:49am Wed 16 Jan 08

Another serious criminal apprehended by Oxford police.Well done chaps!How much did this all cost?Any way I'll just pop down to the local park and watch the drug dealers that the police totally ignore on a daily basis,whilst they drive by on the way to arrest an easy target.Is this really the publicity our police force want??

Kathy, Bicester says...
10:02am Wed 16 Jan 08

I can't believe Molly is comparing this situation with Nazi Germany!! These protester ARE idiots who need to get a life. The trees being cut down and replaced with more trees I believe and the area is set to look a lot nicer and more welcoming. Stop fools of yourselves guys.

cottage2day, Cowley says...
10:02am Wed 16 Jan 08

I think this is bloody ridiculous. Fair enough he shouldnt have given him water and the trees should be knocked down so the crack heads cant gather around there. But there is no need to arrest him, that is a total waste of the Government money and Police time, why not arrest the crack heads instead? This whole country has gone to sh*t. It is joke that this even makes the paper, who cares? why not focus on something important. I see prostitutes roaming outside my house every night, but nothing is done about them. The end.

joe, oxford says...
10:05am Wed 16 Jan 08

Molly Walsh wrote:
There are always the same small minded vitriolic individuals making derogatory comments on those who are concerned enough about the environment to make a stand. Perhaps one day they may care enough about something to make a protest themselves, though I imagine they would be too cowardly and gutless. These same spineless wonders also stand by and say nothing when the police become rather "enthusiastic" and abuse their powers. Mind you, in Nazi Germany similar spineless people stood by as the atrocities were carried out in the concentration camps. You are small minded cretins who have most likely seen nothing of life.
tell you what molly, stop spouting rubbish and go over to china/russia the worlds biggest polluters, and protest over there... See what happens to you then? When it comes down to it, Gabriel and his tree huggers had they chance to have a say during the planning process. and they never did, so TOUGH. thats called democracy.

Alastair, Oxford says...
10:09am Wed 16 Jan 08

Andy,

Has there been a delivery today? There was no juice last night.

Alastair

DanOxford, Oxford says...
11:07am Wed 16 Jan 08

MOLLY: Godwin's law (also known as Godwin's Rule of Nazi Analogies) is an adage formulated by Mike Godwin in 1990. The law states:

As an online discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler approaches one.



Tarbatt, says...
11:27am Wed 16 Jan 08

DanOxford wrote:
MOLLY: Godwin's law (also known as Godwin's Rule of Nazi Analogies) is an adage formulated by Mike Godwin in 1990. The law states: As an online discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler approaches one.
That's probably because Nazi sympathisers (and BNP supporters) are drawn to them likes moths to a flame.

But let's get back to the intersting stuff, DanOxford. Why were you shot at and tear gassed by the CRS?

Molly Walsh, says...
11:44am Wed 16 Jan 08

Well Joe, I have worked in several countries, including China. I wrote about the potential ecological risks of going ahead with the Three Gorges Dam across the Yangtze River. The Chinese government ignored critics who forecast it would be an environmental disaster.
Top officials in Beijing now openly say the Three Gorges Dam is a colossal mistake and has turned into an environmental nightmare.
Tell me Joe, have you ever seen the real world. Or have you not got beyond your computer keyboard?
What small minded and blinkered people you are.

alan page, says...
11:55am today Wed 16 Jan 08

Molly Walsh wrote:
Well Joe, I have worked in several countries, including China. I wrote about the potential ecological risks of going ahead with the Three Gorges Dam across the Yangtze River. The Chinese government ignored critics who forecast it would be an environmental disaster. Top officials in Beijing now openly say the Three Gorges Dam is a colossal mistake and has turned into an environmental nightmare. Tell me Joe, have you ever seen the real world. Or have you not got beyond your computer keyboard? What small minded and blinkered people you are.
Well, bully for you Molly.

Now please explain quite how the removal of this ONE tree and its replacement by FOUR trees is going to adversely affect the enviroment?

Please also answer the question posted on another thread here as well.

What did Gabriel acheive apart from lots of self publicity?

How does this tree compare to the acres of trees being removed in the Americas to cater for the Biofuels market?

How does the enviromental impact of this one tree measure up to the amount land being cleared to cater for smackheads Afghanistan or for Cokeheads in Columbia?

If you seriously gave a toss about anythng beyond self promotion and career advancement, those issues would be at the top of your agenda.

Not some alleged smackhead piddling around in a tree in a provincial town.

DanOxford, Oxford says...
12:17pm Wed 16 Jan 08

Tarbatt- I was at the Le Mans motorcycle races when the local yoofs decided to use the opportunity to have a pop at the plod. No-one claimed the disruption was about a tree as far as I recall. Unlike England, the French take their rioting very seriously and deployed the CRS.

Molly- it's a well known fact that, despite Allied intelligence, millions stood by and did nothing while the Nazis pursued a relentless policy of tidying up city squares and planting new trees.

Many believe that Hitler was so incensed by the lack of trees in Red Square that he opened up a second front by invading Russia.

joe, oxford says...
12:17pm Wed 16 Jan 08

alan page wrote:
Molly Walsh wrote: Well Joe, I have worked in several countries, including China. I wrote about the potential ecological risks of going ahead with the Three Gorges Dam across the Yangtze River. The Chinese government ignored critics who forecast it would be an environmental disaster. Top officials in Beijing now openly say the Three Gorges Dam is a colossal mistake and has turned into an environmental nightmare. Tell me Joe, have you ever seen the real world. Or have you not got beyond your computer keyboard? What small minded and blinkered people you are.
Well, bully for you Molly. Now please explain quite how the removal of this ONE tree and its replacement by FOUR trees is going to adversely affect the enviroment? Please also answer the question posted on another thread here as well. What did Gabriel acheive apart from lots of self publicity? How does this tree compare to the acres of trees being removed in the Americas to cater for the Biofuels market? How does the enviromental impact of this one tree measure up to the amount land being cleared to cater for smackheads Afghanistan or for Cokeheads in Columbia? If you seriously gave a toss about anythng beyond self promotion and career advancement, those issues would be at the top of your agenda. Not some alleged smackhead piddling around in a tree in a provincial town.
Thank you Alan for seeing the bigger picture rather the obsessive blinkered view some people have.

Mr Ison, England says...
12:19pm Wed 16 Jan 08

Is there any diabolical scheme the Nazi did not invent?

What about Goldbergsteins law of Communism?


Andrew, Oxford says...
12:54pm Wed 16 Jan 08

It wouldn't appear that it was the intention of the individual to litter. Was he given the opportunity to retrieve the bottle and "dispose" of it properly? Probably not.

It really doesn't look good when the authorities pick and choose who to pursue.

I trust there will now follow a zero tolerance policy in central Oxford for all littering. It's now clear that every piece of gum stuck to the pavement is evidence of a crime being committed and, of course, DNA could easily be collected from it.

alan page, says...
12:58pm Wed 16 Jan 08

I wonder whether the anti-police brigade would feel the same about them were they to be burgled?

Perhaps the "fascist oppressors" will just laugh at them and refuse to attend.

I think that would be quite amusing.

alan page, says...
1:02pm Wed 16 Jan 08

Andrew wrote:
It wouldn't appear that it was the intention of the individual to litter. Was he given the opportunity to retrieve the bottle and "dispose" of it properly? Probably not. It really doesn't look good when the authorities pick and choose who to pursue. I trust there will now follow a zero tolerance policy in central Oxford for all littering. It's now clear that every piece of gum stuck to the pavement is evidence of a crime being committed and, of course, DNA could easily be collected from it.
Rather like the student who a few years back complained of being arrested for calling a horse gay, I suspect there is more to this story than meets the eye.

Perhaps he was drunk and behaving in an agressive fashion?

I think there is probably more to this than the student is letting on.

Woody, Goody says...
1:42pm Wed 16 Jan 08

What the hell is that green thing on his mouth in the photo above. Did he eat the tree??

Ron, Abingdon says...
1:51pm Wed 16 Jan 08

> I don't think any rational person would argue that such routine swabs are the end of civilisation as we know it.

Living under a government who keeps "misplacing" all your personal details and that so far has addressed any perceived problem in society with more repressive laws you may be surprised.

alan page, says...
2:27pm Wed 16 Jan 08

Ron wrote:
> I don't think any rational person would argue that such routine swabs are the end of civilisation as we know it. Living under a government who keeps "misplacing" all your personal details and that so far has addressed any perceived problem in society with more repressive laws you may be surprised.
I haven't felt particularly "repressed" myself.

I beleive there IS a misplaced faith in centralised computer databases.

We have had 24 hour drinking legalised, and online gambling liberalised.

I suppose you can pick and choose to suit any viewpoint, but I think routine swabbing is of more benefit than harm to society as a whole.

I used to beleive the Locke/Godwin idea than mankind is essentially nice and the laxer the regulating, the nicer they became. Sadly the world is not like that and the tragedy is that these laws have had to be put in place in the first place.

But, that's the way of the world.

Paul, Oxford says...
2:32pm Wed 16 Jan 08

Meanwhile, elsewhere in Oxford, there are robberies and burglaries and the police are too busy nicking Tarquin Bultitude the Third for the heinous crime of throwing a water bottle to a soap-dodging vegetarian publicity-seeker. I am glad to see that the police are making such good use of their resources and that they full deserve and pay rise coming their way! It is on par with that woman reporter from Channel 4 who had her backside pinched and the police, the brave crime-solvers that they are, went looking for the man responsible.

Mr Ison, England says...
2:34pm Wed 16 Jan 08

The student is probably already familiar with the torture of little ease.

Mr Ison, England says...
3:01pm Wed 16 Jan 08

Look at it from the Police perspective,some toff kid hurls an unknown object at a protester who is perched precariously in a tree,said toff misses his mark.

DanOxford, Oxford says...
3:46pm Wed 16 Jan 08

Throwing bottles of water at crusties in trees; calling Police horses 'gay'; jumping off bridges in May...

Over- privileged toffs- can't live with 'em, can't issue them with a monocle and baton and send them to walk slowly towards German machine gun fire...

Mr Ison, England says...
3:49pm Wed 16 Jan 08

They had more to fear from the Vickers.

Terry Chandler, east Oxford says...
3:56pm Wed 16 Jan 08

alan page wrote:
I wonder whether the anti-police brigade would feel the same about them were they to be burgled? Perhaps the "fascist oppressors" will just laugh at them and refuse to attend. I think that would be quite amusing.
I don't know whether they the police laugh or not but they don't attend, they just give you a crime number.

Mr Ison, england says...
3:57pm Wed 16 Jan 08

You wuz ripped off,they dish out some literature herabouts.

Jasper, says...
5:04pm Wed 16 Jan 08

Perhaps the folks who frequent Bonn Square will not be hostile to the new trees (Robinia pseudoacacia)when they find that an intoxicating narcotic drink can made from the skin of the fruit. Very potent I understand. Perhaps Mr Ison with his knowledge of horticulture could tell us more?

DanOxford, Oxford says...
5:08pm Wed 16 Jan 08

Perhaps a compromise could be reached? I'm sure with a little imagination the Council could add some coca bushes,opium poppies, peyote cactus, liberty cap mushrooms and cannabis sativa plants.

I would of course expect clear signage warning to stay off the grass of course.

DanOxford, Oxford says...
5:11pm Wed 16 Jan 08

Rumours that the area is to be renamed 'Bong Square' have proven impossible to verify.

Jasper, says...
5:27pm Wed 16 Jan 08

We'll get high with a little help from our friends. (With apologies to the Beatles)

Joe, Bonn Square says...
8:26pm Wed 16 Jan 08

The OCC wish to know if the dicarded plastic water bottle was placed in the correct re-cycle bin.

If not - beware men with fine notices entering the Square and serving them on the unwashes.

Not that they can pay of course. Crisis loan time!

Cat, says...
8:40pm Wed 16 Jan 08

Woody wrote:
What the hell is that green thing on his mouth in the photo above. Did he eat the tree??
I have just noticed your comment - has anyone else noticed the offending article coming from the crackheads mouth?

Cat, says...
8:42pm Wed 16 Jan 08

joe wrote:
alan page wrote:
Molly Walsh wrote: Well Joe, I have worked in several countries, including China. I wrote about the potential ecological risks of going ahead with the Three Gorges Dam across the Yangtze River. The Chinese government ignored critics who forecast it would be an environmental disaster. Top officials in Beijing now openly say the Three Gorges Dam is a colossal mistake and has turned into an environmental nightmare. Tell me Joe, have you ever seen the real world. Or have you not got beyond your computer keyboard? What small minded and blinkered people you are.
Well, bully for you Molly. Now please explain quite how the removal of this ONE tree and its replacement by FOUR trees is going to adversely affect the enviroment? Please also answer the question posted on another thread here as well. What did Gabriel acheive apart from lots of self publicity? How does this tree compare to the acres of trees being removed in the Americas to cater for the Biofuels market? How does the enviromental impact of this one tree measure up to the amount land being cleared to cater for smackheads Afghanistan or for Cokeheads in Columbia? If you seriously gave a toss about anythng beyond self promotion and career advancement, those issues would be at the top of your agenda. Not some alleged smackhead piddling around in a tree in a provincial town.
Thank you Alan for seeing the bigger picture rather the obsessive blinkered view some people have.

I wonder whether the anti-police brigade would feel the same about them were they to be burgled?

Perhaps the "fascist oppressors" will just laugh at them and refuse to attend.

I think that would be quite amusing.


For once I agree with Alan but only once!

Mr Ison, England says...
8:49pm Wed 16 Jan 08

Not really a fan of the acacia pseudo acacia,they always look a bit sickly

Try Sophora secundiflora instead.

Pierce your chest with catfish hooks and tie the eyelets to the pole then do a little sundancing.

Mr Ison, England says...
9:16pm Wed 16 Jan 08

Cotton woods may be better,strange fruit indeed.

C, says...
10:00pm Wed 16 Jan 08

alan page wrote:
Andrew wrote:
It wouldn't appear that it was the intention of the individual to litter. Was he given the opportunity to retrieve the bottle and "dispose" of it properly? Probably not. It really doesn't look good when the authorities pick and choose who to pursue. I trust there will now follow a zero tolerance policy in central Oxford for all littering. It's now clear that every piece of gum stuck to the pavement is evidence of a crime being committed and, of course, DNA could easily be collected from it.
Rather like the student who a few years back complained of being arrested for calling a horse gay, I suspect there is more to this story than meets the eye.

Perhaps he was drunk and behaving in an agressive fashion?

I think there is probably more to this than the student is letting on.
He was arrested literally the second the bottle left his hand and had no dealings with the police beforehand (I was there). The only thing more to this story is that the 'redevelopment' benefits no-one more than the property developers.

The Bajinator, says...
10:26pm Wed 16 Jan 08

He drives worse than the throws, stay off the streets of Oxford.

Jez, Oxon says...
10:39pm Wed 16 Jan 08

Oh, for goodness sake. Gabriel Chamberlain has become everyone's hero all of a sudden and all these "right on" people crawl out of the woodwork in support/sympathy. This stupid student wouldn't countenance even looking at chamberlain in normal circumstances, let alone talking to him, or "supporting" him.
Now we have the ridiculous situation where a dumb student is taking matters further after being arrested and wasting tax payer's money by getting the Independent Police Complaints Commission involved. As for maybe not taking legal action, ...get a life you silly little boy. Go back to your studies and start acting like the adult you purport to be!

Mr Ison, England says...
10:47pm Wed 16 Jan 08

It's not out fault they spent 1.5 million pounds sterling feathering the nest of some naff scottish architect.

Mr Ison, England says...
11:12pm Wed 16 Jan 08

Kind of leaves me wondering how much it would have cost to glaze the area and have semi-tropical plantings to wow the tourists.

If it's mind bending plants you wish to see then Kew has Ayahuasca Vine,Peyote,Cocoa,Ep
hedra,and probaly a few others.

I view Bonn square as an opportunity missed.

If one looks at Milton Keynes shopping centre they built an extension around an oak.

Last time i was there the several Banana actually had bananas.

They also have dates on their palms from time to time.

They too have psychoactive herbiage,Trichocereu
s Pachanoi,though every time i visit i never see a flower.

My own specimens have flowers every year and 2007 saw a fruit.

There is a technique to assisting fruiting which i am working on.

Simon, Somewhere nice says...
11:28pm Wed 16 Jan 08

I agree with Jock about the insidious nature of routine DNA harvesting - the crap about the student and the crusty up a tree is a red herring - whats that poem by Martin Niemöller? "First they came for the Communists...". It's funny how many people only care about injustice when it's happening to people just like themselves.

re: DNA - The Government retrospectively changed the law to allow them to keep over 100,000 illegally held DNA and fingerprint samples - such as those from people who were proved innocent and those whose DNA was given voluntarily to eliminate them from enquiries (they were *helping* the police and were promised it would be destroyed!).
The law was recently changed again so that DNA can be taken from anyone arrested for anything (previously it was only taken if the person was arrested for a crime that warranted a prison sentence). The Government has a target for populating it's DNA database and it seems that just taking criminals DNA wasn't hitting the mark

Occasionally old crimes will be cleared up by using DNA matches found using this trawler approach, but equally there are numerous instances of DNA evidence being key to securing unsafe convictions when there was minimal or non existent corroborating evidence. If you think a DNA database won't be abused then you're a fool.

Consider this - if it's so innocuous, why are the police the only people in the country whose DNA and fingerprint records will be destroyed (when the leave the force)?

Hmm.

Mr Ison, England says...
11:34pm Wed 16 Jan 08

One wonders what it is they are looking for.

Simon, Somewhere says...
11:38pm Wed 16 Jan 08

The Doughnut King?

alan page, says...
12:53am Thu 17 Jan 08

Simon wrote:
I agree with Jock about the insidious nature of routine DNA harvesting - the crap about the student and the crusty up a tree is a red herring - whats that poem by Martin Niemöller? "First they came for the Communists...". It's funny how many people only care about injustice when it's happening to people just like themselves. re: DNA - The Government retrospectively changed the law to allow them to keep over 100,000 illegally held DNA and fingerprint samples - such as those from people who were proved innocent and those whose DNA was given voluntarily to eliminate them from enquiries (they were *helping* the police and were promised it would be destroyed!). The law was recently changed again so that DNA can be taken from anyone arrested for anything (previously it was only taken if the person was arrested for a crime that warranted a prison sentence). The Government has a target for populating it's DNA database and it seems that just taking criminals DNA wasn't hitting the mark Occasionally old crimes will be cleared up by using DNA matches found using this trawler approach, but equally there are numerous instances of DNA evidence being key to securing unsafe convictions when there was minimal or non existent corroborating evidence. If you think a DNA database won't be abused then you're a fool. Consider this - if it's so innocuous, why are the police the only people in the country whose DNA and fingerprint records will be destroyed (when the leave the force)? Hmm.
So what do you suggest? No DNA swabbing? No fingerprinting? What about we issue burglars with street maps?

If you dont commit a crime you wont end up on a database. Simple really.

Now ID cards are a different kettle of fish and with those you are right to be concerned as they do pose a threat to individual liberty.

As to your point regarding the police, surely if they become the subject of criminal proceedings they will remain on file irrespective of whether they remain in the force or not.

I presume you are opposed to the sex offenders register as well?

As for the Niemoller, can you tell me how you find it relevant? It seems to apply that if anybody dares to disagree with some absurd "collective" decision or other they are traitors to the world at large.

The issue here IS whether this protester actually acheived anything in the grand scheme of things and whether all the money spent having to police the area has contributed anyway to the overall global scheme of things in general.

Bourgeois lassaiz faire attitudes to crime are out of place in such a discussion.

Alan "Harryhausen& quot; Page, says...
3:36pm Thu 17 Jan 08

It's the truth.

Simon, Somewhere Nice says...
12:14am Fri 18 Jan 08

"If you dont commit a crime you wont end up on a database. Simple really."

No Alan, I'm pretty sure thats precisely the opposite of what I wrote. I also think this is important stuff, so let me reiterate:

The government held hundreds of thousands of DNA records taken from people who were proven innocent in a court of law, were not actually charged with any crime or who had volunteered their DNA in order to help the police with their enquiries (i.e. to rule themselves out in order to narrow down the possible list of suspects). The government knew this and went so far as to change the law to allow them to keep data that they already held on innocent people, and to continue collecting it.

So, asserting that not commiting a crime will keep you off the DNA database is provably false, and the Criminal Justice and Police Act 2001 is the proof.
http://www.idealgove

rnment.com/index.php

/blog/brian_gladman_

looks_at_id_risks_an

d_costs/

I'm saddened that you somehow conflate a register for people convicted of a sexual offence (note the word convicted) with a massive database that is regularly being populated by the DNA records of anyone the police have detained but later released without charge.

I'm fairly sure that a coppers 6th sense is not enough to prove guilt and that it's considered traditional to go through the wearing procedure of arrest, having charges brought, going to trial, presenting evidence and finally being judged by a jury of your peers who find you guilty....