Met Police (London PD) firearms officers turning in their weapons following Chris Kaba murder charge - An officer was charged with murder after Chris Kaba was shot dead last year after he drove his Audi into a marked police car.

Metropolitan Police firearms officers have been handing in their weapons after a force marksman was charged with the murder of Chris Kaba.

Mr Kaba, 24, died in Streatham Hill, southeast London, in September last year after he was shot through an Audi windscreen.

The officer accused of his murder, named only as NX121 after an anonymity order was granted by a district judge, appeared at Westminster Magistrates' Court and the Old Bailey on Thursday.

Earlier it was reported Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley met with 70 firearms officers who operate across London following the murder charge saying many of them were "understandably anxious" following the decision.

It has since been revealed a number of officers have "taken the decision to step back from armed duties" and that this number "has increased in the last 48 hours".

The force also said it was "exploring contingencies" to cope with a potential dearth of armed officers "should they be required".

A Met Police spokesperson said: "Senior officers, including the Commissioner, have been meeting with firearms officers in recent days as they reflect on the CPS decision to charge NX121 with murder.

"Many are worried about how the decision impacts on them, on their colleagues and on their families.

"They are concerned that it signals a shift in the way the decisions they take in the most challenging circumstances will be judged.

"A number of officers have taken the decision to step back from armed duties while they consider their position. That number has increased over the past 48 hours.

"We are in ongoing discussions with those officers to support them and to fully understand the genuinely held concerns that they have.

"The Met has a significant firearms capability and we continue to have armed officers deployed in communities across London as well as at other sites including Parliament, diplomatic premises, airports etc."

'It is a difficult and fine line senior officers have to take'

Sky News policing commentator Graham Wettone said: "Officers on the frontline do not feel they have the support and backing of their senior leaders.

"Senior leaders are very quick to come out and make statements supporting families and loved ones, but the actual officers involved do not feel they are receiving support.

"It is a difficult and fine line senior officers have to take but there seems to be a lack of public support for the officers while investigations are ongoing.

"This has led to officers deciding they no longer want to, for example, drive police cars or carry weapons. Those skills are voluntary, they don't have to do them and now we are seeing some choose not to."

In the moments before the shooting, Mr Kaba had driven into Kirkstall Gardens and collided with a marked police car.

The officer fired one shot and hit Mr Kaba in the head.

NX121 was released on bail on the conditions that he lives at a named address, surrenders his passport and does not apply for international travel documents.

A plea and trial preparation hearing will be listed for December 1, with a possible trial date of September 9 next year.


 
So they won't protect your daughter from paki rape gangs, they'll arrest your elderly mother for calling a troon a man and now they won't even drive a police cry to respond in time when your being burglarized. British cops are a fucking joke.

Here have some civil disobedience to thugs with badges.
 
So they won't protect your daughter from paki rape gangs, they'll arrest your elderly mother for calling a troon a man and now they won't even drive a police cry to respond in time when your being burglarized. British cops are a fucking joke.

Here have some civil disobedience to thugs with badges.
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How nice of the cop to try and put out the fire in the car instead of the one burning his coworker to a crisp.
 
What is it with entitled drivers using their cars as weapons, predictably getting shot, and the whole country going apeshit over clear-cut cases of self-defense? First Nahel, then Ta'Kiya, now this. I'm surprised people weren't simping for Darrell Brooks when an officer fired at him.

And of course car-hating urbanists never talk about these cases even though the best term to describe reactions to the shooting is car-brained.
 
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Why do people even fear the Britbong "police"?
To me, it seems like the only people they can arrest are grandmas who refuse to suck the girldick, because as soon as a crackhead with a knife shows up all of them run for the hills scared shitless.
 
In the moments before the shooting, Mr Kaba had driven into Kirkstall Gardens and collided with a marked police car.


The officer fired one shot and hit Mr Kaba in the head.
Seems like it was a good shoot, almost as if government is trying to dismantle the police without overtly doing it.

I'm guessing the only explanation is that he hit the police car by accident, but even then how are the police to know that he isn't about to allah akbar? Also does that mean Cressida Dick (ex-Met police chief who ordered the killshot on the train station guy) is going to be charged with murder too?...Oh right, rules for thee but not for me.

I don't understand how government can take the piss so much, but I'm not surprised that its retarded enough to do it so close to a depression.
 
I don’t understand how the police force isn’t mass protesting the fact that they can be charged as murderers for doing their jobs in a moment of crisis. Instead they…turn in their guns and get back to work? The British truly deserve every single bad thing that happens to them. I don’t know who competes with them in being such a cucked people willing to destroy their nation in exchange for nothing.
 
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