logo
The police job that is beyond the stuff of nightmares

The police job that is beyond the stuff of nightmares

Yahoo2 days ago

David Murray's office has a warning on its door: "Please be aware: child sexual abuse material being viewed in this room."
The detective constable spends hours examining pictures and watching videos, the worst of which are beyond the stuff of nightmares.
He puts himself through it because he knows the job is important.
The father of two young boys admits it takes its toll, yet he wishes he had started the job far earlier in his policing career to make a difference.
He says it's worth it, because every week he and his colleagues are identifying young victims, and protecting them from further abuse.
Earlier this week, Police Scotland invited BBC Scotland News to witness its work demonstrating the change in offending behaviour since the Covid pandemic, revealing that paedophiles were making direct contact with children online within 30 seconds of trying.
David was the first victim identification officer to work with Police Scotland's national child abuse investigation unit.
After four years, he now has three colleagues and an ever increasing workload.
The unit is conducting 700 inquiries a year and executing 15 to 20 search warrants every week, seizing dozens of devices from the homes of suspects.
The job of the victim identification officers is to examine images and footage found on these phones and laptops, to try to find children who've been abused.
According to Interpol, online child sexual abuse is one of the rare crime areas where police officers start with the evidence and work their way back to the crime scene.
Once images are found, the victim identification specialists take over, combing through the images with the objective of removing the child from harm and arresting the abuser.
But their workload is increasing as fast as they can get through them.
David says: "Four years ago we were identifying approximately 25 to 30 victims a year. We're doing more than ten times that now."
Shockingly, the victims are close to home.
"Last year we identified nearly 400 victims and 90% of those children are from Scotland.
"When I started, I thought it was a problem that was far away, but it's on our doorstep. It's children in our community."
The contents of the devices are uploaded to the UK-wide child abuse image database.
If they've been discovered before, they don't have to be viewed again, but if they're new, they're classed as "first generation" images and checked by David and his colleagues.
The grim reality of that is that much of the abuse takes place within households where the perpetrator knows the victim.
That means devices can include pictures of normal family life, providing a horrifying contrast to the images of abuse and vital information for the detectives.
"Essentially we start looking for clues in the pictures as to where this footage was taken, things like plug sockets or bits of clothing, maybe school uniforms and football strips, anything that would perhaps indicate where the child lives," says David.
"A lot of our identifications are made from non-indecent images."
One victim was recently traced in Glasgow after a detective recognised a water tower in the background of a selfie.
Steps are taken to safeguard children who've been identified, in conjunction with outside agencies such as social work.
The most extreme images and videos viewed by David and his colleagues plumb the depths of depravity. He agrees they have to switch off their own emotions.
Police Scotland monitors the wellbeing of officers in this type of work and there are strict rules to limit how much time they spend looking at the material.
They're not allowed to view it in the first or last hour of their shift, and one day a week is spent working from home, catching up on admin and emails.
"It's just a case of prioritising and laying out your day," David says.
"We start with a briefing every morning and we've got quite a substantial workload, and we just work our way through it the best we can.
"There are wellbeing measures in place and talking to counsellors and other people about what you're feeling and seeing can help unlock things."
Every week he and his colleagues walk past that warning on their office doors.
"We are reviewing footage of something that's already happened to these children," says David.
"But when we identify them and put the safeguarding measures in place, that's the most satisfying part of the job.
"I used to work in other areas of policing, like serious and organised crime and drug enforcement but I can honestly say that now kind of pales into insignificance.
"It doesn't compare to putting measures in place to make a child safe."
A soft knock - how police arrest a suspected paedophile

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Alpha Kappa Alpha Charters New Chapter In The United Kingdom
Alpha Kappa Alpha Charters New Chapter In The United Kingdom

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Alpha Kappa Alpha Charters New Chapter In The United Kingdom

Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. is exporting a Black American tradition to the U.K. It officially charted the first AKA chapter in the country, which will be known as Alpha Delta Alpha Omega Chapter, on Friday. It is the 19th chapter of AKA's international mission. Technically, there was a precursor to the AKA's presence in London with the former Tau Sigma Omega Chapter, which was dissolved in 2006. AKA inaugurated the new chapter in London on Friday. Alpha Delta Alpha Omega Chapter includes 25 professional women who work in fields like real estate, finance, medicine and business. 'History has been made across the pond!' the sorority wrote in an Instagram post. 'Congratulations to the charter members of Alpha Delta Alpha Omega Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated® on your official chartering in London, United Kingdom!' Before its official induction, the interest group was titled the Royal Pearl Society. They have been working with local organizations to help communities in need this past year, according to Watch the Yard. The group spearheaded initiatives such as the distribution of 350 Childhood Hunger Power Packs, assembling over 200 Blessing Bags, organizing an eight-week entrepreneurship training program for women, investing over £3,000 in Black-owned businesses and volunteering over 200 hours. 'These women are already making an enormous difference in and around London,' Carrie J. Clark, AKA's International Regional Director. 'They are an amazing group of servant leaders who I am confident will expand Alpha Kappa Alpha's legacy of service in the Greater London area for years to come.' Alpha Delta Alpha Omega Chapter will keep focusing on similar initiatives after its official induction. They plan on organizing activities like distributing children's books by Black authors, as well as collecting professional attire for women re-entering the workforce. Although sororities are an American tradition, AKA established international chapters early on, according to their website. The first one to be established overseas was the AKA chapter in Liberia, which was chartered in 1954. AKA then opened another international chapter in Nassau, Bahamas, in 1963, in the U. S. Virgin Islands in 1978, and in Germany a year later. Other countries with international chapters include Japan, South Korea, Canada, South Africa and more. The sorority has led global initiatives like efforts to reduce poverty in sub-Saharan African countries, building schools in South Africa after apartheid and service missions to support women and children in Liberia. The organization now counts over 365,000 members across 13 countries and post Alpha Kappa Alpha Charters New Chapter In The United Kingdom appeared first on Blavity.

High energy costs threaten UK manufacturing's future, industry warns
High energy costs threaten UK manufacturing's future, industry warns

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

High energy costs threaten UK manufacturing's future, industry warns

By Andy Bruce MANCHESTER, England (Reuters) -Britain needs to cut industrial energy bills that are the highest among major advanced economies if its aspirations for a healthy manufacturing sector are to succeed, industry body Make UK said on Monday. Prime Minister Keir Starmer's government is working on an industrial strategy to put British manufacturing - hit hard by Brexit, soaring energy costs and global trade wars - on a solid footing for the years ahead. Manufacturing association Make UK said it should cancel climate levies imposed on industrial energy costs and adopt a fixed industrial energy price. Britain had the highest industrial energy prices out of any International Energy Agency member country in 2023, reflecting its dependence on gas and its role in setting electricity prices. "If we do not address the issue of high industrial energy costs in the UK as a priority, we risk the security of our country," Make UK chief executive officer Stephen Phipson said. "We will fail to attract investment in the manufacturing sector and will rapidly enter a phase of renewed de-industrialisation." Britain has de-industrialised - defined as the share of manufacturing in overall economic output - faster than in any other major European country over the last 30 years, according to a Reuters analysis of national accounts data. Manufacturing hit a record low 9% of economic output last year, crowded out by the dominant services sector which now drives the majority of the country's exports - a first among Group of Seven advanced economies. Alan Johnson, a senior executive for manufacturing, supply chain and purchasing at Nissan Motor, said its Sunderland plant in the north east of England had the highest energy costs out of any of its facilities in the world. "The proposals being put forward by Make UK ... would send a strong message to investors that the UK remains committed to creating a more competitive environment for electric vehicle manufacturing," Johnson said. Sign in to access your portfolio

Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis have their very own 'Mary Poppins-like' figure - and it's their grandma Carole
Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis have their very own 'Mary Poppins-like' figure - and it's their grandma Carole

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis have their very own 'Mary Poppins-like' figure - and it's their grandma Carole

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. There are plenty of parents out there who have no doubt wished for a Mary Poppins of their own to come and get the house in order when things feel overwhelming - and for the Princess of Wales, she had this in the form of her own mother. A royal source has claimed that Carole Middleton became something of a 'real Mary Poppins-like figure' to her three eldest grandchildren, stepping up and becoming a vital helper to Prince William and Kate Middleton as Kate faced her cancer treatment in 2024. The source close to the Wales' spoke to The Independent in the United Kingdom about the irreplaceable role Kate's mom played in her grandchildren's lives, claiming "Carole has been the driving force keeping the family together with minimum fuss and maximum modesty". They explained that Carole, who has always been thought of as Kate's rock and who has helped the Prince and Princess of Wales have an ordinary life, supported her grandchildren and was always on hand to keep their schedules as normal as possible, always on hand to ferry them around their various extracurricular activities. "She's ferried and fetched George, Louis and Charlotte, taken them to school sports matches and given them endless support. She's been a real Mary Poppins-like figure," the source continued. It's also been claimed that the Princess of Wales's mother embodied the 'three R's' when it comes to her family. "She's come to the rescue, provided reassurance, and has been a rock to Catherine and William as they come to terms with the news," the source said. Catherine, the Princess of Wales: A Biography of the Future Queen by Robert Jobson, $12.06 (was $29.95) from Amazon Through the author's extensive connections within the royal household, this dynamic biography tells the full story of how Catherine, the Princess of Wales, became the woman she is Deal Carole went into "Mary Poppins" mode for the family after the Princess of Wales confirmed she was undergoing cancer treatment following her abdominal surgery at the start of 2024. In a poignant video released on social media at the time, Catherine revealed, "In January, I underwent major abdominal surgery in London and at the time, it was thought that my condition was non-cancerous. The surgery was successful. However, tests after the operation found cancer had been present." She added in the video, "My medical team therefore advised that I should undergo a course of preventative chemotherapy and I am now in the early stages of that treatment." Carole going above and beyond for her family is nothing new. Royal Journalist, Katie Nicholl, has previously claimed on the True Royalty documentary Kate Middleton: Heir We Go Again, "One of the things that allows William and Kate to be so ordinary is the presence of the Middletons in their lives." "Carole is a regular through those golden gates at Kensington Palace. She whizzes through in her Land Rover. There is no security because everybody knows her. She turns up to help with bedtime and bath time," said the royal expert. "She is absolutely indispensable." Of course, the family have been living at Adelaide Cottage in Windsor since 2022, which means that the young royal family are closer than ever to their grandmother who is located in the same county and just a 45-minute drive from her grandchildren.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store