Pubdate: Mon, 10 Nov 2008 Source: Times, The (UK) Copyright: 2008 Times Newspapers Ltd Contact: http://www.the-times.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/454 Author: Libby Purves 'IT'S KNIVES, FIREARMS, CASH, DRUGS. EVERY NIGHT' Wearing A Stab-Proof Vest, I'm Ready To Join A Policewoman Taking The Fight Against Weapons And Gangs To The Streets We are barrelling across Wandsworth in a big silver carrier with sirens wailing, six smart policemen in light body armour and me in a rather oversized Times stab-vest. Why the sirens? "Fight at a garage," says PC Andrea Pickup. She is a diminutive figure with beautiful brown eyes and three children under ten: senior officers in the elite Territorial Support Group call her "brilliant". She runs marathons, undergoes the group's regular and taxing public-order training at Gravesend, and frisks men twice her size for knives and guns. "You should see her wag her finger at them...!" says Inspector Chris Bethel, shaking his head wonderingly. It is Andrea whose night I am following, although for dramatic reasons I don't see her after ten and finish the shift with the men. We are on Operation Blunt 2, the Met's initiative against knives and gangs. In its first ten weeks it made 97 arrests, searched 3,500 citizens and retrieved 1,900 knives, assorted knuckledusters, at least one meat cleaver and a great many drugs. In the briefing we got maps and photographs of the known leaders - "Nominals" - and recent incidents: Blunt is "intelligence-led". Wandsworth's gangs are the SUK and TZ, or "Stickemup Kids" and "Terror Zone"; other boroughs offer such vaunting teenage sobriquets as Clapham Soldiers or the DSN - "Don't say Nuttin'." The briefing officers know them all, but are subject to cautionary mantras: "Remember human rights. Avoid police humour that may offend. But make no mistake, we must get into their faces and into their pockets, and let these people know they cannot terrorise innocent citizens. The community is behind us." The local force has beaten us to the garage fight, so the big silver carrier starts nosing like a shark through glum estates. Two lads with sculpted hair outside a launderette... "Nah." But then a nondescript group by a newsagent , black and white together, one with a football. I wouldn't have glanced twice, but we jump out and searching begins. Tiny Andrea takes on an enormous shaven-headed man, briskly patting down his cargo pockets. "Knives can be anywhere - belt, small of the back, leg. Some of them wear two pairs of trousers, knife on the inside." The man with the football emotes like Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells. "Why don't you go and catch a burglar or a rapist? You're wasting my time - you got no right - " "Yes we have," says the officer patiently (there is a Section 60 - stop and search - over the whole borough for this week's Blunt operation). Names are passed to the computer in the van; before she has finished Andrea knows her subject is a regular "distraction burglar". Behind him another man is handcuffed, enabling her colleagues to remove Class A drugs from his pockets. No knife this time, but all through the shift the officers laugh at my astonishment over how they choose their subjects amid the thousands of lounging London teenagers. "You read body language; 95 per cent of stops turn out to be already known to us." The football man, freed, starts bouncing his ball in the traffic, to annoy. "Stop that!" "You wasting my time, man!" Our drug dealer is being led to the van; his mate follows with a bag of chips and feeds him one. "'Scuse me," says the felon politely, "could you tell my friends which station?" "Wandsworth." We hand him over to a Case Progression Unit, which frees the team to get back on the road. News comes in of arrests by other teams, and the officers start to worry. With only three stations waiting, they risk running out of cells. It is the main frustration of Blunt 2: prisoners must be taken to a police station, but the days of a cop-shop in every neighbourhood are gone. A lot of time is spent driving through traffic with sullen passengers, in the hopes of a free cell in Catford. More searching, outside a Londis. This time there is aggression: Andrea and a colleague move in on a young man and suddenly she is on the ground. Then he is. A full moon emerges from the clouds and a smart woman noses by in an MGB. "It transpires," says Chris Bethel while Andrea leads her assailant to the van in cuffs, "that he didn't want to take his shoes off, because in one of them was a stolen Oyster card." I raise my eyebrows. "Believe me, it's stops like these that produce the knives, the firearms, the cash, the drugs. Every night." We offload Oyster man at Battersea - Wandsworth now being full - but Andrea stays to have her leg checked. Our depleted band moves on to another estate and a VW Golf attracts the team. Why? "Just the way he glanced round; you get a feeling." A Polish lady stops to ask directions and the driver patiently checks the map. "It's surreal sometimes, you can be actually fighting a guy and someone will ask the way to Tesco." From the VW car comes a cry: "Find!" They are vindicated again, and show me a large plastic bag, full of individual wraps and UKP 20 notes. This is a PWITS: possession with intent to supply. He may not have a knife, but his trade fuels those who do. The community is gathering now, children and girls and the man's mother saying: "He needs his medication. Your doctor won't know what he's got." "Yes we do," says the inspector. "Sickle cell." Again, the man's previous record has flashed up. But we wait for the medication before haring off towards the last free cells available: in Tooting. As I climb in, a small boy on a flash bike asks wonderingly: "Is dis de start of something?" The calm speed, the uniforms and radios and all-knowing technology, the cool guy with the smart car being taken away through the dark streets - the child's eyes are wide. "They see that we mean it," says one of the veterans. "I think we rather lost our way over stop and search. We're finding it now." Radios crackle. Andrea's leg is not serious. At Tooting I say goodnight, but two impressions remain. The first is that given a chance and a strong team, the police know exactly who to stop, white or black. Not one of our groups has failed to include at least one lawbreaker. The second is a look on the faces of those searched but not arrested: relief, mingled with a grudging respect. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin