Suspicious behaviour on the tube
http://www.guardian.co.uk/attackonlondon/story/0,16132,1575532,00.html

David Mery
Thursday September 22, 2005
The Guardian

A London underground station was evacuated and part of a main east-west line
closed in a security alert on Thursday, three weeks after suicide bombers
killed 52 people on the transport network, police said. (Reuters)

This Reuters story was written while the police were detaining me in
Southwark tube station and the bomb squad was checking my rucksack. When
they were through, the two explosive specialists walked out of the tube
station smiling and commenting: "Nice laptop." The officers offered
apologies on behalf of the Metropolitan police. Then they arrested me.

7.10 pm: From my workplace in Southwark, south London, I arrange by text
message to meet my girlfriend at Hanover Square. To save time - as I suppose
- I decide to take the tube to Bond Street instead of my usual bus. I am
wearing greenish Merrell shoes, black trousers, T-shirt, black Gap jumper,
light rainproof Schott jacket and grey Top Shop cap. I am carrying a black
rucksack I use as a workbag.

7.21 pm: I enter Southwark tube station, passing uniformed police by the
entrance, and more police beyond the gate. I walk down to the platform,
peering down at the steps as, thanks to a small eye infection, I'm wearing
specs instead of my usual contact lenses. The next train is scheduled to
arrive in a few minutes. As other people drift on to the platform, I sit
down against the wall with my rucksack still on my back. I check for
messages on my phone, then take out a printout of an article about Wikipedia
from inside my jacket and begin to read.

The train enters the station. Uniformed police officers appear on the
platform and surround me. They must immediately notice my French accent,
still strong after living more than 12 years in London.

They handcuff me, hands behind my back, and take my rucksack out of my
sight. They explain that this is for my safety, and that they are acting
under the authority of the Terrorism Act. I am told that I am being stopped
and searched because:

· they found my behaviour suspicious from direct observation and then from
watching me on the CCTV system;

· I went into the station without looking at the police officers at the
entrance or by the gates;

· two other men entered the station at about the same time as me;

· I am wearing a jacket "too warm for the season";

· I am carrying a bulky rucksack, and kept my rucksack with me at all times;

· I looked at people coming on the platform;

· I played with my phone and then took a paper from inside my jacket.

They empty the contents of my pockets into two of their helmets, and search
me, and loosen my belt. One or two trains arrive and depart, with people
getting on and off. Then another train arrives and moves slowly through the
station. The driver is told not to stop. After that, no more trains pass
through the station.

We move away from the platform into the emergency staircase. I sit down on
the (dirty) steps. The police say they can't validate my address. I suggest
they ask the security guard where I work, two streets away. We go up to the
station doors, and I realise that the station is cordoned off. Two bomb
squad officers pass by. One turns to me and says in a joking tone: "Nice
laptop!" A police officer apologises on behalf of the Metropolitan police,
and explains that we are waiting for a more senior officer to express
further apologies. They take off the handcuffs and start giving me back my
possessions: my purse, keys, some papers. Another police officer says that
this is not proper. I am handcuffed again. A police van arrives and I am
told that I will wait in the back. After about five minutes, a police
officer formally arrests me.

8.53pm Arrested for suspicious behaviour and public nuisance, I am driven to
Walworth police station. I am given a form about my rights. I make one
correction to the police statement describing my detention: no train passed
before I was stopped. I empty my pockets of the few things they had given me
back at the tube station, and am searched again. My possessions are put in
evidence bags. They take Polaroid photographs of me. A police officer
fingerprints me and takes DNA swabs from each side of my mouth.

10:06pm I am allowed a call to my girlfriend. She is crying and keeps
repeating: "I thought you were injured or had an accident, where were you,
why didn't you call me back?" I explain I'm in a police station, my phone
was taken and the police wouldn't allow me to call. She wants to come to the
station. I ask her to stay at home as I don't know how long it will take.

10:30pm I am put into an individual police cell. A plainclothes officer
tells me my flat will be searched under the Terrorism Act. I request that my
girlfriend be called beforehand, so that she won't be too scared. I am asked
for her phone number. I don't know it - it is stored in my phone - so I
explain it is with the officer at the desk. I later find out that they don't
call her.

12:25-1:26 am Three uniformed police officers search my flat and interview
my girlfriend. They take away several mobile phones, an old IBM laptop, a
BeBox tower computer (an obsolete kind of PC from the mid-1990s), a handheld
GPS receiver (positioning device with maps, very useful when walking), a
frequency counter (picked it up at a radio amateur junk fair because it
looked interesting), a radio scanner (receives short wave radio stations), a
blue RS232C breakout box (a tool I used to use when reviewing modems for
computer magazines), some cables, a computer security conference leaflet,
envelopes with addresses, maps of Prague and London Heathrow, some business
cards, and some photographs I took for the 50 years of the Association of
Computing Machinery conference. This list is from my girlfriend's memory, or
what we have noticed is missing since.

3.20am I am interviewed by a plainclothes officer. The police again read out
their version of events. I make two corrections: pointing out that no train
passed between my arrival on the platform and when I was detained, and that
I didn't take any wire out of my pocket. The officer suggests the computer
cables I had in my rucksack could have been confused for wires. I tell him I
didn't take my rucksack off until asked by police so this is impossible.
Three items I was carrying seem to be of particular interest to the officer:
a small promotional booklet I got at the Screen on the Green cinema during
the screening of The Assassination of Richard Nixon: a folded A4 page where
I did some doodles (the police suspect it could be a map); and the active
part of an old work pass where one can see the induction loop and one
integrated circuit. Items from the flat the police officer asks about: the
RS232C breakout box, the radio scanner and the frequency counter.

The officer explains what made them change their mind and arrest me.
Apparently, on August 4, 2004, there was a firearms incident at the company
where I work. The next day I find out that there had been a hoax call the
previous year, apparently from a temp claiming there was an armed intruder.
Some staff had also been seen photographing tube stations with a camera
phone. On June 2, as part of a team-building exercise, new colleagues were
supposed to photograph landmarks and try to get a picture of themselves with
a policeman.

4:30am The interviewing officer releases me on bail, without requiring
security. He gives me back most of the contents of my pockets, including my
Oyster card and iPod, and some things from my rucksack. He says he will keep
my phone. I ask if I can have the SIM card? He says no, that's what they
need, but lets me keep the whole phone. On August 31 I arrive at the police
station at 9 am as required by bail, with my solicitor. A plainclothes
police officer tells us they are dropping the charges, and briefly
apologises. The officer in charge of the case is away so the process of
clearing up my case is suspended until he signs the papers cancelling the
bail and authorising the release of my possessions. The meeting lasts about
five minutes.

I send letters to the data protection registrars of London Underground,
Transport for London, the British Transport police and the Metropolitan
police. The first three letters ask for any data, including CCTV footage,
related to the incident on July 28, while the final one asks for any data
they have on me. They all have 40 days to respond. On September 8 I talk to
my solicitor about ensuring the police return all my possessions, giving us
all the inquiry documents (which they may or may not do) and expunging
police records (apparently unlikely to happen). The solicitor sends a letter
to the officer in charge of my case conveying to him how upset I am.

I write to my MP about my concerns. The police decided that wearing a rain
jacket, carrying a rucksack with a laptop inside, looking down at the steps
while going into a tube station and checking your phone for messages just
ticked too many boxes on their checklist and makes you a terrorist suspect.
How many other people are not only wrongly detained but wrongly arrested
every week in similar circumstances? And how many of them are also computer
and telecoms enthusiasts, fitting the police's terrorist profile so well?

While a police officer did state that my rain jacket was "too warm for the
season", could it have been instead that the weather was too cold for the
season? The day before had been the coldest July day for 25 years.

Under current laws the police are not only entitled to keep my fingerprints
and DNA samples, but according to my solicitor, they are also entitled to
hold on to what they gather during their investigation: notepads of
arresting officers, photographs, interviewing tapes and any other documents
they entered in the police national computer (PNC). So even though the
police consider me innocent there will remain some mention (what exactly?)
in the PNC and, if they fully share their information with Interpol, in
other police databases around the world as well. Isn't a state that keeps
files on innocent persons a police state? This erosion of our fundamental
liberties should be of concern to us all. All men are suspect, but some men
are more suspect than others (with apologies to George Orwell).



You are a subscribed member of the infowarrior list. Visit
www.infowarrior.org for list information or to unsubscribe. This message
may be redistributed freely in its entirety. Any and all copyrights
appearing in list messages are maintained by their respective owners.

Reply via email to