http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/kent/7520598.stm
"Terror police detain disabled boy
A police officer has been transferred from duties at a Channel crossing after a
disabled child and his parents were detained under the Terrorism Act.
Julie Maynard, of Ware, Hertfordshire, was taking a day trip to Calais through
the Channel Tunnel in Folkestone, Kent.
The detective constable accused Ms Maynard and her husband Leslie Coombs of
trafficking her son Joshua, 12.
Kent Police apologised and described the incident as inappropriate,
unprofessional and lacking in tact.
The family were stopped by the plain clothes officer from the Channel Tunnel
Policing Unit on 20 February.
Ms Maynard, a legal advocate, said the officer, who failed to identify who she
was, asked for the family's passports then asked "who's the boy?".
"My son is mixed race and the officer then told us, 'I believe you are child
trafficking'," she said.
When Ms Maynard asked the woman officer if she would be asked the same question
if her son was white, she said the officer replied: "Are you accusing me of
being a racist?"
The family were then detained under the Terrorism Act and surrounded by "at
least 10 police officers" who ordered them to get out of their car.
Ms Maynard was separated from her husband and son, who is autistic and has
cerebral palsy, and taken to a detention room for questioning, leaving Joshua
distressed.
Ms Maynard said the woman officer told her: "It's obvious he [Joshua] has
nothing to do with you".
She said officers had told the family they had powers to hold them for up to
nine hours under Section 7 of the Terrorism Act, but they were released after
more than two hours.
Mr Coombs said it was an "unpleasant and frightening experience".
Julie Maynard said: "More and more people are being stopped under the Terrorism
Act - there's absolutely nothing in the act to stop individual officers abusing
their powers.
"They have a difficult job to do in a difficult climate but their approach needs
to be reasonable and not presumptive that every person is somehow guilty of a
possible terrorism or criminal offence."
Kent Police have paid a "substantial sum" of money to the welfare fund at
Joshua's school, reimbursed the family's ferry fare and offered Joshua a visit
to the Kent police marine launch.
Insp Helen Shaw, from Kent Police's Frontier Operations, apologised to the
family in a letter.
In another letter she wrote: "Your complaint and my subsequent enquiries allowed
me to identify that her (the officer's) manner had been insensitive, lacking in
tact and that her conduct overall lacked the professionalism I expect.
"I wish to reassure you that your highly unsatisfactory experience was a very
isolated incident."
Quoted in full no apologies. First and foremost, how did this get from a
ludicrous suspicion of child trafficking, to an even more ludicrous arrest under
the *Terrorism Act*?!
Mike
--
http://www.corestore.org
'As I walk along these shores
I am the history within'