After seeing the photos of the two boys involved, I really don’t blame the police for the confusion. They really look like the could be brothers, and if there were serious injuries, I can see how swelling, bruising etc. could add to them being difficult to identify.Â
OSUBrit on
The thing about the Rotherham crash is he wasn’t identified until he came around, despite the family of the deceased lad spending days at hospital with the one that survived and not identifying him as not their relative. Very sad case but I don’t feel there’s blame to be attributed there.
BlueMoonCityzen on
It’s very sad but I don’t know what they expect to come out of complaining
Sure compensation as usual but it isn’t like this is much of a trainable situation, and surely you don’t just want someone sacked
harping_along on
What I never understand about articles like this, usually criticizing the police over something, is why they interview about five people who all just say emotional, obvious things e.g. “this is very distressing for the families involved”, “identifying people from their driving licence alone isn’t enough” etc etc. But they never seem to offer an alternative? They’ve talked to an expert in this article who offers absolutely no solution to the problem. What are the police actually meant to do here then? I guess just not identify the victim at all until they wake up – but the expert says waiting until the victim regains consciousness also isn’t good enough. So what are they meant to do??
sillysimon92 on
*For three weeks Trevor’s family believed he had died, while Joshua’s sat by the bedside of the injured victim in hospital. When he regained consciousness, the truth became clear.*
Jesus Christ! This wasn’t a case of failure on the emergency services if the family couldn’t tell for 3 WHOLE WEEKS!
5 Comments
After seeing the photos of the two boys involved, I really don’t blame the police for the confusion. They really look like the could be brothers, and if there were serious injuries, I can see how swelling, bruising etc. could add to them being difficult to identify.Â
The thing about the Rotherham crash is he wasn’t identified until he came around, despite the family of the deceased lad spending days at hospital with the one that survived and not identifying him as not their relative. Very sad case but I don’t feel there’s blame to be attributed there.
It’s very sad but I don’t know what they expect to come out of complaining
Sure compensation as usual but it isn’t like this is much of a trainable situation, and surely you don’t just want someone sacked
What I never understand about articles like this, usually criticizing the police over something, is why they interview about five people who all just say emotional, obvious things e.g. “this is very distressing for the families involved”, “identifying people from their driving licence alone isn’t enough” etc etc. But they never seem to offer an alternative? They’ve talked to an expert in this article who offers absolutely no solution to the problem. What are the police actually meant to do here then? I guess just not identify the victim at all until they wake up – but the expert says waiting until the victim regains consciousness also isn’t good enough. So what are they meant to do??
*For three weeks Trevor’s family believed he had died, while Joshua’s sat by the bedside of the injured victim in hospital. When he regained consciousness, the truth became clear.*
Jesus Christ! This wasn’t a case of failure on the emergency services if the family couldn’t tell for 3 WHOLE WEEKS!