Read Confessions of a Police Constable Online
Authors: Matt Delito
âAll teams stand by; we have some suspicious activity near the girls.'
âStanding by,' the safety team replied.
I whistled to Simon, who was giving incredibly detailed directions to two attractive blondes in high heels. He waved back, said his fond farewell and started walking towards the club on his side of the street.
âIt's an IC1 male, around five foot tall, blue striped shirt, carrying a small backpack over one shoulder,' the CCTV team transmitted. âHe is sitting down, looking around. He is at the end of the cubicle with the bag holding our package. Don't look at him.'
Inside the club, there were six officers who desperately wanted to get a closer look at their suspect, but forced themselves to stare at each other instead.
âOur view is blocked,' the CCTV operator said. âNo visual.'
âI see him,' one of the safety officers radioed back, barely legible over the music in the background.
Simon and I were on opposite sides of the door to the nightclub; if the thief did steal the iPad, he would probably try to make a quick exit, and then it would be our turn to leap into action. Simon was leaning against a barrier where about 20 people were waiting to be let into the club.
My radio suddenly spat out a 15-second burst of loud club music, but no recognisable words.
âSafety, are you okay?' the CCTV team transmitted, followed by a long burst of silence, during which my full concentration was on the earpiece I was wearing.
âSafety, confirm status. Spotters, go check on them,' the CCTV team transmitted, after what seemed like an absolute eternity.
I was waiting for my radio to give a meaningful response, when I heard a commotion on the far side of the club doors. Simon had turned around, and was shouting at a young man.
âMate, shut up and listen,' he shouted. âIf this gentleman says you have had enough to drink, then that's his prerogative. Go home.'
I sighed; it's a scene we see a dozen times on any given Friday or Saturday night; a group of young lads had been ejected from one club for being a drunken gaggle of nuisance-makers and were trying to sneak into the next club. The bouncers use their own radios to warn each other about the worst grief-magnets, and so when the inebriated good-for-noughts are ejected from one club, chances are they won't be doing any more drinking that night. It's a pretty good system, particularly because it's a lot easier to deal with troublemakers outside a club than inside one.
The group of youths was six strong, and they were obviously disinclined to listen to Simon. I glanced at the door for a second, then reached for my radio, changed the channel to despatch and quickly transmitted.
âMike Delta receiving five-nine-two.'
âFive-nine-two, go ahead.'
âWe're on Operation Slate. I'm outside the Summer Fiesta nightclub, and could do with some additional help to clear away a group of six inebriated males.'
âReceived,' the operator replied, and then proceeded to transmit a request for some extra backup.
I switched back to the operation channel and caught the tail end of a transmission.
â⦠the door.'
âI was on another channel,' I said. âUpdate, please?'
âComing, Matt! Yellow shirt!' one of the safety officers shouted down the radio. I whirled around, and spotted a man with a yellow shirt dart out of the club, clutching Lisa's bag. He didn't even pause long enough to spot me in my uniform; he simply ran straight past me.
âShit,' I transmitted. âGet some guys out here, I can't leave Simon by himself,' I said, my eyes on the man who was sprinting down the road. The argument between Simon and the young men was escalating.
About 30 seconds later, several of the spotters and the two safety officers came bursting out through the doors.
âWhat the fuck?' one of them shouted. âAll you had to do was to stop the little bastard!'
I waved him off, and turned my attention to Simon, who was now physically intervening between the âingress/egress security advisor' (that's a bouncer to you and me) and two of the lads who were causing trouble. I walked over and got involved, and half a second later the three spotters joined us.
âStand back,' one of them called. âPolice!'
The group of youths was momentarily confused. The plain-clothes officers had hauled warrant cards attached to lanyards out of their pockets and donned them around their necks to identify them as police, but at the same time, two additional security guys had shown up; they were also wearing their IDs around their necks.
âFuck you, you ain't police,' one of the youngsters said to the bouncers, as one of his friends was dragging at his arm.
âDude, they're totally police, let's get out of here,' he said.
Slowly, the guys gathered their wits. Just when they had decided to go, a van containing half a dozen uniformed units arrived. The drunk boys seemed to sober up rather impressively quickly at the sight of them, and executed their previously made plan of making a hasty disappearance. They started running down the road. We let them go; they had been loud and obnoxious, and perhaps shoved Simon around a little bit, but nothing they'd get prosecuted for. Besides, we had bigger fish to fry.
I turned around. The whole operation team had come out of the nightclub.
âWhy didn't you stop him, Delito?' Seventy-one's voice boomed.
âEr ⦠Simon â¦' I stuttered.
Sergeant Thomas, who had been leading the operation, piped up.
âNot to worry, lads,' he said, and fished an iPhone out of his pocket. âI can track the iPad with this thing.'
Apple's Find My iPhone/iPod/iPad feature is great, but it's not perfect â it's useful for finding out where your iPhone is at any given time, but if it gets stolen and ends up in a council estate somewhere â as stolen things are often wont to do â you've got a problem: we can tell which building the device is in, but there could be dozens, if not hundreds, of flats stacked on top of each other, and we wouldn't be able to bust in through every single door looking for one device.
âWhat does this mean?' the skipper said, pointing non-specifically at the iPhone's screen.
âCan I?' I asked. I'm a bit of an Apple fanboy, and I've used the system before.
âIt says it can't find the iPad,' I said, after pressing various options on his iPhone screen for a while.
âDamn,' the sarge said. âHe must have disconnected from the WiFi.'
âUmm ⦠What do you mean?' I asked.
âWell, if he disconnects from the WiFi, we can't find him until he connects to a different WiFi.'
âYou've got to be kidding me,' I said. âIs it not a 3G iPad?'
The sergeant stared at me blankly.
âWhat â¦' he said, âdo you mean?'
âYou bought the iPad thing especially for these operations, right?' I said to the boss of the Clubs and Vice team.
âYeah.'
âSo, er, which iPad did you buy?'
âDon't be an idiot, Delito,' he said. âThis is the Metropolitan Police. You shouldn't have to ask; I bought the cheapest one, of course.'
âOh, Jesus,' I said, rubbing my forehead with my fingertips.
âWhat?' demanded Simon.
âThe top-model iPads have 3G and GPS built in. Like on a phone. So, if we'd bought one of those, the iPad would know exactly where it was, and it would have an Internet connection anywhere there is mobile phone coverage,' I explained. âBut instead, we bought the cheapest version, which only has WiFi, and no GPS. The one we bought never knows exactly where it is, it can only guess its location based on what WiFi networks it can see ⦠And it only has a network when it is connected to WiFi.'
Nine pairs of eyes stared at me blankly.
âFer feck's sake,' I said. âDo I really have to spell it out? Basically, we won't have any idea where that iPad is until our thief connects it to a WiFi network. Which, if he has any sense, he won't do. If he formats the damn thing, we're royally fucked; we won't get our iPad back, and the guy will get away with it.'
âBut ⦠I have Find My iPad right here,' Sergeant Thomas said, wiggling his iPhone in the air desperately. âBollocks,' he concluded, wisely.
The sarge stood still for a second, weighing his options. Then he started ordering people around: âOkay, Delito, you know about this geek stuff. Simon, stick with me, and Tracy, you come with us as well. The rest of you, you're dismissed. Write up a quick MG11
64
about the theft, and email it to me before you head home.'
âLet's see if we can't find our iPad,' he added grimly to those of us who had been âlucky' enough to be chosen to stay behind.
âBollocks to that,' Tracy said. âI need a cuppa.'
The sergeant sighed.
âYeah, me too. Let's go,' he said, and led the way to one of the late-night coffee bars that had recently popped up in the area. The coffee bars were apparently opened especially to cater to stoned hipsters, hip stoners â and us.
As we leaned over our steaming cups of coffee, the sarge prodded his iPhone whilst the rest of us looked beaten.
âDo you know what the kid looks like?' Simon asked, half-heartedly.
âYes, but we were tracking the wrong guy on the CCTV for most of the evening. We had the fella in the striped shirt, he was looking well dodgy, but after the other guy ran off with the iPad we finally took him aside and it turned out he was just pilled off his face,' Sergeant Thomas said, shaking his head. âWe did catch the little bastard on one of the cameras, though. I emailed a copy of the image to my phone, hang on â¦'
After a couple of minutes' worth of fiddling â about a minute and 57 seconds longer than it ought to have taken â Sergeant Thomas held up his phone.
âNever seen 'im before,' Simon said, after poring over the shot for a moment. The rest of us repeated similar sentiments.
We spent another ten minutes in the café finishing our coffee. Just before we got up to leave, Thomas had another look at his iPhone.
âI've got him!' he said.
Simon and I leapt up and slid around the table to look over the sergeant's shoulder.
Tracy, who was sitting next to the sarge had a clear view: âHe's just off the borough,' he said, âbut only about ten minutes away. Have we got a car?'
âEr â¦' the skipper replied, tentatively. âTechnically, no. We sent them all on their way home. I figured we could catch a lift later.'
âAny units near the Coffee Bucket?' I threw myself on my radio.
Tracy walked to the counter to pay for our coffees, whilst Simon and Sergeant Thomas kept their eyes on the little iPad icon in the middle of the map display.
âUnit calling for backup near Coffee Bucket; Mike Delta two-eight receiving.'
âTwo-eight, cancel, cancel, we don't need backup. We just need a lift. Do you have ten minutes?'
âYeah, of course,' came the reply. âOn the hurry-up?' he asked.
âYes, yes.'
âAaaalrighty then,' the driver said, and halfway through his atrocious Jim Carrey impression, we heard the sirens of a caged van whine into life over the radio. âFor you? Special price. Get me a brew, will ya?'
Tracy overheard the conversation via his radio, turned around and retraced his steps back to the counter to order a cup of tea for the van driver.
Moments later, sirens came to a halt outside the coffee shop, and we all poured out and climbed into the van.
âHey, Joe,' I said, recognising the driver and passing him his tea.
âThank you for your expedience,' Thomas said. âStep on it, we need to get to Garyson Rise double-quick.'
He flashed his iPhone at Joe to show where we were going.
âAye, boss,' Joe said. He placed his drink in the cup holder and pulled away. Laughing, he added, âAre you going to the Starbucks up there? I thought you guys just
had
a coffee'.
Tracy and I looked at each other. Garyson Rise is just outside our borough, in an area where there isn't usually a lot of trouble, so I'm not very familiar with it.
âSeriously? There's a Starbucks?' I asked. âWhat else is there?'
âOh, not much, really,' Joe said. âCouple of pizza joints. Delivery places, mostly. One of those Internet places and a Tesco, but I think it closes at midnight,' he rambled on.
âScrew the Starbucks,' I said.
âTake us to the Internet place,' Tracy added, finishing my thought.
âBut kill the sirens and lights before we get there,' Simon said completing our train of thought.
Finally, for the first time all night, we were working as a team.
As we came up to Garyson Rise, Joe cut the sirens. He left the blues on as we pulled through a red light. Then he shut the flashers off as well, and stopped in a bus stop a few doors down from the Internet shop. The shutters covering the windows were down, but the door shutter was open and there was a dim ray of light spilling out onto the pavement.
âI'll go in. You guys stop him from getting away again,' Tracy said.
Simon and Tracy got out of the van and Tracy took up position next to the shop.
âFuck me, where did you learn to drive, Joe?' I said, keeping my eyes on the shop front. Joe mumbled something about hiring a limo instead, if I didn't like his driving. The sergeant and I climbed out of the van and approached the door from the other side.
Once we were in position, Tracy nodded to Simon, before turning back and nodding to me. We were ready ⦠He quickly checked to make sure none of his police paraphernalia was showing, before he casually strolled into the Internet shop, his police radio on mute in his back pocket. Tracy's undercover stab vest and other equipment in a covert vest were hidden under his oversized zippered hoodie.
He came walking out again after a minute, sipping a can of Coke. He didn't look at any of us, until he was out of the dull light-cone from the door. When he was out of sight, he looked over his shoulder to see if he'd been followed, before quickly unzipping his hoodie and shooting some instructions over to Simon. A second later, Simon's voice came over the radio.