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Police told to ignore vaccine damage
The Light
|Issue 60, August 2025
Operation Talla instructed officers to treat complaints as ‘dissent’
SCOTTISH police were told to ‘reject’ potential criminal complaints relating to covid measures and vaccinations, a freedom of information (FOI) request has revealed.
Instead of concerns being investigated, those reporting covid issues were suspected of criminal behaviour, had their names recorded and were then tracked, a move that could amount to the offence of nonfeasance in a public office (a public official’s failure to perform a required duty).
On January 25, 2022, Scotland’s Deputy Chief Constable (DCC) Alan Speirs issued a statement about those working in settings related to the covid-19 vaccine. A video shows citizens at Govan police station attempting to submit evidence of vaccine-related deaths.
DCC Speirs’s memo was addressed to ‘all officers and staff’. It said: ‘We are aware of individuals attending police stations or calling police to either report what they believe to be criminal offences relating to the vaccine or to request police support in their attempts to “serve” papers on staff and volunteers or to shut down facilities.
‘In some cases, these individuals have claimed that a police investigation is taking place into criminal allegations relating to the UK’s vaccine programme.
‘The Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) received a complaint and a number of documents on 20 December 2021. The MPS provided the complainers with a crime reference number and is reviewing the content of the documents.
‘However, the MPS has been clear that nothing has been found to suggest any offences or grounds for an investigation, and that no such investigation is taking place.
‘Should any officer or member of staff be approached or contacted by people requesting assistance in line with any of the above, then these requests should be rejected.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Issue 60, August 2025-Ausgabe von The Light.
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