johncons

Stikkord: Ipcc

  • Untitled Post

    From: eribsskog@gmail.com Erik Ribsskog
    To: lynne.overend@ipcc.gsi.gov.uk
    Date: Tue, 4 Sep 2007 00:41:38 +0000
    Subject: Enclosures

    This is the note from 15/6, when the police-woman called me from Walton Lane
    Police-station,
    and the sheet also has notes from the police-station on 22/6.

  • Untitled Post

    From: eribsskog@gmail.com Erik Ribsskog
    To: lynne.overend@ipcc.gsi.gov.uk
    Date: Tue, 4 Sep 2007 00:34:38 +0000
    Subject: Enclosures

    This is from my notebook, it has some of the notes from the meeting with
    Sgt. Camel, and
    the other officer/constable on 16/1.

    I think there should be some more notes from this meeting, but I couldn’t
    manage to find them
    now.

    I think it’s possible that they could have ended up at the Norwegian
    Embassy, since I brought
    almost the originals for the documents there. Because I thought the Embassy
    should be
    a bit informed, since there were many Norwegian and Scandinavian citizens
    working there,
    and I didn’t want to have all the documents laying in my flat all the time,
    I thought it was
    better if they were at the embassy, in case it was some information in them
    that could
    be used in eg. a court-case etc.

    From that meeting, I remember I asked Sgt. Camel if the CAB was
    ‘government’.

    And he said yes.

    But later I’ve seen that CAB is a charity.

    The reason I’m sure about this, is that in a later conversation with
    constable Holmes, (which
    there should be notes from), there Holmes asked me to call Crime Stoppers
    about this case,
    (Enclosure VIII).

    And I hadn’t heard of Crime Stoppers from before, so then I asked him if
    they were government,
    and he said yes.

    But it was the same with the CAB. I hadn’t heard of them before eighter.

    But this was brought up in the meeting with Sgt. Camel on 16/1, where I
    asked him in the same
    way if the CAB was government.

    So I’m sure about this, even if I can’t find any more notes about this
    meeting at the moment. But
    if I find more notes, then I’ll send them later. (And they could possibly be
    at the Embassy).

  • Untitled Post

    From: eribsskog@gmail.com Erik Ribsskog
    To: lynne.overend@ipcc.gsi.gov.uk
    Date: Tue, 4 Sep 2007 00:19:27 +0000
    Subject: Enclousures

    This is the notes from the meeting on with Liz Hurley from the Norwegian
    Consulate on 19/3.

    It’s in this meeting that she calls Sgt. O’Brian, and then Hurley tells me
    that O’Brian has said
    to her that he ‘remembers the case’.

  • Untitled Post

    From: eribsskog@gmail.com Erik Ribsskog
    To: lynne.overend@ipcc.gsi.gov.uk
    Date: Mon, 3 Sep 2007 23:37:16 +0000
    Subject: 2007/006341

    Hi,

    I’m refering to you letter from 28/8, where you ask me to send you
    documentation I may
    have regarding the appeal from 26/8.

    I sent a lot of documentation with the original complaint, but I’ll sent the
    documentation
    again now, just in case you haven’t got it.

    There are quite a few documents, so I’m going to send them in several
    e-mails. (To avoid
    problems with e-mail sizes etc.)

    Also, I’m going to send some documents which are of newer dates, and also
    some ‘old’
    documents, which I found now today, which weren’t sent the first time.

    I’ll explain more about these, the ‘new’ documents in the e-mails I enclose
    them with.

    With this e-mail, I’ll send the explanation file, and in the next e-mails,
    I’ll send the
    enclosures, which are refered to in the explanation file.

    Hope that this is alright!

    Yours sincerely,

    Erik Ribsskog

  • Untitled Post

    From: eribsskog@gmail.com Erik Ribsskog
    To: Joanne.Fitzgerald@ipcc.gsi.gov.uk Joanne Fitzgerald
    Date: Sun, 26 Aug 2007 03:22:32 +0000
    Subject: Re: Your Complaint Against Merseyside Police – 2007/006341

    Hi,

    here is the appeal against the decision not to formally record my complaint:

    Please give the name of the police force your complaint was about:

    Merseyside Police

    If you recieved a letter from the police telling you that they will not be
    recording your complaint,
    please give the date of that letter:

    10/7/07

    Mr. Erik Ribsskog
    Flat 3
    5 Leather Lane
    L2 2AE
    Liverpool

    01512363298/07758349954

    eribsskog@gmail.com

    Date you made your complaint:

    3/5/07

    Who did you make your complaint to:
    To the IPCC.

    How did you make your complaint:
    By e-mail.

    Please provide brief details about the complaint that you made:

    I had been reporting about some problems that seems clear to me to involve
    organised
    crime at the place which I worked to the police on several occations from
    November
    last year.

    I had been having some problems with the police being supposed to call me
    back regarding
    this, but they didn’t call back, even if contacted the police-station to
    inform them about this.

    So, when I was at the CAB regarding advice on when one needed a criminal
    solicitors.
    (Since the solicitor that I had met in a duty solicitors meeting at the CAB
    had informed me
    that Morecrofts couldn’t help me if I needed a criminal solicitor. But it
    wasn’t clear to me
    when one would need a criminal solicitor, so I contacted the CAB again, and
    was told that
    this was if one were being accused of doing something wrong.

    The Morecrofts solicitor had said that the case was both an employment-case,
    and a
    criminal-case, so I asked the advisor at the CAB, on how I should go forward
    with the
    criminal part of the case.

    And I was ansered that I should bring this up in liasons with the police.

    I had been trying to do this from before, but I had been having some
    problems involving the
    police not calling me back when they said they would.

    So I asked the advisor what I should do if I had problems with the liasons
    with the police.

    And the advisor said that I should bring it up with the CPS or the
    Law-society.

    I asked about this as a precaution, so that I knew what to do if the police
    still didn’t contact
    me after the new meeting there.

    So, some weeks later, when they still hadn’t contacted me, then I contacted
    the CPS about
    the problems with the liasons with the police.

    The CPS answered that they didn’t have the powers to investiagte a case, and
    told me to
    contact the IPCC.

    Which I did on 3/5, I sent the IPCC a complaint regarding the problems I’ve
    been having with the
    liasons with the police. (Or ‘the contact with the police’, like I wrote in
    the e-mail I sent you on 3/5).

    In the complaint, I had listed up 18 individual complaints about thing I
    though were dealt with wrongly
    by the police in relation to my contact with them.

    I’ll try to specify how I thought the police conducted wrongly:

    1. The police-constable wouldn’t let me report a crime.

    2. The police adviced me to go back to work, even if I had told them that
    the company was
    infiltradet/taken over by a criminal organisation. I think that this was
    irresponsible by the police.

    3. On 16/1/07 Sergant Camel told me to take the case to the CAB, even if he
    knew I was
    unemployed, and couldn’t afford to pay a solicitor £140/hour to deal with
    the case.

    I though that this was irresponsible by the Sergant. (The police should have
    investigated the
    case themselves).

    (Also, I remember from the meeting on 16/1, that Sgt. Camel wanted me to
    take the case to
    the CAB, and then to a solicitor and the Crowns Court.

    I haven’t been living in Britain that long, so I wasn’t sure what the CAB
    was. But I remember
    I asked the Sergant if the CAB were government. And the sergant said ‘yes’.

    Later (maybe 2 or 3 weeks ago), I have been browsing the CAB website looking
    for some
    information there, and I’ve seen on the CAB website, that CAB is actually a
    charity.

    So, it’s now clear to me that Sgt. Camel actually lied to me about this in
    the meeting
    at the policestation on 16/1.

    If he had told me that the CAB was a charity, then I would
    have objected much stronger
    on brining the case to them, I would have insisting stronger on the
    right department of
    the police to deal with it.

    But that the Sergant told me that the CAB were government, and that the
    solicitor I would
    get to speak with there, would send the case back to the police if they
    thought it was
    a matter for the police, confused me, and since I hadn’t been living that
    long in Britain,
    and I’m not so used to dealing with the police, and I wasn’t sure if I as a
    Norwegian,
    could demand what the police should do, so thats why I after contacting the
    police
    a number of more times trying to get them to deal with the case, (but they
    still
    insited on me going to the CAB with it), thats why I ended up at the CAB
    with it,
    beliving the CAB was a government organisation.

    4. The police didn’t want to investigate the case, even if I told them I had
    documents
    that would show that it was a crime-case.

    (And I also told the police on 16/1, that I was worried about my collegues
    that were
    still working in the complany, that they were under control by the
    criminals).

    5. The police didn’t want to look at the evidence/documents on my laptop on
    22/1,
    saying it was a breach of the data protection act. Even if I think it must
    be obvious that
    since I myself let them look at the documents, then this couldn’t have been
    a data
    protection issue.

    6. That constable Keith Holmes didn’t call me back, even if
    constable Victoria Steele
    told me on 22/1 that she would ask Holmes to call me back.

    This happened a lot of times, that the police said they would call me back,
    but they
    didn’t. It’s difficult for me to say what happened in this situation. If
    Holmes got the
    message or not. There could be some problems with the routines at the
    police-station,
    or it could have been a mistake from eighter Steele or Holmes.

    7. The constable who was in the ‘reception’ on 24/1 and 25/1 didn’t wear
    collar-number-
    tags. I think police should be expected to wear their tag-numbers, because I
    know
    there are rules about things like this, even eg. shop-assistants are
    instructed to
    wear their name-tags, so I think the police, having an important funciton in
    society,
    also should wear some kind of indification, so that it’s possible for
    members of the
    public to identify the serviceman/woman they have been talking with. (In
    case
    something wrong is being said or done by the constable/officer).

    8. The constable that didn’t wear number-tags on 24/1 and 25/1, promised me
    that
    she would get Victoria Steele to call me back regarding the case.

    But Steele didn’t call. This is a similar problem I think to complaint 6,
    and this happened
    a lot of times, I was promised maybe 10 times by different
    officers/constables that the
    police would call me back, but I wasn’t called back by the police a single
    time in 2007.

    I was only called back once in November 2006.

    (And I was promised to be called back about ten times or more in 2007, and
    they didn’t
    call a single time).

    9. I went to the police in January, and gave them copies of the documents in
    which I
    thought that it would be possible to find evidence about the problem with a
    criminal
    organisation of some kind having infiltrated/taking over the company I had
    worked in.

    I gave the documents (many hundred sheets) to Steele, who gave it to Holmes.

    When I spoke with Holmes two or three weeks later, he said he had only read
    a bit
    on the top of the pile, a bit in the middle, and a bit on the bottom of the
    pile.

    And he still said it was an employment-case, and that I should go to the
    CAB.

    By then I had ‘argued’ so much with the police about this, that I didn’t
    know if it
    would be right for me as a Norwegian to continue arguing with the British
    police about
    this.

    But, I remebered Sgt. Camel had said earlier that the CAB would send it back
    to the
    police if they thought it was right.

    And thought that maybe it was because I was from another country that they
    wouldn’t
    listen to me at the police-station, and maybe they weren’t used to dealing
    that much
    with documents for all that I knew.

    So I thought that it would maybe be just as smart to have a lawyer at the
    CAB have a
    look at it, and send it back, maybe this would convince the police to have a
    look at, and
    investigate the case.

    (It could be of couse, that the police investigated it, but didn’t tell me
    about this. I had
    been at the police-station several times in November and later explaining
    about the case.

    I’m not an expert in police-methods, but I guessed that it could be that the
    police investigated
    without telling me, for some reason, I wasn’t sure, but I reackoned that
    this could be the case,
    since I would have thought that the British Police would deal with a matter
    like this in a
    responsible way.)

    But in the complaint about the liasons with the police, I could only relate
    to what I knew for
    sure, and I knew for sure that Constable Holmes didn’t look properly through
    the documents
    I delivered to the police-station for him to give to an investigator.

    So I thought that it was irresponsible by constable Holmes to not read
    throught the documents
    proberly, and to not give them to an investigator.

    10. The police sent me a letter on 16/2, where they called me ‘Miss Erik
    Ribsskog’. I think, like
    the British representative on the Norwegian Consulate in the India Building
    said, that it should
    be obvious to Brits that Erik and Eric is the same name, and it therefore
    must be someone
    making jokes and not taking their job serious.

    Like I had explained in meetings at the police-station, it seemed to me that
    some of my collegues
    in the complany, probably must have been under control by criminals. So I
    thought this was an important
    case, and then to start making jokes like this in an important case. I think
    thats irresponsible and
    it seems like a joke that small kids could have made. So this makes me
    worried that things could be
    out of control at the police-station.

    11. In the meeting on 1/2, Sergant O’Brian told me to move from the chair I
    sat down with at the
    table, (even if I sat in the same chair in the meeting there with Sgt. Camel
    and the constable on
    16/1).

    So I had to move to another chair, at the other side of the table, I think
    that Sgt. O’Brian was acting
    patronising towards me when he ‘ordered’ me to sit in the other chair.

    12. In the meeting at the St. Ann’s police-station on 1/3, the ‘ginger’
    police-constable, wouldn’t let
    me present the issues about which I had contacted the police-station to the
    Sergant O’Brian, but
    insisted on presenting the things I wanted to bring up in the meeting to the
    Sergant himself.

    So this made me lose a bit control on how the issues were presented, and it
    seemed to me that
    I was being patronised by the police-constable.

    And this made it diffucult for me to present the things I wanted to bring
    up, in the way I intended
    to present it, and also it made me more of a spectator than a participant in
    the meeting.

    I guess it could be that it was O’Brian who should have told the constable
    to let me explain myself,
    because I think they should have let me explain my concerns myself.

    13. So in the meeting on 1/3, I was a bit confused if I was supposed to
    exlain about my concerns
    to Sgt. O’Brian myself, or if this was the job of the constable.

    So this made me a bit confused about how they meant the meeting to be
    conducted, and what they
    wanted my role in the meeting to be.

    14. In the meeting on 1/3, Sgt. O’Brian said that he thought the problem
    with the case not having any
    progress with being dealt with by the police, was due to the case having
    being dealt with by a large
    number of police servicemen.

    So, he suggested, that to find out exactly what had been going on, they
    would ask constable Steele
    to call me, and tell me what she had been doing with the documents after I
    gave them to her.

    I think this was irresponsible by the Sergant. He must have understood that
    to find out what the police
    had been doing, would be a job for the police.

    So I think that he should have taken the job of finding out what the police
    had been doing, that he should
    have taken the responsibility of finding this out himself.

    And of course, investigate the case himself, instead of not doing anything,
    other that saying I had to find
    out what the police had been doing so far.

    So I thought this was very irresponsible by Sgt. O’Brian.

    15. This is connected with point 14. That I think Sgt. O’Brian should have
    investigated himself:

    1. What the police had done regarding the case so far. (And not telling me
    to find out about this.)

    2. Investigate the case further.

    Sgt. O’Brian didn’t do eighter of these actions, and I think that this was
    very irresponsible.

    16. In the meeting on 1/3, Sgt. O’Brian was very un-calm, and this together
    with the patronising
    I was subjected to (which is explained in point 11 and 12), made it
    difficult for me to bring up
    the issues I wanted to bring up in the way I had intended.

    So I think that (especially since I haven’t been living in Britain that
    long, and had to ‘compete’
    with to British police-servicemen who were patronising me in the meeting),
    because of this,
    I think that the Sergant should have tryed to remain calm in the meeting,
    since I think when
    one have a job as a public serviceman, then it’s important that one are
    capable of comunicating
    with the public.

    And then to be so un-calm in the meeting, can make it difficult for the
    meeting and the comunication
    to be conducted in a meaningful way, since the things the Sergant said had
    marks of not being
    very thorowly considered. (Like he told me that I had to make sure that my
    former employer and
    the job-agency got in touch about the letter I had brought there, even if it
    was obvious from that
    letter that they already were in touch, and the Sergant was reading the
    letter explaining about
    this).

    So I think the Sergant must have been so un-calm that he didn’t get the
    meaning of the letter.
    And I didn’t want to aggrivate or make the Sergant even more un-calm, so I
    just had to pretend
    to agree with him.

    I though that I would rather call the Sergant later, and explain about this
    later, when he was in
    a calmer state.

    An I think that when one as a member of the public, contacts the police,
    about important things
    like this, then one should expect to be treated in professional way by the
    police.

    So when the police are patronising you, and like I mention in this
    individual complaint, the police
    Sergant in charge of the meeting, isn’t capable to keep control of himself
    and remain calm, in
    a way that the meeting could be conducted in a professional and meaningful
    way.

    I think that if the Sergant in charge of the meeting isn’t capable of doing
    this, then this is a reason
    to complain. (Because I don’t think members of the public should be treated
    in an unprofessional
    and unpolite way when they are contacting the police).

    17. Sgt. O’Brian said in the meeting on 1/3, that they would get constable
    Steele to call me back
    about what the police had been doing with the case so far.

    Victoria Steele didn’t call, and I called back to the police-station several
    times, and was told that
    she was on holiday.

    I also called back several times after she should have been back, but she
    was never present.

    The people I talked with at the police-station, told me several times that
    they would get Steele
    to call, yet she never called.

    This problem happened very often. (That I was promised someone from the
    police would call
    me back, but that they didn’t call at all in 2007).

    18. The same in this individual complaint.

    When I tryed calling Steele, but didn’t suceed in getting in contact with
    her at all.

    Then I tried to call Sgt. O’Brian on several phone-numbers I was given by
    the central, and
    by St. Ann’s police-station.

    I didn’t manage to get hold of Sgt. O’Brian eighter, and after trying to get
    in contact with
    Constable Steele and Sergant O’Brian for weeks, without getting hold of
    them, and without
    any of them returning my calls.

    Then I went to the Norwegian Consulat in the India Building, asking The
    Consulate if they
    had any advice for me, on how to get in contact with Constable Steele or
    Sgt. Obrian.

    The Consulate-representative, Liz Hurley, went and called Sgt. O’Brian,
    while I was at
    the Consulate on 19/3.

    Liz Hurley said, that she had been talking with O’Brian, and that O’Brian
    had told her that
    ‘he remembered the case’.

    Yet, Sgt. O’Brian still didn’t call me back, even after recieving this
    reminder by the Norwegian
    Consulate representative.

    Sgt. O’Brian still hadn’t called me back when I sent you the complaint on
    3/5, and he still
    haven’t called me back when I’m writing this appeal now on 26/8.

    I think this is very unprofessional of the Sergant. On the meeting on 1/3, I
    showed the
    constable and Sergant O’Brian the explanation I had written were I explain
    about
    my concern about what was going on in the company, and I remember the
    Sergant
    was reading the explanation, he got it from the constable.

    And I had written that it was clear to me that some of my collages in the
    company was
    under control by criminals.

    (I had written it in capital letters, because I was a bit tired of the
    police not taking any
    actions after I had gone to the police-station reporting about this several
    times in
    November, then in the meeting with Sgt. Cambel in January, and then in the
    talks
    with Constable Holmes also in January.

    I wasn’t sure if the police was taking this as serious as they should, so I
    tryed to
    write it in a document, why I think they should act. I even wrote some of it
    in capital
    letters, so to show that I meant this seriously, and to maybe get them to
    wake up).

    And it was this document that I remember O’Brian read, and still they didn’t
    even return
    my calls, even after reading that document, and having seen how important I
    thought
    the case was.

    And in the meeting on 1/3, I also showed the Constable and the Sergant the
    letter from
    the Solicitor from 27/2, where the Solicitor writes that:

    ‘As I explained, Morecrofts do not deal with criminal law and would not be
    able to advise you
    on this aspect although some further perusal of your papers may reveal some
    information that
    will assist the police.’

    Even if I showed the Sergant this letter from the Solicitor, still the
    Sergant didn’t want to investigate/
    look at the papers/documents I had. And even if he had read this letter and
    the the letter where
    I explain that I’m worried about some of my collueges being under control by
    criminals in the
    company I used to work, and also even if he got a call about this from the
    Norwegian Consulate,
    still he didn’t even return my calls.

    I think this was very irresponsible and unprofessional by the Sergant. And
    it was this behaviour from
    the Sergant that I thought was the ‘final drop’, so to speak, and lead me to
    complain about the
    police to the CPS.

    And then, after recieving my complaint, the CPS adviced me to contact you,
    so thats why
    I sent you the e-mail with the complaint on 3/5.

    Please tell us why you would like to appeal about the way your complaint was
    handled:

    The police force didn’t record my complaint.

    Please explain why you want to appeal:

    Well, like I exlained above, I think that the police force should deal with
    members of the
    public in a professional and aproriate way.

    All of the 18 individual complaint I have mentioned, are situations, where I
    think the police
    have acted in a way which I think is below the standard you could expect
    from a responsible
    police force.

    And when I complain about the police not letting me report a crime (like in
    complaint 1), and
    the police acting irresponsible with sending me back to work even if the
    complany was
    controled by criminals (complaint 2), lying to me about the CAB being a
    government
    organisation (even if I discovered the lying later, complaint 3), the police
    refusing to
    investgate a serious criminal case, involiving people being held under
    control, seemingly
    like slaves, by criminals (complaint 4), the police lying to me again,
    saying that
    it would be a breach on the data protection act if they looked at some
    documents
    on my laptop. (complaint 5), that the police acted irresponsible, on
    numerous occations,
    when I was promised the police would call me back, but they didn’t. I would
    think that
    this happened to many times to it being coincidental, I would think that
    some type of
    misconduct is the reason for this way of treatment by the police (numerous
    complaints, eg.
    complaint 6, 8, 17 and 18).

    That the police constable didn’t give the documents I gave him regarding a
    serious crime-
    case to an investigator (complaint 9), that the police insulted me, calling
    me ‘Miss Erik
    Ribsskog’, in their letter from 16/2, when it should be obvious, as I have
    got confirmed by
    a British representative working for the Norwegian Consulate, that it should
    be obvious
    for Brits that Erik and Eric is the same name, and due to this, the police
    were inpolite
    towards me, since they called me ‘Miss’, even if they should know that my
    name isn’t
    a girls name.

    That Sgt. O’Brian was, I would go as far as to say he was harassing me, and
    were
    patronising towards me in the meeting on the police-station on 1/3,
    described in
    complaint 11-18.

    That Sgt. O’Brian was acting irresponsible in not investigating a serious
    crime-case,
    even if the Solicitor had written in the letter that she thought this could
    be a matter
    for the police, and even if he was called by the Norwegian Consulate, and
    still didn’t
    return my calls.

    And also that he left it to me, a member of the public, to find out how the
    police had
    been dealing with the case, instead of dealing with it himself.

    And also that he was ‘in a state’ in the meeting, not giving me a chance to
    explain
    about the issues in the way I had intended, due to having to focus on not
    trying
    to aggrivate the Sergant any more, that is to try to get him calm down,
    taking
    the focus away from presenting the actual issues I had gone there to
    present.

    I think the harassment, patronisment, unprofesionalism from the Sergant in
    the
    meeting on 1/3 certainly qualifyes to problems with the liasons with the
    police, like
    I initialy complained about, but also to beind misconduct like I see now
    that it has
    to be, for the police to deal with the complaint.

    Also the other issues I’ve mentioned under this section ‘Why you want to
    appeal’,
    I think they also must be misconduct, like when the Constable didn’t want to
    let
    me report a crime in complaint 1, and the refusal to investigate a serious
    crime-case
    in complaint 2, the later discovered lying in complain 3 etc. (see section
    above).

    So when I read in your e-mail from 14/8, that ‘I was informed by
    Merseyside Police that they did not deem your complaint to be concerned
    with allegations of misconduct against individual police officers and
    therefore decided not to formally record your complaint under the Police
    Reform Act 2002.’, then I can’t agree with the Merseyside Police that my
    complaint isn’t being deemed as being concerd with allegations of
    misconduct against individual police officers.

    I can’t see that the lying, the harrasment, the insults, the not alowing a
    member
    of the public to report a crime case, the refusal to investigate a serious
    crime-case,
    and the other mentioned issues (see above).

    I cant see that these things shouldn’t be considered as misconduct.

    Thats my view, I’m not sure how police are expected to conduct themselves in
    this
    country, but if I use my head and think by myself how I would have thought
    that
    the police were meant to conduct themselves, and then think about the way
    the
    police-officers have conducted themselves, which I have described in this
    complaint,
    then I’d say that the police-officers have misconducted.

    Also, while I’m dealing with this, I thought I’d mention some points from
    the complaint-
    procedure:

    The police called me a week before the meeting at Walton Lane police station
    on 22/6.

    The police-woman that called on 15/6, didn’t tell me her name, even if I
    asked who I should
    say that I had spoken with.

    She just instructed me to report at Walton Lane police-station on 22/6 at a
    certain time,
    and ask to speak with Sgt. Smithe.

    I thought that they would probably ask me who had called me and told me to
    meet there,
    so I asked her who I should tell them that I had been speaking with.

    But she didn’t say her name, she just said that I should say that I had been
    called by
    the police.

    And she didn’t tell me at all what the meeting was about.

    I used to live in Walton about a year ago, and I’d also been in contact with
    the police in
    Walton (and also the St. Ann’s police-station), about some problems I had
    been having
    org. criminals in Oslo and Liverpool.

    And also when I lived in Walton, I rented a room in a shared house, and
    there were also
    problems going on in the house which I have reported to the Walton Lane
    police.

    And also when I was living in the shared house, due to reasons unknown to
    me, and I
    hadn’t been living in Britain long enough then to understand about all the
    things
    surounding Council-tax.

    But for some reason, I don’t think any of the tenants revieved council-tax
    bills (or tv-licensing
    bills), when they were living in the shared house in Mandeville St. in
    Walton.

    So I wasn’t completly sure about why it was that the police had called me
    and instructed
    me to meet at the Walton Lane police-station.

    I thought, of course, that it could be to do with the complaint. But I
    wasn’t completly sure,
    I thought it also could be with the cases I had reported about earlier
    regarding problems with
    org. criminials in Oslo and Liverpool.

    I also thought there could be a chance it was regarding the problem with the
    missing council
    tax and tv-licensing bills from the Mandeville shared house. (Problems which
    I had intended
    to bring up togheter with a lot of other problems, once I’d got set up a
    dialog with the police,
    once I’d got a contact-person and a dialog at the police, and could start to
    focus on trying
    to explain all details with the earlier reported problems in Norway and
    Liverpool).

    And I wanted the police to deal with the things I had brought up seriously.
    And I was a bit
    afraid to ‘make a fool of myself’, if I called the Walton Lane
    police-station, and asked to
    speak with Sgt. Smithe, to ask what the meeting was about.

    Because then I reackoned that I had to explain who had called me about the
    meeting, and
    I couldn’t really be sure that the Sergant was working on Walton Lane
    police-station
    permanently. He could be in a specialised police-department for all that I
    know, who dealt
    with police complaint cases, and who was stationed somewhere else, maybe
    even out of
    town, for all that I knew. And only was supposed to be at the Walton Lane
    police-station
    for the meeting regarding the complaint-case.

    So, since I didn’t want to make a bad impression, (makine a fool of myself),
    since I’m a
    bit clumsy sometimes with my manners etc, since I haven’t been living in
    Britain that
    long, due to this, I found it best to just show for the meeting, and not
    call to ask any
    questions regarding the agenda.

    I also guessed that if it was meant for me to contact them back regarding
    things surrounding
    the meeting, then I would have got a contact-name there, like the
    police-woman calling
    would have told me her name, and told me that if I had any questions, then I
    could contact
    this and this person.

    But since no such contact-name was given to me, then I guessed that I wasn’t
    meant to
    know what the meeting was about, before the meeting.

    So I didn’t know exactly how to prepare for the meeting.

    And when the meeting started, I had to ask the Sergant if the meeting was
    about the complaint,
    to be sure.

    In the meeting, we didn’t discuss the issues regarding problems with the
    liasons with the
    police at all.

    Somehow, we ended up discussing the cases that I had complained about to the
    Walton
    Lane police-station before. (The problems with org. criminals in Oslo and
    Liverpool).

    I wrote some notes down when I got home from the meeting, here are some of
    the points.

    – Core of case: Followed by mafia in Norway, and this has continued in
    England (Ppl. from
    work etc).

    (This is about some problems I had in Norway, and which I have reported
    about to the police
    in Norway and England.

    It was on my workplace in Oslo. I was working as an assistant shop-manager,
    while I was studying.
    And then I got some problems with the my face being more or less distroyed
    (its a long story), and
    I still went to work a few days (I didn’t think it was so serious, so I
    thought the problems with the
    face-skin would pass), and then I overheard a couple of conversations about
    me behind my back so to
    speak, eg. one conversation I overheard I heard it being said (they were
    talking about my face which
    was more or less distroyed), and I head them say: ‘I’ve heard that he’s also
    followed by the mafia’.

    And also I heard other customers say, about me, ‘he isn’t afraid (eg. he
    goes to work as normal
    I think they must have meant) even if he’s being followed by the mafia’.

    This was just some of what happened, I’ve tryed to explain about these
    things to the police in
    Norway and Britain, but I haven’t been able to find someone who want’s to
    deal with and investigate
    this, and let me explain all I know about this.

    But I mentioned it to the Sergant in the meeting on 22/6.

    But he writes in the answer-letter that ‘I have since had the oppertunity to
    examine the issues you
    raised in terms of organised criminality and the Norwegian Mafia.’.

    Well, I haven’t actually menioned anything about a ‘Norwegian Mafia’. I have
    never heard of, or
    menioned a ‘Norwegian mafia’.

    I always thought that the people I overheard at my old workplace in Oslo,
    was refering to the
    Albanian mafia, since this was the only mafia I had heard that were being
    present in Oslo.

    So, when the Sergant is writing about ‘the Norwegian Mafia’ in his letter,
    then I get a bit
    concerned that maybe there have been some misunderstanings in the
    comunications,
    since I’ve never used the term ‘Norwegian mafia’, and I’ve never heard of or
    refered to
    any Norwegian Mafia, so I think we must have been speaking past eachother a
    bit
    in the meeting.

    We were also taling a bit of the Arvato company which I had reported the
    problems
    with being infiltrated by org. criminals.

    (I said I thought the problems with org. criminals in Liverpool probably had
    to be connected
    with the problems in Oslo, since I found it unlikly that the lightening
    would strike at the
    same place twice so to speak).

    I can see in my notes that the Sergant thought that Arvato had a Swedish
    parent-company,
    but I told him that it wasn’t Swedish, but German. (Bertelsman).

    I also told him that I thought it would be very fine to have a contact
    person at the police,
    since the police didn’t return my calls, and also since I had a lot of
    information regarding
    the different cases which I still hadn’t got an oppertunity to report to the
    police, yet this
    haven’t been addressed in the answering-letter.

    Like I’ve explained above, the police have been suposed to call me on more
    than ten occations,
    but they haven’t called me in 2007 at all.

    So I think they should take this problem a bit more serious. They are
    ignoring this problem
    in their answering-letter, and I can’t really say that I’m sure what to do
    if some incidents
    happens now, for which I would have needed the assitance of the police. I’m
    not sure what
    I should do if this happens, I don’t really want to call the police, just to
    be ignored even
    more.

    So I think they should have brought up this issue in their answering-letter.

    In the meeting, the Sergant asked me what I wanted the police to do, and I
    answered that I
    wanted the police to investigate the case with the problems with the
    Arvato-company
    having problems with infiltration by org. criminals.

    I explained to the Sergant that I had a lot of documents that helped showing
    this, and that
    I think he should maybe have a look at these documents, in concetion with
    his investigation.

    Yet, I wasn’t contacted back by the Sergant at all, before I got the letter
    that he couldn’t
    find any evidence to substantiatie my claims.

    So, I think that the Sergant should maybe have had a look at the documents
    then, like I
    suggested to him in the meeting. Maybe this could have helped him. He says
    he haven’t
    found any evidence to substantiate my claims. But when he didn’t even have a
    look at
    the documents, which I explained about to him that I had in the meeting,
    then it’s seems
    a bit to me that he didn’t really try that hard to find any evidence.

    Because in the meeting I told him that he could just contact me if he wanted
    to have at
    the documents I had from working in the company, but the Sergant didn’t
    contact me
    back about this.

    I’ve also been in contact with the Norwegian Embassy in London, regarding
    the problems
    with org. crime in Oslo and in Arvato-company and elsewhere in Liverpool.

    The Embassy, told me that if I wanted the British and Norwegian police to
    cooperate
    on these issues, then I had to tell the Brisish and Norwegian police myself
    that I
    wanted them to cooperate about this.

    So, I aslo see this in my notes, I made sure to tell the Sergant that I
    wanted the British
    police to cooperate with the Norwegian police about these issues. (I’ve also
    earlier told
    the Norwegian police the same, that I want them, like the Embassy adviced,
    to cooperate
    with the British police on this.)

    I also gave the Sergant the name of the Norwegian police-officer who knew
    most about
    the case in Norway. (Who was working in a similar Norwegian Department, that
    is the
    department that investigates the regular police). This because Sgt. Smithe
    asked who
    in Norway he could contact about this, and I didn’t really know who else
    that knew
    enough about this.

    Yet, in the answering letter, there is no mention about this, if the British
    police have
    been in contact with the Norwegian police or not, so I would have to asume
    that
    they haven’t been in contact then, even if I asked them to do this, on
    advice from
    the Embassy, in the meeting.

    I told the Sergant that I had even contacted the Norwegian Consulate, and
    that the
    Consulate-representative contacted Sgt. O’Brian, reminding him that I had
    tryed to
    get in contact with him regarding the case, but still, Sgt. O’Brian didn’t
    call me back.

    And this is neigther addressed in the answering-letter.

    I gave Sgt. Smithe some copies of explanations about the further problems
    with
    criminals in Norway, that they tried to kill me on the farm belonging to the
    woman
    my uncle lived with there, in the summer of 2005, and thats why I went away
    from
    Norway again and settled in Liverpool.

    And I gave the Sergant the log-number from when I reported about the
    problems
    with criminals in Oslo and Liverpool to the Walton Lane police-station in
    the
    Automn of 2005.

    (I’ve also been in contact with the Merseyside police regarding these
    problems
    several times before this, and also after this, in the spring and summer of
    2006.

    And then also again with the frequent contact about the problems in the
    Arvato
    company from November 2006).

    I told the Sergant that it seemed to me, and that this was supported by the
    documents I had, that all the different departments on Arvato was involved
    in
    this problem, with being taken over/infiltraded by org. criminals.

    But the Sergant still didn’t contact me back to have a look at the
    documents.

    I see from my notes that I told Sgt. Smithe that I had been in contact with
    a Norwegian Police-officer, in the special department that investigates the
    regular police, earlier the same week, about that had been surrounding this
    in Oslo.e problems in Oslo.

    Further from my notes, I see that I told the Sergant that it seemed to me
    that
    the police were worried, when they called me in the night, around midnight,
    in late Novemeber 2006, and asked me to contact higher management
    at Arvato, regarding the problems I had been having with certain persons
    working there. (It seemed to me that she was worried do to who these
    people I had been having problems with were).

    I’ll try to summarise the problems surrounding the complaint-process and the
    meeting on 22/6:

    – The police didn’t tell me was calling when they called me on 15/6
    instructing me
    to met at Walton Lane police-station on 22/6.

    – The police didn’t tell me the agenda for the meeting on 22/6, before the
    meeting.

    – The police didn’t address the individual complaints from the complaint
    from 3/5, neighter
    in the meeting on 22/6, or in their letter from 10/7.

    – The police didn’t investigate the documents I told them I had, which I
    told them in the
    meetin on 22/6, could help explain what went on at Arvato while I was
    working there.

    – The police says in their letter from 10/7, that I have been raising issues
    in terms of
    ‘The Norwegian Mafia’. But I have never heard about or refered to the term
    ‘the Norwegian
    mafia’, so the police must have been misunderstanding what I said in the
    meeting on 10/7.

    – In their answering-letter, the police haven’t addressed the issue I
    brought up in the
    meeting on 10/7, that I had been adviced by the Embassy to tell the British
    and Norwegian
    police to cooperate on the case. But in the letter from 10/7, it isn’t
    mentioned at all,
    if there has been any contact at all with the Norwegian police regarding
    this.

    – In the meeting on 22/6, I mentioned to Sgt. Smite, that I had been having
    problems
    with the Merseyside Police, on repeted occations, having promised to call me
    back,
    but then not having called. I explained that this procedure made it
    difficult to me,
    to report about what I knew about the cases, and to get any meaningful
    dialog.

    I threfore expressed in the meeting, a request, if I please could get a
    contact-person,
    in the Merseyside Police, which I could contact, and get a dialog with, and
    tell about
    the things I knew regarding the different crime-cases that had been going
    on.

    Yet, in the letter from the police from 10/7, this isn’t brought up at all,
    and I have
    so far in 2007, not recieved a single call from the Merseyside Police about
    this, or
    about anything else.

    So these problems from the meeting/complaint process, together with the 18
    individual complaints
    from the complaint from 3/5, which I have exlained about above, and which
    haven’t been dealt
    with at all in the Merseyside Police letter from 10/7, are the reasons for
    which I am appealing.

    Also, my complaint from 3/5, is like I have explained above, regarding
    problems with the
    liasons, or contact, with the police.

    Like I’ve also explained earlier, I’m not an expert on police methods, and
    I’ve been a bit
    confused about why the police seemingly don’t want to cooperate with me.

    I’ve looked at it as certain, that maybe even if the Merseyside police
    haven’t seemed to want
    to cooperate with me about the problems at Arvato etc., I’ve taken it as
    certain, that the
    Merseyside police, like any responsilbe Police-unit, would investigate the
    things that have
    been going on at Arvato, when I’ve been telling them when I’ve met up at the
    police-station
    in Novemeber last year, on several occations telling them about my concerns
    about org. criminal
    activity in the company.

    When I’ve in the meetings with Sgt. Camel on 16/1, in the several talks with
    Constable Holmes,
    and in the meeting with Sgt. O’Brian on 1/3.

    When I’ve in these expressed my concern about what has been going on in the
    Arvato company, and
    also explained to them that I’m worried about my former collegues that were
    still working there,
    because it seemed to me that some of them must have been under control by
    criminals.

    And when I also mention to the Merseyside Police that I have been in contact
    with the Embassy,
    and later also the Consulate, and I give a larger number, several hundred,
    documents, that
    helps show that there has been something goving on there.

    And when I’ve also sent e-mails, on my last day working at Arvato, to a
    number of British and
    Norwegian newspapers and tv-stations, and also to the parent-company, that
    it’s clear to me
    that there is a problem with organised criminal activity in the company.

    If the fact, that the police are still ignoring my plea to get a
    contact-person and a dialog
    with the police, to get a chance to tell them everything I know about the
    problems at Arvato,
    (and also about the other problems from Liverpool and Norway).

    If the fact that they are still ignoring this request, means that they
    haven’t been investigating
    the problems at Arvato at all, then I off course think that this is serious.
    And I guess, since
    I haven’t been reading about the problems at Arvato in the newspapers or
    otherwere, and since
    I see from the letter the Merseyside police sent me on 10/7, that the police
    doesn’t seem to be
    interested in letting me tell them what I know about (since they haven’t
    commented on the problems
    I have been having with the contact with the police at all).

    Due to this I have to presume that nothing has been done about the problems
    at Arvato then.
    Problems which to me seems like they are serious, and it seems to me that
    some of the people
    that were working there, at the same time I was working there, was under
    control by criminals.
    (This got clear to me at the end of the time I worked there, thats why I
    sent the e-mails to
    the newspapers etc., and this is also why I went to the police and told them
    about this all
    those times from November 2006.).

    I’ve also explained about what it seems to me must have been going on at
    Arvato, to the Norwegian
    Embassy, and the Norwegian Police, since there were many Norwegians and
    Scandinavians working
    at the Arvato campaign which I was working on.

    But if it even, after I’ve tryed to tell all of these about the problems, if
    there still hasn’t
    been investigating what has been going on at Arvato (Which I find highly
    unlikly, since I think
    any responsible police-force of course would have investigated serious cases
    like this. But
    I mention this anyway, due to the ignorance from the police regarding my
    plea to tell the police
    what I know about what has been going on).

    Because then, since it also hasn’t been about this in the news, then I have
    to presume that the
    problems at Arvato haven’t been investigated by the Merseyiside Police at
    all, or by anyone
    else, so then I think the only responsible think would be to try get advice
    on how this problem,
    with the semingly organised crime activity at the Arvato company, should
    addressed, when the
    police are igonring the problem.

    So if you at the IPCC have any idea on how to go forward then. I guess thats
    a complaint about
    the Merseyside Police as a police-force, as well as a complaint against
    individual police-
    officers, like it is in the complaints you are dealing with.

    But I reackoned that I might as well ask you now then, how I should go
    forward, to get the police
    to investigate the problems with the organised criminal activity at Arvato,
    which seeems clear
    to me from working there, and which I also have documents that supports the
    occurance of.

    Sorry if I’m repeating myself a bit at the end here, but I think that these
    problems should
    be dealt with in a responsilbe way.

    And it doesn’t seem to me that the complaint with the problems with the
    liasons is being dealt
    with in a responsible way from the Merseyside Police.

    And this makes a bit worried about if the problems with my former collegues
    from Arvoto which
    it seemed to me must have been under control by criminal, also is being
    dealt with in an
    irresponsible way.

    Thats why I’m bringing this up now, even if I’m not sure if it’s the right
    time and place, but
    I hope that maybe you could maybe give some advice on how to go forward with
    this problem as
    well, with the org. criminal activity at Arvato, and the problems with the
    people working
    there seeming to be under control by criminals.

    Even if this complaint originaly only was regarding the problems with the
    contact with the
    police, because I was sure that the police would deal with a case like that
    responsible,
    no matter what they inform me about what they are doing.

    But I must admit that the way the police have been dealing with my complaint
    from 3/5, with the
    problems surrounding the meeting on 22/6, and the answering-letter from
    10/7.

    I think issues have been dealt with a bit unprofessional by the police, so
    the unprofessionalism
    from them surrounding these issues, has made me a bit uncertain as to if
    they are dealing with
    the problems at Arvato in a responsible way at all.

    So thats why I thought I’d bring this up now, while I was dealing with the
    relating issues
    in the appeal.

    So I hope that this is alright, and that it’s possible for you have a look
    at the issues I’ve
    brought up in this appeal.

    Yours sincerely,

    Erik Ribsskog

    On 8/15/07, Joanne Fitzgerald wrote:
    >
    > Dear Mr Ribsskog,
    >
    > Thank you for contacting the Independent Police Complaints Commission
    > (IPCC).
    >
    > The information we require, should you wish to appeal the police’s
    > decision to not formally record your complaint, is set out in the Appeal
    > Form that I have posted to you. I have also now attached the relevant
    > appeal form with this email for your consideration – this electronic version
    > can be printed out, completed and returned by post. You may complete an
    > Appeal Form or provide the same required information in an email.
    >
    > Please be aware that if you wish to submit an appeal we must receive your
    > appeal within 28 days of the date of me informing you of your right to
    > appeal.
    >
    > I hope this information has assisted you.
    >
    > Please contact me if you have any further questions,
    >
    > Yours sincerely,
    >
    > Joanne
    >
    > *Joanne Fitzgerald*
    > Casework Manager
    > Independent Police Complaints Commission
    > 90 High Holborn
    > London
    > WC1V 6BH
    > Tel: 020 7166 3182
    > Fax: 020 7166 3642
    > Email: joanne.fitzgerald@ipcc.gsi.gov.uk
    >
    >
    > ——————————
    > *From:* Erik Ribsskog [mailto:eribsskog@gmail.com]
    > *Sent:* 15 August 2007 00:24
    > *To:* Joanne Fitzgerald
    > *Subject:* Re: Your Complaint Against Merseyside Police – 2007/006341
    >
    >
    > Hi,
    >
    > thank you very much for your e-mail!
    >
    > I will definatly appeal against the decision not to investigate the
    > complaint.
    >
    > I’m just a bit busy with work and other issues at the moment, but I’m
    > going
    > to look up in the letter about how one should appeal formally, one of the
    > next
    > days, and then I’ll send a more formal appeal if thats needed.
    >
    > Or else, please tell me if you think this e-mail can be considered as a
    > formal
    > appeal, if not, then I’ll send a new e-mail one of the next days.
    >
    > Hope that this is alright!
    >
    > Yours sincerely,
    >
    > Erik Ribsskog
    >
    >
    > On 8/14/07, Joanne Fitzgerald wrote:
    > >
    > > Dear Mr Ribsskog,
    > >
    > > Thank you for contacting the Independent Police Complaints Commission
    > > (IPCC).
    > >
    > > I have contacted Merseyside Professional Standards Department to
    > > establish the current status of your complaint. I was informed by
    > > Merseyside Police that they did not deem your complaint to be concerned
    > > with allegations of misconduct against individual police officers and
    > > therefore decided not to formally record your complaint under the Police
    > > Reform Act 2002.
    > >
    > > If you disagree with the decision by Merseyside Police to not formally
    > > record your complaint, then you have a right to appeal to the IPCC to
    > > independently review the police’s decision. I have sent you the relevant
    > > appeal form today in the post (Appealing Against a Complaint Not Being
    > > Recorded) and this form is also available online at our website
    > > (www.ipcc.gov.uk), should this assist you further. Please note, should
    > > you wish to appeal, we must receive your appeal form within 28 days.
    > >
    > > If you have any further questions then please do not hesitate to contact
    > >
    > > me.
    > >
    > > Yours sincerely,
    > >
    > > Joanne
    > >
    > > Joanne Fitzgerald
    > > Casework Manager
    > > Independent Police Complaints Commission
    > > 90 High Holborn
    > > London
    > > WC1V 6BH
    > > Tel: 020 7166 3182
    > > Fax: 020 7166 3642
    > > Email: joanne.fitzgerald@ipcc.gsi.gov.uk
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > >
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    > > WC1V 6BH.
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  • Untitled Post

    Fwd: Your Complaint Against Merseyside Police – 2007/006341

    21 November 2007
    03:18

    Subject Fwd: Your Complaint Against Merseyside Police – 2007/006341
    From Erik Ribsskog
    To Joanne.Fitzgerald@ipcc.gsi.gov.uk
    Sent 21 November 2007 03:07
    Attachments

    Hi,
     
    I can’t see that I have recieved an answer to this e-mail yet, that’s why I’m sending it again.
     
    Hope that this is alright!
     
    Yours sincerely,
     
    Erik Ribsskog

    ———- Forwarded message ———-
    From: Erik Ribsskog
    Date: Nov 10, 2007 7:38 AM
    Subject: Re: Your Complaint Against Merseyside Police – 2007/006341
    To: Joanne Fitzgerald

     
    Hi,
     
    I’m writing to you, to inform you, (like I’ve already informed the Norwegian Embassy), that I haven’t
    got that much confidence left regarding how the Merseyside Police, are dealing with the complaint/appeal.
     
    I was at Walton Lane Police Station, regarding a meeting with Sgt. Smythe, the day before yesterday.
     
    I was harassed in the reception there.
     
    Yesterday, I sent an e-mail to Sgt. Smythe and his assistant Rachel, about some enclosures, that
    we had agreed on the meeting Thursday, that I would e-mail them.
    I was also asking them, how I should go forward with reporting the harassment, but when they answered
    to my e-mail, they didn’t tell me how I should go forward regarding this.
     
    In the meeting on Thursday, Rachel, Sgt. Smyth’s assistant, told me that the e-mail address to the
    Liverpool North Standards Unit, was civil.litigation.e@merseyside.police.uk. (She wrote it on a note).
     
    While I was sending the files, as agreed yesterday, I had a look at the lastest letter I had recieved, from
    the Liverpool North Standards Unit, and there it says that their e-mail address is: civil.litigation.e.@merseyside.police.uk .
     
    (So on their letters, the email address, has got an extra ‘.’).
     
    When I wrote the last e-mail to Sgt. Smyth/Rachel yesterday, after finishing e-mailing all the files, I
    asked them to please confirm that they had recieved the documents, due to this problem with the
    e-mail address.
     
    Then Rachel, Mr. Smyth’s assistant, informed me that it was the e-mail address that she wrote on
    the note, that was the right address, and not the e-mail address on their letters.
     
    I think that this means that eighter Mr. Smyths assistant isn’t telling the thruth, or that the Liverpool
    North Standards Unit are so unproffesional, that they are writing letters, to members of the public,
    with the wrong e-mail addresses on the letters.
     
    And also, since I think I was harrassed, at the Police Station on Thursday, and also since the
    Liverpool North Standards Unit, weren’t answering me about my questions surrounding the harassment
    incident, even if I the e-mail containing these questions, also was forwarded with the e-mail they
    sent me an answer to yesterday.
     
    (So they had two oppertunities, to get to read my quesions regarding how to go forward with reporting
    the harassment incident, and still they didn’t answer me on this).
     
    And I also think that regarding the problem with the e-mail address, that eighter the PC must have
    been lying, or the Police Force and the Standards Unit, are run so unproffesional (printing the wrong
    e-mail address on their letters, that there has to be something wrong with the Police-force.
     
    I don’t think that they can have two different e-mail addresses, and claim both to be the right e-mail
    address, that doesn’t really make any sense.
     
    So I havent got any confidence left in the Merseyside Police’s ability to deal with this case/comlaint and
    appeal, so I think I’m going to have to withdraw from the complaint-process, if not a thustworhty autorothy
    from outside of the Merseyside Police, are drawn directly into this.
     
    (I’m enclosing a copy of the mentioned note, and letter, and I’m also going to forward you three e-mails
    containing the e-mail correspondence I was refering to from yesterday).
     
    I hope that this is alright!
     
    Yours sincerely,
    Erik Ribsskog
     
    On 8/26/07, Erik Ribsskog wrote:
    Hi,
     
    here is the appeal against the decision not to formally record my complaint:
     
    Please give the name of the police force your complaint was about:
     
    Merseyside Police
     
    If you recieved a letter from the police telling you that they will not be recording your complaint,
    please give the date of that letter:
     
    10/7/07
     
    Mr. Erik Ribsskog
    Flat 3
    5 Leather Lane
    L2 2AE
    Liverpool
     
    01512363298/07758349954
     
    eribsskog@gmail.com
     
    Date you made your complaint:
     
    3/5/07
     
    Who did you make your complaint to:
    To the IPCC.
     
    How did you make your complaint:
    By e-mail.
     
    Please provide brief details about the complaint that you made:
     
    I had been reporting about some problems that seems clear to me to involve organised
    crime at the place which I worked to the police on several occations from November
    last year.
     
    I had been having some problems with the police being supposed to call me back regarding
    this, but they didn’t call back, even if contacted the police-station to inform them about this.
     
    So, when I was at the CAB regarding advice on when one needed a criminal solicitors.
    (Since the solicitor that I had met in a duty solicitors meeting at the CAB had informed me
    that Morecrofts couldn’t help me if I needed a criminal solicitor. But it wasn’t clear to me
    when one would need a criminal solicitor, so I contacted the CAB again, and was told that
    this was if one were being accused of doing something wrong.
     
    The Morecrofts solicitor had said that the case was both an employment-case, and a
    criminal-case, so I asked the advisor at the CAB, on how I should go forward with the
    criminal part of the case.
     
    And I was ansered that I should bring this up in liasons with the police.
    I had been trying to do this from before, but I had been having some problems involving the
    police not calling me back when they said they would.
     
    So I asked the advisor what I should do if I had problems with the liasons with the police.
     
    And the advisor said that I should bring it up with the CPS or the Law-society.
     
    I asked about this as a precaution, so that I knew what to do if the police still didn’t contact
    me after the new meeting there.
     
    So, some weeks later, when they still hadn’t contacted me, then I contacted the CPS about
    the problems with the liasons with the police.
     
    The CPS answered that they didn’t have the powers to investiagte a case, and told me to
    contact the IPCC.
     
    Which I did on 3/5, I sent the IPCC a complaint regarding the problems I’ve been having with the
    liasons with the police. (Or ‘the contact with the police’, like I wrote in the e-mail I sent you on 3/5).
     
    In the complaint, I had listed up 18 individual complaints about thing I though were dealt with wrongly
    by the police in relation to my contact with them.
     
    I’ll try to specify how I thought the police conducted wrongly:
     
    1. The police-constable wouldn’t let me report a crime.
     
    2. The police adviced me to go back to work, even if I had told them that the company was
    infiltradet/taken over by a criminal organisation. I think that this was irresponsible by the police.
     
    3. On 16/1/07 Sergant Camel told me to take the case to the CAB, even if he knew I was
    unemployed, and couldn’t afford to pay a solicitor £140/hour to deal with the case.
    I though that this was irresponsible by the Sergant. (The police should have investigated the
    case themselves).
     
    (Also, I remember from the meeting on 16/1, that Sgt. Camel wanted me to take the case to
    the CAB, and then to a solicitor and the Crowns Court.
     
    I haven’t been living in Britain that long, so I wasn’t sure what the CAB was. But I remember 
    I asked the Sergant if the CAB were government. And the sergant said ‘yes’. 
     
    Later (maybe 2 or 3 weeks ago), I have been browsing the CAB website looking for some
    information there, and I’ve seen on the CAB website, that CAB is actually a charity.
     
    So, it’s now clear to me that Sgt. Camel actually lied to me about this in the meeting 
    at the policestation on 16/1.
     
    If he had told me that the CAB was a charity, then I would have objected much stronger
    on brining the case to them, I would have insisting stronger on the right department of
    the police to deal with it.
    But that the Sergant told me that the CAB were government, and that the solicitor I would
    get to speak with there, would send the case back to the police if they thought it was 
    a matter for the police, confused me, and since I hadn’t been living that long in Britain,
    and I’m not so used to dealing with the police, and I wasn’t sure if I as a Norwegian,
    could demand what the police should do, so thats why I after contacting the police 
    a number of more times trying to get them to deal with the case, (but they still 
    insited on me going to the CAB with it), thats why I ended up at the CAB with it,
    beliving the CAB was a government organisation.
     
    4. The police didn’t want to investigate the case, even if I told them I had documents
    that would show that it was a crime-case.
     
    (And I also told the police on 16/1, that I was worried about my collegues that were
    still working in the complany, that they were under control by the criminals).
     
    5. The police didn’t want to look at the evidence/documents on my laptop on 22/1,
    saying it was a breach of the data protection act. Even if I think it must be obvious that
    since I myself let them look at the documents, then this couldn’t have been a data
    protection issue.
     
    6. That constable Keith Holmes didn’t call me back, even if constable Victoria Steele
    told me on 22/1 that she would ask Holmes to call me back.
     
    This happened a lot of times, that the police said they would call me back, but they 
    didn’t. It’s difficult for me to say what happened in this situation. If Holmes got the
    message or not. There could be some problems with the routines at the police-station,
    or it could have been a mistake from eighter Steele or Holmes. 
     
    7. The constable who was in the ‘reception’ on 24/1 and 25/1 didn’t wear collar-number-
    tags. I think police should be expected to wear their tag-numbers, because I know
    there are rules about things like this, even eg. shop-assistants are instructed to
    wear their name-tags, so I think the police, having an important funciton in society,
    also should wear some kind of indification, so that it’s possible for members of the
    public to identify the serviceman/woman they have been talking with. (In case
    something wrong is being said or done by the constable/officer).
     
    8. The constable that didn’t wear number-tags on 24/1 and 25/1, promised me that
    she would get Victoria Steele to call me back regarding the case.
    But Steele didn’t call. This is a similar problem I think to complaint 6, and this happened
    a lot of times, I was promised maybe 10 times by different officers/constables that the
    police would call me back, but I wasn’t called back by the police a single time in 2007.
    I was only called back once in November 2006.
     
    (And I was promised to be called back about ten times or more in 2007, and they didn’t
    call a single time).
     
    9. I went to the police in January, and gave them copies of the documents in which I
    thought that it would be possible to find evidence about the problem with a criminal
    organisation of some kind having infiltrated/taking over the company I had worked in.
     
    I gave the documents (many hundred sheets) to Steele, who gave it to Holmes.
     
    When I spoke with Holmes two or three weeks later, he said he had only read a bit
    on the top of the pile, a bit in the middle, and a bit on the bottom of the pile.
     
    And he still said it was an employment-case, and that I should go to the CAB.
    By then I had ‘argued’ so much with the police about this, that I didn’t know if it
    would be right for me as a Norwegian to continue arguing with the British police about
    this.
     
    But, I remebered Sgt. Camel had said earlier that the CAB would send it back to the
    police if they thought it was right.
     
    And thought that maybe it was because I was from another country that they wouldn’t
    listen to me at the police-station, and maybe they weren’t used to dealing that much
    with documents for all that I knew.
     
    So I thought that it would maybe be just as smart to have a lawyer at the CAB have a
    look at it, and send it back, maybe this would convince the police to have a look at, and
    investigate the case.
     
    (It could be of couse, that the police investigated it, but didn’t tell me about this. I had
    been at the police-station several times in November and later explaining about the case.
     
    I’m not an expert in police-methods, but I guessed that it could be that the police investigated
    without telling me, for some reason, I wasn’t sure, but I reackoned that this could be the case,
    since I would have thought that the British Police would deal with a matter like this in a
    responsible way.)
     
    But in the complaint about the liasons with the police, I could only relate to what I knew for
    sure, and I knew for sure that Constable Holmes didn’t look properly through the documents
    I delivered to the police-station for him to give to an investigator.
     
    So I thought that it was irresponsible by constable Holmes to not read throught the documents
    proberly, and to not give them to an investigator.
     
    10. The police sent me a letter on 16/2, where they called me ‘Miss Erik Ribsskog’. I think, like
    the British representative on the Norwegian Consulate in the India Building said, that it should
    be obvious to Brits that Erik and Eric is the same name, and it therefore must be someone
    making jokes and not taking their job serious.
     
    Like I had explained in meetings at the police-station, it seemed to me that some of my collegues
    in the complany, probably must have been under control by criminals. So I thought this was an important
    case, and then to start making jokes like this in an important case. I think thats irresponsible and
    it seems like a joke that small kids could have made. So this makes me worried that things could be
    out of control at the police-station.
     
    11. In the meeting on 1/2, Sergant O’Brian told me to move from the chair I sat down with at the
    table, (even if I sat in the same chair in the meeting there with Sgt. Camel and the constable on
    16/1).
     
    So I had to move to another chair, at the other side of the table, I think that Sgt. O’Brian was acting
    patronising towards me when he ‘ordered’ me to sit in the other chair.
     
    12. In the meeting at the St. Ann’s police-station on 1/3, the ‘ginger’ police-constable, wouldn’t let
    me present the issues about which I had contacted the police-station to the Sergant O’Brian, but
    insisted on presenting the things I wanted to bring up in the meeting to the Sergant himself.
     
    So this made me lose a bit control on how the issues were presented, and it seemed to me that
    I was being patronised by the police-constable.
     
    And this made it diffucult for me to present the things I wanted to bring up, in the way I intended
    to present it, and also it made me more of a spectator than a participant in the meeting.
     
    I guess it could be that it was O’Brian who should have told the constable to let me explain myself,
    because I think they should have let me explain my concerns myself.
     
    13. So in the meeting on 1/3, I was a bit confused if I was supposed to exlain about my concerns
    to Sgt. O’Brian myself, or if this was the job of the constable.
    So this made me a bit confused about how they meant the meeting to be conducted, and what they
    wanted my role in the meeting to be.
     
    14. In the meeting on 1/3, Sgt. O’Brian said that he thought the problem with the case not having any
    progress with being dealt with by the police, was due to the case having being dealt with by a large
    number of police servicemen.
     
    So, he suggested, that to find out exactly what had been going on, they would ask constable Steele
    to call me, and tell me what she had been doing with the documents after I gave them to her.
     
    I think this was irresponsible by the Sergant. He must have understood that to find out what the police
    had been doing, would be a job for the police.
     
    So I think that he should have taken the job of finding out what the police had been doing, that he should
    have taken the responsibility of finding this out himself.
     
    And of course, investigate the case himself, instead of not doing anything, other that saying I had to find
    out what the police had been doing so far.
     
    So I thought this was very irresponsible by Sgt. O’Brian.
     
    15. This is connected with point 14. That I think Sgt. O’Brian should have investigated himself:
     
    1. What the police had done regarding the case so far. (And not telling me to find out about this.)
     
    2. Investigate the case further.
     
    Sgt. O’Brian didn’t do eighter of these actions, and I think that this was very irresponsible.
     
    16. In the meeting on 1/3, Sgt. O’Brian was very un-calm, and this together with the patronising
    I was subjected to (which is explained in point 11 and 12), made it difficult for me to bring up
    the issues I wanted to bring up in the way I had intended.
     
    So I think that (especially since I haven’t been living in Britain that long, and had to ‘compete’
    with to British police-servicemen who were patronising me in the meeting), because of this,
    I think that the Sergant should have tryed to remain calm in the meeting, since I think when
    one have a job as a public serviceman, then it’s important that one are capable of comunicating
    with the public.
     
    And then to be so un-calm in the meeting, can make it difficult for the meeting and the comunication
    to be conducted in a meaningful way, since the things the Sergant said had marks of not being
    very thorowly considered. (Like he told me that I had to make sure that my former employer and
    the job-agency got in touch about the letter I had brought there, even if it was obvious from that
    letter that they already were in touch, and the Sergant was reading the letter explaining about
    this).
     
    So I think the Sergant must have been so un-calm that he didn’t get the meaning of the letter.
    And I didn’t want to aggrivate or make the Sergant even more un-calm, so I just had to pretend
    to agree with him.
     
    I though that I would rather call the Sergant later, and explain about this later, when he was in
    a calmer state.
     
    An I think that when one as a member of the public, contacts the police, about important things
    like this, then one should expect to be treated in professional way by the police.
     
    So when the police are patronising you, and like I mention in this individual complaint, the police
    Sergant in charge of the meeting, isn’t capable to keep control of himself and remain calm, in
    a way that the meeting could be conducted in a professional and meaningful way.
    I think that if the Sergant in charge of the meeting isn’t capable of doing this, then this is a reason
    to complain. (Because I don’t think members of the public should be treated in an unprofessional
    and unpolite way when they are contacting the police).
     
    17. Sgt. O’Brian said in the meeting on 1/3, that they would get constable Steele to call me back
    about what the police had been doing with the case so far.
     
    Victoria Steele didn’t call, and I called back to the police-station several times, and was told that
    she was on holiday.
    I also called back several times after she should have been back, but she was never present.
     
    The people I talked with at the police-station, told me several times that they would get Steele
    to call, yet she never called.
     
    This problem happened very often. (That I was promised someone from the police would call
    me back, but that they didn’t call at all in 2007).
     
    18. The same in this individual complaint.
     
    When I tryed calling Steele, but didn’t suceed in getting in contact with her at all.
     
    Then I tried to call Sgt. O’Brian on several phone-numbers I was given by the central, and
    by St. Ann’s police-station.
     
    I didn’t manage to get hold of Sgt. O’Brian eighter, and after trying to get in contact with
    Constable Steele and Sergant O’Brian for weeks, without getting hold of them, and without
    any of them returning my calls.
     
    Then I went to the Norwegian Consulat in the India Building, asking The Consulate if they
    had any advice for me, on how to get in contact with Constable Steele or Sgt. Obrian.
     
    The Consulate-representative, Liz Hurley, went and called Sgt. O’Brian, while I was at
    the Consulate on 19/3.
     
    Liz Hurley said, that she had been talking with O’Brian, and that O’Brian had told her that
    ‘he remembered the case’.
     
    Yet, Sgt. O’Brian still didn’t call me back, even after recieving this reminder by the Norwegian
    Consulate representative.
     
    Sgt. O’Brian still hadn’t called me back when I sent you the complaint on 3/5, and he still
    haven’t called me back when I’m writing this appeal now on 26/8.
     
    I think this is very unprofessional of the Sergant. On the meeting on 1/3, I showed the
    constable and Sergant O’Brian the explanation I had written were I explain about
    my concern about what was going on in the company, and I remember the Sergant
    was reading the explanation, he got it from the constable.
     
    And I had written that it was clear to me that some of my collages in the company was
    under control by criminals.
     
    (I had written it in capital letters, because I was a bit tired of the police not taking any
    actions after I had gone to the police-station reporting about this several times in
    November, then in the meeting with Sgt. Cambel in January, and then in the talks
    with Constable Holmes also in January.
     
    I wasn’t sure if the police was taking this as serious as they should, so I tryed to
    write it in a document, why I think they should act. I even wrote some of it in capital
    letters, so to show that I meant this seriously, and to maybe get them to wake up).
     
    And it was this document that I remember O’Brian read, and still they didn’t even return
    my calls, even after reading that document, and having seen how important I thought
    the case was.
     
    And in the meeting on 1/3, I also showed the Constable and the Sergant the letter from
    the Solicitor from 27/2, where the Solicitor writes that:
     
    ‘As I explained, Morecrofts do not deal with criminal law and would not be able to advise you
    on this aspect although some further perusal of your papers may reveal some information that
    will assist the police.’
     
    Even if I showed the Sergant this letter from the Solicitor, still the Sergant didn’t want to investigate/
    look at the papers/documents I had. And even if he had read this letter and the the letter where
    I explain that I’m worried about some of my collueges being under control by criminals in the
    company I used to work, and also even if he got a call about this from the Norwegian Consulate,
    still he didn’t even return my calls.
     
    I think this was very irresponsible and unprofessional by the Sergant. And it was this behaviour from
    the Sergant that I thought was the ‘final drop’, so to speak, and lead me to complain about the
    police to the CPS.
     
    And then, after recieving my complaint, the CPS adviced me to contact you, so thats why 
    I sent you the e-mail with the complaint on 3/5.
     
     
    Please tell us why you would like to appeal about the way your complaint was handled:
     
    The police force didn’t record my complaint.
     
    Please explain why you want to appeal:
     
    Well, like I exlained above, I think that the police force should deal with members of the
    public in a professional and aproriate way.
     
    All of the 18 individual complaint I have mentioned, are situations, where I think the police
    have acted in a way which I think is below the standard you could expect from a responsible
    police force.
     
    And when I complain about the police not letting me report a crime (like in complaint 1), and
    the police acting irresponsible with sending me back to work even if the complany was
    controled by criminals (complaint 2), lying to me about the CAB being a government
    organisation (even if I discovered the lying later, complaint 3), the police refusing to
    investgate a serious criminal case, involiving people being held under control, seemingly
    like slaves, by criminals (complaint 4),  the police lying to me again, saying that
    it would be a breach on the data protection act if they looked at some documents
    on my laptop. (complaint 5), that the police acted irresponsible, on numerous occations,
    when I was promised the police would call me back, but they didn’t. I would think that
    this happened to many times to it being coincidental, I would think that some type of
    misconduct is the reason for this way of treatment by the police (numerous complaints, eg.
    complaint 6, 8, 17 and 18).
     
    That the police constable didn’t give the documents I gave him regarding a serious crime-
    case to an investigator (complaint 9), that the police insulted me, calling me ‘Miss Erik
    Ribsskog’, in their letter from 16/2, when it should be obvious, as I have got confirmed by
    a British representative working for the Norwegian Consulate, that it should be obvious
    for Brits that Erik and Eric is the same name, and due to this, the police were inpolite
    towards me, since they called me ‘Miss’, even if they should know that my name isn’t
    a girls name.
     
    That Sgt. O’Brian was, I would go as far as to say he was harassing me, and were
    patronising towards me in the meeting on the police-station on 1/3, described in
    complaint 11-18.
     
    That Sgt. O’Brian was acting irresponsible in not investigating a serious crime-case,
    even if the Solicitor had written in the letter that she thought this could be a matter
    for the police, and even if he was called by the Norwegian Consulate, and still didn’t
    return my calls.
     
    And also that he left it to me, a member of the public, to find out how the police had
    been dealing with the case, instead of dealing with it himself.
     
    And also that he was ‘in a state’ in the meeting, not giving me a chance to explain
    about the issues in the way I had intended, due to having to focus on not trying
    to aggrivate the Sergant any more, that is to try to get him calm down, taking
    the focus away from presenting the actual issues I had gone there to present.
     
    I think the harassment, patronisment, unprofesionalism from the Sergant in the
    meeting on 1/3 certainly qualifyes to problems with the liasons with the police, like
    I initialy complained about, but also to beind misconduct like I see now that it has
    to be, for the police to deal with the complaint.
     
    Also the other issues I’ve mentioned under this section ‘Why you want to appeal’,
    I think they also must be misconduct, like when the Constable didn’t want to let
    me report a crime in complaint 1, and the refusal to investigate a serious crime-case
    in complaint 2, the later discovered lying in complain 3 etc. (see section above).
     
    So when I read in your e-mail from 14/8, that ‘I was informed by
    Merseyside Police that they did not deem your complaint to be concerned
    with allegations of misconduct against individual police officers and
    therefore decided not to formally record your complaint under the Police
    Reform Act 2002.’, then I can’t agree with the Merseyside Police that my
    complaint isn’t being deemed as being concerd with allegations of
    misconduct against individual police officers.
     
    I can’t see that the lying, the harrasment, the insults, the not alowing a member
    of the public to report a crime case, the refusal to investigate a serious crime-case,
    and the other mentioned issues (see above).
     
    I cant see that these things shouldn’t be considered as misconduct.
     
    Thats my view, I’m not sure how police are expected to conduct themselves in this
    country, but if I use my head and think by myself how I would have thought that
    the police were meant to conduct themselves, and then think about the way the
    police-officers have conducted themselves, which I have described in this complaint,
    then I’d say that the police-officers have misconducted.
     
    Also, while I’m dealing with this, I thought I’d mention some points from the complaint-
    procedure:
     
    The police called me a week before the meeting at Walton Lane police station on 22/6.
     
    The police-woman that called on 15/6, didn’t tell me her name, even if I asked who I should
    say that I had spoken with.
     
    She just instructed me to report at Walton Lane police-station on 22/6 at a certain time,
    and ask to speak with Sgt. Smithe.
     
    I thought that they would probably ask me who had called me and told me to meet there,
    so I asked her who I should tell them that I had been speaking with.
     
    But she didn’t say her name, she just said that I should say that I had been called by
    the police.
     
    And she didn’t tell me at all what the meeting was about.
     
    I used to live in Walton about a year ago, and I’d also been in contact with the police in
    Walton (and also the St. Ann’s police-station), about some problems I had been having
    org. criminals in Oslo and Liverpool.
     
    And also when I lived in Walton, I rented a room in a shared house, and there were also
    problems going on in the house which I have reported to the Walton Lane police.
    And also when I was living in the shared house, due to reasons unknown to me, and I
    hadn’t been living in Britain long enough then to understand about all the things
    surounding Council-tax.
    But for some reason, I don’t think any of the tenants revieved council-tax bills (or tv-licensing
    bills), when they were living in the shared house in Mandeville St. in Walton.
     
    So I wasn’t completly sure about why it was that the police had called me and instructed
    me to meet at the Walton Lane police-station.
     
    I thought, of course, that it could be to do with the complaint. But I wasn’t completly sure,
    I thought it also could be with the cases I had reported about earlier regarding problems with
    org. criminials in Oslo and Liverpool.
     
    I also thought there could be a chance it was regarding the problem with the missing council
    tax and tv-licensing bills from the Mandeville shared house. (Problems which I had intended
    to bring up togheter with a lot of other problems, once I’d got set up a dialog with the police,
    once I’d got a contact-person and a dialog at the police, and could start to focus on trying
    to explain all details with the earlier reported problems in Norway and Liverpool).
     
    And I wanted the police to deal with the things I had brought up seriously. And I was a bit
    afraid to ‘make a fool of myself’, if I called the Walton Lane police-station, and asked to
    speak with Sgt. Smithe, to ask what the meeting was about.
    Because then I reackoned that I had to explain who had called me about the meeting, and
    I couldn’t really be sure that the Sergant was working on Walton Lane police-station
    permanently. He could be in a specialised police-department for all that I know, who dealt
    with police complaint cases, and who was stationed somewhere else, maybe even out of
    town, for all that I knew. And only was supposed to be at the Walton Lane police-station
    for the meeting regarding the complaint-case.
     
    So, since I didn’t want to make a bad impression, (makine a fool of myself), since I’m a
    bit clumsy sometimes with my manners etc, since I haven’t been living in Britain that
    long, due to this, I found it best to just show for the meeting, and not call to ask any
    questions regarding the agenda.
     
    I also guessed that if it was meant for me to contact them back regarding things surrounding
    the meeting, then I would have got a contact-name there, like the police-woman calling
    would have told me her name, and told me that if I had any questions, then I could contact
    this and this person.
    But since no such contact-name was given to me, then I guessed that I wasn’t meant to
    know what the meeting was about, before the meeting.
     
    So I didn’t know exactly how to prepare for the meeting.
     
    And when the meeting started, I had to ask the Sergant if the meeting was about the complaint,
    to be sure.
     
    In the meeting, we didn’t discuss the issues regarding problems with the liasons with the
    police at all.
     
    Somehow, we ended up discussing the cases that I had complained about to the Walton
    Lane police-station before. (The problems with org. criminals in Oslo and Liverpool).
     
    I wrote some notes down when I got home from the meeting, here are some of the points.
     
    – Core of case: Followed by mafia in Norway, and this has continued in England (Ppl. from
    work etc).
     
    (This is about some problems I had in Norway, and which I have reported about to the police
    in Norway and England.
     
    It was on my workplace in Oslo. I was working as an assistant shop-manager, while I was studying.
    And then I got some problems with the my face being more or less distroyed (its a long story), and
    I still went to work a few days (I didn’t think it was so serious, so I thought the problems with the
    face-skin would pass), and then I overheard a couple of conversations about me behind my back so to
    speak, eg. one conversation I overheard I heard it being said (they were talking  about my face which
    was more or less distroyed), and I head them say: ‘I’ve heard that he’s also followed by the mafia’.
     
    And also I heard other customers say, about me, ‘he isn’t afraid (eg. he goes to work as normal
    I think they must have meant) even if he’s being followed by the mafia’.
     
    This was just some of what happened, I’ve tryed to explain about these things to the police in
    Norway and Britain, but I haven’t been able to find someone who want’s to deal with and investigate
    this, and let me explain all I know about this.
     
    But I mentioned it to the Sergant in the meeting on 22/6.
     
    But he writes in the answer-letter that ‘I have since had the oppertunity to examine the issues you
    raised in terms of organised criminality and the Norwegian Mafia.’.
     
    Well, I haven’t actually menioned anything about a ‘Norwegian Mafia’. I have never heard of, or
    menioned a ‘Norwegian mafia’.
     
    I always thought that the people I overheard at my old workplace in Oslo, was refering to the
    Albanian mafia, since this was the only mafia I had heard that were being present in Oslo.
     
    So, when the Sergant is writing about ‘the Norwegian Mafia’ in his letter, then I get a bit
    concerned that maybe there have been some misunderstanings in the comunications,
    since I’ve never used the term ‘Norwegian mafia’, and I’ve never heard of or refered to
    any Norwegian Mafia, so I think we must have been speaking past eachother a bit
    in the meeting.
     
    We were also taling a bit of the Arvato company which I had reported the problems
    with being infiltrated by org. criminals.
    (I said I thought the problems with org. criminals in Liverpool probably had to be connected
    with the problems in Oslo, since I found it unlikly that the lightening would strike at the
    same place twice so to speak).
     
    I can see in my notes that the Sergant thought that Arvato had a Swedish parent-company,
    but I told him that it wasn’t Swedish, but German. (Bertelsman).
     
    I also told him that I thought it would be very fine to have a contact person at the police,
    since the police didn’t return my calls, and also since I had a lot of information regarding
    the different cases which I still hadn’t got an oppertunity to report to the police, yet this
    haven’t been addressed in the answering-letter.
     
    Like I’ve explained above, the police have been suposed to call me on more than ten occations,
    but they haven’t called me in 2007 at all.
     
    So I think they should take this problem a bit more serious. They are ignoring this problem
    in their answering-letter, and I can’t really say that I’m sure what to do if some incidents
    happens now, for which I would have needed the assitance of the police. I’m not sure what
    I should do if this happens, I don’t really want to call the police, just to be ignored even
    more.
     
    So I think they should have brought up this issue in their answering-letter.
     
    In the meeting, the Sergant asked me what I wanted the police to do, and I answered that I
    wanted the police to investigate the case with the problems with the Arvato-company
    having problems with infiltration by org. criminals.
    I explained to the Sergant that I had a lot of documents that helped showing this, and that
    I think he should maybe have a look at these documents, in concetion with his investigation.
     
    Yet, I wasn’t contacted back by the Sergant at all, before I got the letter that he couldn’t
    find any evidence to substantiatie my claims.
    So, I think that the Sergant should maybe have had a look at the documents then, like I
    suggested to him in the meeting. Maybe this could have helped him. He says he haven’t
    found any evidence to substantiate my claims. But when he didn’t even have a look at
    the documents, which I explained about to him that I had in the meeting, then it’s seems
    a bit to me that he didn’t really try that hard to find any evidence.
    Because in the meeting I told him that he could just contact me if he wanted to have at
    the documents I had from working in the company, but the Sergant didn’t contact me
    back about this.
     
    I’ve also been in contact with the Norwegian Embassy in London, regarding the problems
    with org. crime in Oslo and in Arvato-company and elsewhere in Liverpool.
     
    The Embassy, told me that if I wanted the British and Norwegian police to cooperate
    on these issues, then I had to tell the Brisish and Norwegian police myself that I
    wanted them to cooperate about this.
     
    So, I aslo see this in my notes, I made sure to tell the Sergant that I wanted the British
    police to cooperate with the Norwegian police about these issues. (I’ve also earlier told
    the Norwegian police the same, that I want them, like the Embassy adviced, to cooperate
    with the British police on this.)
     
    I also gave the Sergant the name of the Norwegian police-officer who knew most about
    the case in Norway. (Who was working in a similar Norwegian Department, that is the
    department that investigates the regular police). This because Sgt. Smithe asked who
    in Norway he could contact about this, and I didn’t really know who else that knew
    enough about this.
     
    Yet, in the answering letter, there is no mention about this, if the British police have
    been in contact with the Norwegian police or not, so I would have to asume that
    they haven’t been in contact then, even if I asked them to do this, on advice from
    the Embassy, in the meeting.
     
    I told the Sergant that I had even contacted the Norwegian Consulate, and that the
    Consulate-representative contacted Sgt. O’Brian, reminding him that I had tryed to
    get in contact with him regarding the case, but still, Sgt. O’Brian didn’t call me back.
     
    And this is neigther addressed in the answering-letter.
     
    I gave Sgt. Smithe some copies of explanations about the further problems with
    criminals in Norway, that they tried to kill me on the farm belonging to the woman
    my uncle lived with there, in the summer of 2005, and thats why I went away from
    Norway again and settled in Liverpool.
     
    And I gave the Sergant the log-number from when I reported about the problems
    with criminals in Oslo and Liverpool to the Walton Lane police-station in the
    Automn of 2005.
     
    (I’ve also been in contact with the Merseyside police regarding these problems
    several times before this, and also after this, in the spring and summer of 2006.
     
    And then also again with the frequent contact about the problems in the Arvato
    company from November 2006).
     
    I told the Sergant that it seemed to me, and that this was supported by the
    documents I had, that all the different departments on Arvato was involved in
    this problem, with being taken over/infiltraded by org. criminals.
     
    But the Sergant still didn’t contact me back to have a look at the documents.
     
    I see from my notes that I told Sgt. Smithe that I had been in contact with
    a Norwegian Police-officer, in the special department that investigates the
    regular police, earlier the same week, about that had been surrounding this
    in Oslo.e problems in Oslo.
     
    Further from my notes, I see that I told the Sergant that it seemed to me that
    the police were worried, when they called me in the night, around midnight,
    in late Novemeber 2006, and asked me to contact higher management
    at Arvato, regarding the problems I had been having with certain persons
    working there. (It seemed to me that she was worried do to who these
    people I had been having problems with were).
     

     
    I’ll try to summarise the problems surrounding the complaint-process and the meeting on 22/6:
    – The police didn’t tell me was calling when they called me on 15/6 instructing me
    to met at Walton Lane police-station on 22/6.
    – The police didn’t tell me the agenda for the meeting on 22/6, before the meeting.
    – The police didn’t address the individual complaints from the complaint from 3/5, neighter
    in the meeting on 22/6, or in their letter from 10/7.
    – The police didn’t investigate the documents I told them I had, which I told them in the
    meetin on 22/6, could help explain what went on at Arvato while I was working there.
    – The police says in their letter from 10/7, that I have been raising issues in terms of
    ‘The Norwegian Mafia’. But I have never heard about or refered to the term ‘the Norwegian
    mafia’, so the police must have been misunderstanding what I said in the meeting on 10/7.
    – In their answering-letter, the police haven’t addressed the issue I brought up in the
    meeting on 10/7, that I had been adviced by the Embassy to tell the British and Norwegian
    police to cooperate on the case. But in the letter from 10/7, it isn’t mentioned at all,
    if there has been any contact at all with the Norwegian police regarding this.
    – In the meeting on 22/6, I mentioned to Sgt. Smite, that I had been having problems
    with the Merseyside Police, on repeted occations, having promised to call me back,
    but then not having called. I explained that this procedure made it difficult to me,
    to report about what I knew about the cases, and to get any meaningful dialog.
    I threfore expressed in the meeting, a request, if I please could get a contact-person,
    in the Merseyside Police, which I could contact, and get a dialog with, and tell about
    the things I knew regarding the different crime-cases that had been going on.
    Yet, in the letter from the police from 10/7, this isn’t brought up at all, and I have
    so far in 2007, not recieved a single call from the Merseyside Police about this, or
    about anything else.

    So these problems from the meeting/complaint process, together with the 18 individual complaints
    from the complaint from 3/5, which I have exlained about above, and which haven’t been dealt
    with at all in the Merseyside Police letter from 10/7, are the reasons for which I am appealing.
    Also, my complaint from 3/5, is like I have explained above, regarding problems with the
    liasons, or contact, with the police.
    Like I’ve also explained earlier, I’m not an expert on police methods, and I’ve been a bit
    confused about why the police seemingly don’t want to cooperate with me.
    I’ve looked at it as certain, that maybe even if the Merseyside police haven’t seemed to want
    to cooperate with me about the problems at Arvato etc., I’ve taken it as certain, that the
    Merseyside police, like any responsilbe Police-unit, would investigate the things that have
    been going on at Arvato, when I’ve been telling them when I’ve met up at the police-station
    in Novemeber last year, on several occations telling them about my concerns about org. criminal
    activity in the company.
    When I’ve in the meetings with Sgt. Camel on 16/1, in the several talks with Constable Holmes,
    and in the meeting with Sgt. O’Brian on 1/3.
    When I’ve in these expressed my concern about what has been going on in the Arvato company, and
    also explained to them that I’m worried about my former collegues that were still working there,
    because it seemed to me that some of them must have been under control by criminals.
    And when I also mention to the Merseyside Police that I have been in contact with the Embassy,
    and later also the Consulate, and I give a larger number, several hundred, documents, that
    helps show that there has been something goving on there.
    And when I’ve also sent e-mails, on my last day working at Arvato, to a number of British and
    Norwegian newspapers and tv-stations, and also to the parent-company, that it’s clear to me
    that there is a problem with organised criminal activity in the company.
    If the fact, that the police are still ignoring my plea to get a contact-person and a dialog
    with the police, to get a chance to tell them everything I know about the problems at Arvato,
    (and also about the other problems from Liverpool and Norway).
    If the fact that they are still ignoring this request, means that they haven’t been investigating
    the problems at Arvato at all, then I off course think that this is serious. And I guess, since
    I haven’t been reading about the problems at Arvato in the newspapers or otherwere, and since
    I see from the letter the Merseyside police sent me on 10/7, that the police doesn’t seem to be
    interested in letting me tell them what I know about (since they haven’t commented on the problems
    I have been having with the contact with the police at all).
    Due to this I have to presume that nothing has been done about the problems at Arvato then.
    Problems which to me seems like they are serious, and it seems to me that some of the people
    that were working there, at the same time I was working there, was under control by criminals.
    (This got clear to me at the end of the time I worked there, thats why I sent the e-mails to
    the newspapers etc., and this is also why I went to the police and told them about this all
    those times from November 2006.).
    I’ve also explained about what it seems to me must have been going on at Arvato, to the Norwegian
    Embassy, and the Norwegian Police, since there were many Norwegians and Scandinavians working
    at the Arvato campaign which I was working on.
    But if it even, after I’ve tryed to tell all of these about the problems, if there still hasn’t
    been investigating what has been going on at Arvato (Which I find highly unlikly, since I think
    any responsible police-force of course would have investigated serious cases like this. But
    I mention this anyway, due to the ignorance from the police regarding my plea to tell the police
    what I know about what has been going on).
    Because then, since it also hasn’t been about this in the news, then I have to presume that the
    problems at Arvato haven’t been investigated by the Merseyiside Police at all, or by anyone
    else, so then I think the only responsible think would be to try get advice on how this problem,
    with the semingly organised crime activity at the Arvato company, should addressed, when the
    police are igonring the problem.
    So if you at the IPCC have any idea on how to go forward then. I guess thats a complaint about
    the Merseyside Police as a police-force, as well as a complaint against individual police-
    officers, like it is in the complaints you are dealing with.
    But I reackoned that I might as well ask you now then, how I should go forward, to get the police
    to investigate the problems with the organised criminal activity at Arvato, which seeems clear
    to me from working there, and which I also have documents that supports the occurance of.
    Sorry if I’m repeating myself a bit at the end here, but I think that these problems should
    be dealt with in a responsilbe way.
    And it doesn’t seem to me that the complaint with the problems with the liasons is being dealt
    with in a responsible way from the Merseyside Police.
    And this makes a bit worried about if the problems with my former collegues from Arvoto which
    it seemed to me must have been under control by criminal, also is being dealt with in an
    irresponsible way.
    Thats why I’m bringing this up now, even if I’m not sure if it’s the right time and place, but
    I hope that maybe you could maybe give some advice on how to go forward with this problem as
    well, with the org. criminal activity at Arvato, and the problems with the people working
    there seeming to be under control by criminals.
    Even if this complaint originaly only was regarding the problems with the contact with the
    police, because I was sure that the police would deal with a case like that responsible,
    no matter what they inform me about what they are doing.
    But I must admit that the way the police have been dealing with my complaint from 3/5, with the
    problems surrounding the meeting on 22/6, and the answering-letter from 10/7.
    I think issues have been dealt with a bit unprofessional by the police, so the unprofessionalism
    from them surrounding these issues, has made me a bit uncertain as to if they are dealing with
    the problems at Arvato in a responsible way at all.
    So thats why I thought I’d bring this up now, while I was dealing with the relating issues
    in the appeal.
    So I hope that this is alright, and that it’s possible for you have a look at the issues I’ve
    brought up in this appeal.
    Yours sincerely,
    Erik Ribsskog
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
      
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
    On 8/15/07, Joanne Fitzgerald wrote:
    Dear Mr Ribsskog,
     
    Thank you for contacting the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC).
     
    The information we require, should you wish to appeal the police’s decision to not formally record your complaint, is set out in the Appeal Form that I have posted to you. I have also now attached the relevant appeal form with this email for your consideration – this electronic version can be printed out, completed and returned by post. You may complete an Appeal Form or provide the same required information in an email.
     
    Please be aware that if you wish to submit an appeal we must receive your appeal within 28 days of the date of me informing you of your right to appeal.
     
    I hope this information has assisted you.
     
    Please contact me if you have any further questions,
     
    Yours sincerely,
     
    Joanne
     
    Joanne Fitzgerald
    Casework Manager
    Independent Police Complaints Commission
    90 High Holborn
    London
    WC1V 6BH
    Tel: 020 7166 3182
    Fax: 020 7166 3642
    Email: joanne.fitzgerald@ipcc.gsi.gov.uk

    From: Erik Ribsskog [mailto:eribsskog@gmail.com]
    Sent: 15 August 2007 00:24
    To: Joanne Fitzgerald
    Subject: Re: Your Complaint Against Merseyside Police – 2007/006341

     
    Hi,
     
    thank you very much for your e-mail!
     
    I will definatly appeal against the decision not to investigate the complaint.
     
    I’m just a bit busy with work and other issues at the moment, but I’m going
    to look up in the letter about how one should appeal formally, one of the next
    days, and then I’ll send a more formal appeal if thats needed.
     
    Or else, please tell me if you think this e-mail can be considered as a formal
    appeal, if not, then I’ll send a new e-mail one of the next days.
     
    Hope that this is alright!
     
    Yours sincerely,
     
    Erik Ribsskog

     
    On 8/14/07, Joanne Fitzgerald wrote:
    Dear Mr Ribsskog,

    Thank you for contacting the Independent Police Complaints Commission
    (IPCC).

    I have contacted Merseyside Professional Standards Department to
    establish the current status of your complaint. I was informed by
    Merseyside Police that they did not deem your complaint to be concerned
    with allegations of misconduct against individual police officers and
    therefore decided not to formally record your complaint under the Police
    Reform Act 2002.

    If you disagree with the decision by Merseyside Police to not formally
    record your complaint, then you have a right to appeal to the IPCC to
    independently review the police’s decision. I have sent you the relevant
    appeal form today in the post (Appealing Against a Complaint Not Being
    Recorded) and this form is also available online at our website
    (www.ipcc.gov.uk), should this assist you further. Please note, should
    you wish to appeal, we must receive your appeal form within 28 days.

    If you have any further questions then please do not hesitate to contact
    me.

    Yours sincerely,

    Joanne

    Joanne Fitzgerald
    Casework Manager
    Independent Police Complaints Commission
    90 High Holborn
    London
    WC1V 6BH
    Tel: 020 7166 3182
    Fax: 020 7166 3642
    Email: joanne.fitzgerald@ipcc.gsi.gov.uk

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  • Untitled Post

    Jeg skriver notat her mens jeg har det i hue.

    På møtet på Walton Lane police-station i forrige uke, så sa jeg i møtet at det var klart for meg at det foregikk organisert kriminell aktivitet i Arvato firmaet, skand. microsoft kampanjen.

    Jeg sa at det virket som om jentene der ble ‘used’ og ‘exploted’.

    Så spurte Sgt. Smyth om jeg det var traficcing jeg mente.

    Jeg sa ja, fordi veldig mange av jentene skulle plutselig til Spania. Og en av jentene, Sofie, hadde også møtt en engelsk kar, som hun sa var ok på byen, men ikke noe ok/fin hjemme., i Spania da.

    Så jeg har tenkt at det kunne ha vært en link mellom England/Lpool/Arvato Skandinaviske jenter og Spania da.

    Det var derfor jeg svarte ja på det.

    Så senere, på slutten av møtet, så skulle Sgt. Smythe skrive en slutterklæring/vitne-erklæring.

    Og da skrev at det skulle være full investigation angående traficcing i Arvato, mener jeg å huske på skjemaet.

    Men da sa han, like før jeg skulle skrive under, at da var forutsetningen, at jeg glemte den klagen, angående ‘unprofessional conduct’ fra konstabler/offiserer ved The Merseyside Police. (Han sa dette med ‘smørblid’ stemme).

    Jeg sa at jeg så på investigation mot Arvato, og investigation om ‘unprofessional conduct’ fra medlemer av The Merseyside Police, som to forskjellige ting, og som to forskjellige saker/undersøkelse.

    (Jeg hadde også tidligere i møtet, sagt at jeg synes at politikonstabler/offiserer, burde oppføre seg ‘appropriate’ og ‘representatively’ uavhengig av situasjonsbestemte forhold osv.)

    Og da jeg sa det, så fikk Sgt. Smyth et litt ‘sinna’ utrykk i øynene, fant fram et nytt skjema, og sa at det skulle være full etterforsking
    mot både Arvato og politiet.

    Og han leste høyt og raskt opp det han hadde skrevet ned, på det nye skjema.

    Og dette var på slutten av møtet, og det virka litt for meg, som om han ble ‘sinna’, fordi jeg ville se på det som to forskjellige saker, og ikke bare en sak mot Arvato.

    Så jeg fikk litt ‘bakoversveis’ på en måte, så jeg ville egentlig bare komme meg ut av kontoret på en måte.

    Sånn synes jeg det virka.

    Så han sa jo før han leste fort og høyt opp, at jeg kunne legge til ting osv.

    Men dette gikk veldig raskt, og han sersjanten ble plutselig ganske brå og litt hissig, virka han som.

    For nå skrev han bare investigation om ‘organised crime’ mot Arvato, jeg mener å huske, at han hadde skrevet ‘trafficing’,
    på det første skjema.

    Men da hadde jeg litt bakoversveis, og dette gikk så raskt, og var ganske hissig, eller hva man skal si.

    Og han sa det var 19 punkter mot politiet, men jeg måtte endre det til 20 i hvertfall to ganger i løpet av møtet.

    (Fordi på møtet med Sgt. Camel 16/1, var det vel, så var det også en annen konstabel/offiser der, som ikke introduserte seg,
    og mens Camel var ute for å ringe eller prate med kollegaer, eller hva det var han skulle.

    Da avtalte jeg med han andre kollegaen/offiseren, at jeg skulle dra opp dit igjen dagen etter, med alle dokumentene jeg
    hadde fra Arvato.

    Men når Camel kom tilbake, så bare ‘overridet’ han det, og han bare blåse av han kollegaen sin, og sa ‘no’.

    Men han spurte ikke meg.

    Jeg mener at den avtalen mellom meg og kollegaen hans, var en avtale mellom meg og politiet, og ikke kunne brytes
    av Camel, uten at han avtalte dette med meg.

    Han bare sa ‘no’ til kollegaen sin, og ble ikke enig med meg om dette.

    Jeg mener det var feil/’cowboy’-aktig oppførsel, og som jeg også synes preget møte, og jeg mener at Camel ikke hadde
    rett til å diktere dette, når jeg og kollegaen hans hadde blitt enig om noe annet).

    Så det var det 20. punktet.

    Når Smyth leste opp vitne-erklæringen, raskt, så la jeg vel merke til at det ikke var noe om de jentene på Arvato, som ble
    nevnt der.

    Så jeg sa han skulle skrive om det.

    Men dette gikk så raskt, og jeg hadde også bedt han bytte ut 19 med 20, og han virka litt sinna/hissig, så jeg fikk meg ikke
    til å diktere han til å bytte ut organised crime med trafficing.

    Men ja heller til på slutten at jeg var bekymret for jentene.

    For han virka litt som om han var sint og halveis truende for meg.

    At han var en affektert sinnstemning.

    Fordi ellers, så hadde jeg nok ikke godtatt det, uten videre, at han byttet ut organised crime med trafficing.

    Så dette er noe jeg har tenkt på de siste dagene.

    At kanskje han ble sint og ikke ville egentlig hjelpe meg alikevel, siden jeg ikke ville frafalle undersøkelsen
    mot politioffiserene/konstablene.

    Jeg mener det ville vært en hestehandel.

    Jeg mener at politiet burde gjørde jobben sin på en ordentlig måte.

    Og jeg er ikke sånn at jeg går med på at de kan gjøre jobben sin på en ‘cowboy’-aktig måte, mot at de gjør
    jobben sin, og etterforsker Arvato.

    Nei, det synes jeg ikke er en ordentlig/ryddig måte å gjøre ting på.

    Men jeg har jo hatt det møte litt i bakhodet de siste dagene, og nå når jeg har tenkt litt mer på det, så kan
    det virke sånn for meg.

    At nå vil ikke politiet hjelpe meg, siden jeg ikke ble med på noen hestehandel.

    Så derfor tenkte jeg at jeg skulle skrive opp dette, siden dette kanskje kan bli et aktuelt tema senere,
    så da tenkte jeg at jeg kunne skrive det et sted hvor det ble registrert da.

    Og det blir det jo på blogg.

    Jeg har jo allerede skrevet en e-post til ipcc, men jeg har ikke fått noe svar på den.

    Så jeg er litt redd at det vil virke dumt, om jeg sender dem enda en e-post før jeg har fått svar.

    Jeg burde vel kanskje skrevet opp alt i den første e-posten.

    Men dette her trengte jeg litt tid på å tenke på i baholdet, før jeg viste hvordan jeg skulle presantere det
    osv.

    Det ble litt mye på det møtet, og på et annet språk osv, og det var trakassering og tull med e-post adresse
    osv., så det tok litt av fokuset og konsentrasjonen bort fra det jeg skriver om nå.

    Men nå når jeg tenkte på dette igjen, tidligere i dag, så tenkte jeg at jeg også burde prøve å gjøre noe i
    forbindelse med det her.

    Så tenkte jeg nå at hvis jeg skrev det på bloggen, så viste jeg hvor jeg hadde det, og det ble også registrert
    med dato osv.

    Og dette er vel noe som jeg ikke burde legge vekk, og ikke glemme å gjøre noe med.

    Så da synes det kanskje var like greit å skrive det her, sånn at det blir glemt bort blant alt det andre, med
    trakasseringen og e-posten osv.

  • Untitled Post

    From: eribsskog@gmail.com Erik Ribsskog
    To: Joanne.Fitzgerald@ipcc.gsi.gov.uk Joanne Fitzgerald
    Date: Sat, 10 Nov 2007 07:38:35 +0000
    Subject: Re: Your Complaint Against Merseyside Police – 2007/006341

    Hi,

    I’m writing to you, to inform you, (like I’ve already informed the Norwegian
    Embassy), that I haven’t
    got that much confidence left regarding how the Merseyside Police, are
    dealing with the complaint/appeal.

    I was at Walton Lane Police Station, regarding a meeting with Sgt. Smythe,
    the day before yesterday.

    I was harassed in the reception there.

    Yesterday, I sent an e-mail to Sgt. Smythe and his assistant Rachel, about
    some enclosures, that
    we had agreed on the meeting Thursday, that I would e-mail them.

    I was also asking them, how I should go forward with reporting the
    harassment, but when they answered
    to my e-mail, they didn’t tell me how I should go forward regarding this.

    In the meeting on Thursday, Rachel, Sgt. Smyth’s assistant, told me that the
    e-mail address to the
    Liverpool North Standards Unit, was civil.litigation.e@merseyside.police.uk.
    (She wrote it on a note).

    While I was sending the files, as agreed yesterday, I had a look at the
    lastest letter I had recieved, from
    the Liverpool North Standards Unit, and there it says that their e-mail
    address is: civil.litigation.e.@merseyside.police.uk.

    (So on their letters, the email address, has got an extra ‘.’).

    When I wrote the last e-mail to Sgt. Smyth/Rachel yesterday, after finishing
    e-mailing all the files, I
    asked them to please confirm that they had recieved the documents, due to
    this problem with the
    e-mail address.

    Then Rachel, Mr. Smyth’s assistant, informed me that it was the e-mail
    address that she wrote on
    the note, that was the right address, and not the e-mail address on their
    letters.

    I think that this means that eighter Mr. Smyths assistant isn’t telling the
    thruth, or that the Liverpool
    North Standards Unit are so unproffesional, that they are writing letters,
    to members of the public,
    with the wrong e-mail addresses on the letters.

    And also, since I think I was harrassed, at the Police Station on Thursday,
    and also since the
    Liverpool North Standards Unit, weren’t answering me about my questions
    surrounding the harassment
    incident, even if I the e-mail containing these questions, also was
    forwarded with the e-mail they
    sent me an answer to yesterday.

    (So they had two oppertunities, to get to read my quesions regarding how to
    go forward with reporting
    the harassment incident, and still they didn’t answer me on this).

    And I also think that regarding the problem with the e-mail address, that
    eighter the PC must have
    been lying, or the Police Force and the Standards Unit, are run so
    unproffesional (printing the wrong
    e-mail address on their letters, that there has to be something wrong with
    the Police-force.

    I don’t think that they can have two different e-mail addresses, and claim
    both to be the right e-mail
    address, that doesn’t really make any sense.

    So I havent got any confidence left in the Merseyside Police’s ability to
    deal with this case/comlaint and
    appeal, so I think I’m going to have to withdraw from the complaint-process,
    if not a thustworhty autorothy
    from outside of the Merseyside Police, are drawn directly into this.

    (I’m enclosing a copy of the mentioned note, and letter, and I’m also going
    to forward you three e-mails
    containing the e-mail correspondence I was refering to from yesterday).

    I hope that this is alright!

    Yours sincerely,

    Erik Ribsskog

    On 8/26/07, Erik Ribsskog wrote:

    > Hi,
    >
    > here is the appeal against the decision not to formally record my
    > complaint:
    >
    > Please give the name of the police force your complaint was about:
    >
    > Merseyside Police
    >
    > If you recieved a letter from the police telling you that they will not be
    > recording your complaint,
    > please give the date of that letter:
    >
    > 10/7/07
    >
    > Mr. Erik Ribsskog
    > Flat 3
    > 5 Leather Lane
    > L2 2AE
    > Liverpool
    >
    > 01512363298/07758349954
    >
    > eribsskog@gmail.com
    >
    > Date you made your complaint:
    >
    > 3/5/07
    >
    > Who did you make your complaint to:
    > To the IPCC.
    >
    > How did you make your complaint:
    > By e-mail.
    >
    > Please provide brief details about the complaint that you made:
    >
    > I had been reporting about some problems that seems clear to me to involve
    > organised
    > crime at the place which I worked to the police on several occations from
    > November
    > last year.
    >
    > I had been having some problems with the police being supposed to call me
    > back regarding
    > this, but they didn’t call back, even if contacted the police-station to
    > inform them about this.
    >
    > So, when I was at the CAB regarding advice on when one needed a criminal
    > solicitors.
    > (Since the solicitor that I had met in a duty solicitors meeting at the
    > CAB had informed me
    > that Morecrofts couldn’t help me if I needed a criminal solicitor. But it
    > wasn’t clear to me
    > when one would need a criminal solicitor, so I contacted the CAB again,
    > and was told that
    > this was if one were being accused of doing something wrong.
    >
    > The Morecrofts solicitor had said that the case was both an
    > employment-case, and a
    > criminal-case, so I asked the advisor at the CAB, on how I should go
    > forward with the
    > criminal part of the case.
    >
    > And I was ansered that I should bring this up in liasons with the police.
    >
    > I had been trying to do this from before, but I had been having some
    > problems involving the
    > police not calling me back when they said they would.
    >
    > So I asked the advisor what I should do if I had problems with the liasons
    > with the police.
    >
    > And the advisor said that I should bring it up with the CPS or the
    > Law-society.
    >
    > I asked about this as a precaution, so that I knew what to do if the
    > police still didn’t contact
    > me after the new meeting there.
    >
    > So, some weeks later, when they still hadn’t contacted me, then I
    > contacted the CPS about
    > the problems with the liasons with the police.
    >
    > The CPS answered that they didn’t have the powers to investiagte a case,
    > and told me to
    > contact the IPCC.
    >
    > Which I did on 3/5, I sent the IPCC a complaint regarding the problems
    > I’ve been having with the
    > liasons with the police. (Or ‘the contact with the police’, like I wrote
    > in the e-mail I sent you on 3/5).
    >
    > In the complaint, I had listed up 18 individual complaints about thing I
    > though were dealt with wrongly
    > by the police in relation to my contact with them.
    >
    > I’ll try to specify how I thought the police conducted wrongly:
    >
    > 1. The police-constable wouldn’t let me report a crime.
    >
    > 2. The police adviced me to go back to work, even if I had told them that
    > the company was
    > infiltradet/taken over by a criminal organisation. I think that this was
    > irresponsible by the police.
    >
    > 3. On 16/1/07 Sergant Camel told me to take the case to the CAB, even if
    > he knew I was
    > unemployed, and couldn’t afford to pay a solicitor £140/hour to deal with
    > the case.
    >
    > I though that this was irresponsible by the Sergant. (The police should
    > have investigated the
    > case themselves).
    >
    > (Also, I remember from the meeting on 16/1, that Sgt. Camel wanted me to
    > take the case to
    > the CAB, and then to a solicitor and the Crowns Court.
    >
    > I haven’t been living in Britain that long, so I wasn’t sure what the CAB
    > was. But I remember
    > I asked the Sergant if the CAB were government. And the sergant said
    > ‘yes’.
    >
    > Later (maybe 2 or 3 weeks ago), I have been browsing the CAB
    > website looking for some
    > information there, and I’ve seen on the CAB website, that CAB is actually
    > a charity.
    >
    > So, it’s now clear to me that Sgt. Camel actually lied to me about this in
    > the meeting
    > at the policestation on 16/1.
    >
    > If he had told me that the CAB was a charity, then I would
    > have objected much stronger
    > on brining the case to them, I would have insisting stronger on the
    > right department of
    > the police to deal with it.
    >
    > But that the Sergant told me that the CAB were government, and that the
    > solicitor I would
    > get to speak with there, would send the case back to the police if they
    > thought it was
    > a matter for the police, confused me, and since I hadn’t been living that
    > long in Britain,
    > and I’m not so used to dealing with the police, and I wasn’t sure if I as
    > a Norwegian,
    > could demand what the police should do, so thats why I after contacting
    > the police
    > a number of more times trying to get them to deal with the case, (but they
    > still
    > insited on me going to the CAB with it), thats why I ended up at the CAB
    > with it,
    > beliving the CAB was a government organisation.
    >
    > 4. The police didn’t want to investigate the case, even if I told them I
    > had documents
    > that would show that it was a crime-case.
    >
    > (And I also told the police on 16/1, that I was worried about my collegues
    > that were
    > still working in the complany, that they were under control by the
    > criminals).
    >
    > 5. The police didn’t want to look at the evidence/documents on my laptop
    > on 22/1,
    > saying it was a breach of the data protection act. Even if I think it must
    > be obvious that
    > since I myself let them look at the documents, then this couldn’t have
    > been a data
    > protection issue.
    >
    > 6. That constable Keith Holmes didn’t call me back, even if
    > constable Victoria Steele
    > told me on 22/1 that she would ask Holmes to call me back.
    >
    > This happened a lot of times, that the police said they would call me
    > back, but they
    > didn’t. It’s difficult for me to say what happened in this situation. If
    > Holmes got the
    > message or not. There could be some problems with the routines at the
    > police-station,
    > or it could have been a mistake from eighter Steele or Holmes.
    >
    > 7. The constable who was in the ‘reception’ on 24/1 and 25/1 didn’t wear
    > collar-number-
    > tags. I think police should be expected to wear their tag-numbers, because
    > I know
    > there are rules about things like this, even eg. shop-assistants are
    > instructed to
    > wear their name-tags, so I think the police, having an important funciton
    > in society,
    > also should wear some kind of indification, so that it’s possible for
    > members of the
    > public to identify the serviceman/woman they have been talking with. (In
    > case
    > something wrong is being said or done by the constable/officer).
    >
    > 8. The constable that didn’t wear number-tags on 24/1 and 25/1, promised
    > me that
    > she would get Victoria Steele to call me back regarding the case.
    >
    > But Steele didn’t call. This is a similar problem I think to complaint 6,
    > and this happened
    > a lot of times, I was promised maybe 10 times by different
    > officers/constables that the
    > police would call me back, but I wasn’t called back by the police a single
    > time in 2007.
    >
    > I was only called back once in November 2006.
    >
    > (And I was promised to be called back about ten times or more in 2007, and
    > they didn’t
    > call a single time).
    >
    > 9. I went to the police in January, and gave them copies of the documents
    > in which I
    > thought that it would be possible to find evidence about the problem with
    > a criminal
    > organisation of some kind having infiltrated/taking over the company I had
    > worked in.
    >
    > I gave the documents (many hundred sheets) to Steele, who gave it to
    > Holmes.
    >
    > When I spoke with Holmes two or three weeks later, he said he had only
    > read a bit
    > on the top of the pile, a bit in the middle, and a bit on the bottom of
    > the pile.
    >
    > And he still said it was an employment-case, and that I should go to the
    > CAB.
    >
    > By then I had ‘argued’ so much with the police about this, that I didn’t
    > know if it
    > would be right for me as a Norwegian to continue arguing with the British
    > police about
    > this.
    >
    > But, I remebered Sgt. Camel had said earlier that the CAB would send it
    > back to the
    > police if they thought it was right.
    >
    > And thought that maybe it was because I was from another country that they
    > wouldn’t
    > listen to me at the police-station, and maybe they weren’t used to dealing
    > that much
    > with documents for all that I knew.
    >
    > So I thought that it would maybe be just as smart to have a lawyer at the
    > CAB have a
    > look at it, and send it back, maybe this would convince the police to have
    > a look at, and
    > investigate the case.
    >
    > (It could be of couse, that the police investigated it, but didn’t tell me
    > about this. I had
    > been at the police-station several times in November and later explaining
    > about the case.
    >
    > I’m not an expert in police-methods, but I guessed that it could be that
    > the police investigated
    > without telling me, for some reason, I wasn’t sure, but I reackoned that
    > this could be the case,
    > since I would have thought that the British Police would deal with a
    > matter like this in a
    > responsible way.)
    >
    > But in the complaint about the liasons with the police, I could only
    > relate to what I knew for
    > sure, and I knew for sure that Constable Holmes didn’t look properly
    > through the documents
    > I delivered to the police-station for him to give to an investigator.
    >
    > So I thought that it was irresponsible by constable Holmes to not read
    > throught the documents
    > proberly, and to not give them to an investigator.
    >
    > 10. The police sent me a letter on 16/2, where they called me ‘Miss Erik
    > Ribsskog’. I think, like
    > the British representative on the Norwegian Consulate in the India
    > Building said, that it should
    > be obvious to Brits that Erik and Eric is the same name, and it therefore
    > must be someone
    > making jokes and not taking their job serious.
    >
    > Like I had explained in meetings at the police-station, it seemed to me
    > that some of my collegues
    > in the complany, probably must have been under control by criminals. So I
    > thought this was an important
    > case, and then to start making jokes like this in an important case. I
    > think thats irresponsible and
    > it seems like a joke that small kids could have made. So this makes me
    > worried that things could be
    > out of control at the police-station.
    >
    > 11. In the meeting on 1/2, Sergant O’Brian told me to move from the chair
    > I sat down with at the
    > table, (even if I sat in the same chair in the meeting there with Sgt.
    > Camel and the constable on
    > 16/1).
    >
    > So I had to move to another chair, at the other side of the table, I think
    > that Sgt. O’Brian was acting
    > patronising towards me when he ‘ordered’ me to sit in the other chair.
    >
    > 12. In the meeting at the St. Ann’s police-station on 1/3, the ‘ginger’
    > police-constable, wouldn’t let
    > me present the issues about which I had contacted the police-station to
    > the Sergant O’Brian, but
    > insisted on presenting the things I wanted to bring up in the meeting to
    > the Sergant himself.
    >
    > So this made me lose a bit control on how the issues were presented, and
    > it seemed to me that
    > I was being patronised by the police-constable.
    >
    > And this made it diffucult for me to present the things I wanted to bring
    > up, in the way I intended
    > to present it, and also it made me more of a spectator than a participant
    > in the meeting.
    >
    > I guess it could be that it was O’Brian who should have told the constable
    > to let me explain myself,
    > because I think they should have let me explain my concerns myself.
    >
    > 13. So in the meeting on 1/3, I was a bit confused if I was supposed to
    > exlain about my concerns
    > to Sgt. O’Brian myself, or if this was the job of the constable.
    >
    > So this made me a bit confused about how they meant the meeting to be
    > conducted, and what they
    > wanted my role in the meeting to be.
    >
    > 14. In the meeting on 1/3, Sgt. O’Brian said that he thought the problem
    > with the case not having any
    > progress with being dealt with by the police, was due to the case having
    > being dealt with by a large
    > number of police servicemen.
    >
    > So, he suggested, that to find out exactly what had been going on, they
    > would ask constable Steele
    > to call me, and tell me what she had been doing with the documents after I
    > gave them to her.
    >
    > I think this was irresponsible by the Sergant. He must have understood
    > that to find out what the police
    > had been doing, would be a job for the police.
    >
    > So I think that he should have taken the job of finding out what the
    > police had been doing, that he should
    > have taken the responsibility of finding this out himself.
    >
    > And of course, investigate the case himself, instead of not doing
    > anything, other that saying I had to find
    > out what the police had been doing so far.
    >
    > So I thought this was very irresponsible by Sgt. O’Brian.
    >
    > 15. This is connected with point 14. That I think Sgt. O’Brian should have
    > investigated himself:
    >
    > 1. What the police had done regarding the case so far. (And not telling me
    > to find out about this.)
    >
    > 2. Investigate the case further.
    >
    > Sgt. O’Brian didn’t do eighter of these actions, and I think that this was
    > very irresponsible.
    >
    > 16. In the meeting on 1/3, Sgt. O’Brian was very un-calm, and this
    > together with the patronising
    > I was subjected to (which is explained in point 11 and 12), made it
    > difficult for me to bring up
    > the issues I wanted to bring up in the way I had intended.
    >
    > So I think that (especially since I haven’t been living in Britain that
    > long, and had to ‘compete’
    > with to British police-servicemen who were patronising me in the meeting),
    > because of this,
    > I think that the Sergant should have tryed to remain calm in the meeting,
    > since I think when
    > one have a job as a public serviceman, then it’s important that one are
    > capable of comunicating
    > with the public.
    >
    > And then to be so un-calm in the meeting, can make it difficult for the
    > meeting and the comunication
    > to be conducted in a meaningful way, since the things the Sergant said had
    > marks of not being
    > very thorowly considered. (Like he told me that I had to make sure that my
    > former employer and
    > the job-agency got in touch about the letter I had brought there, even if
    > it was obvious from that
    > letter that they already were in touch, and the Sergant was reading the
    > letter explaining about
    > this).
    >
    > So I think the Sergant must have been so un-calm that he didn’t get the
    > meaning of the letter.
    > And I didn’t want to aggrivate or make the Sergant even more un-calm, so I
    > just had to pretend
    > to agree with him.
    >
    > I though that I would rather call the Sergant later, and explain about
    > this later, when he was in
    > a calmer state.
    >
    > An I think that when one as a member of the public, contacts the police,
    > about important things
    > like this, then one should expect to be treated in professional way by the
    > police.
    >
    > So when the police are patronising you, and like I mention in this
    > individual complaint, the police
    > Sergant in charge of the meeting, isn’t capable to keep control of himself
    > and remain calm, in
    > a way that the meeting could be conducted in a professional and meaningful
    > way.
    >
    > I think that if the Sergant in charge of the meeting isn’t capable of
    > doing this, then this is a reason
    > to complain. (Because I don’t think members of the public should be
    > treated in an unprofessional
    > and unpolite way when they are contacting the police).
    >
    > 17. Sgt. O’Brian said in the meeting on 1/3, that they would get constable
    > Steele to call me back
    > about what the police had been doing with the case so far.
    >
    > Victoria Steele didn’t call, and I called back to the police-station
    > several times, and was told that
    > she was on holiday.
    >
    > I also called back several times after she should have been back, but she
    > was never present.
    >
    > The people I talked with at the police-station, told me several times that
    > they would get Steele
    > to call, yet she never called.
    >
    > This problem happened very often. (That I was promised someone from the
    > police would call
    > me back, but that they didn’t call at all in 2007).
    >
    > 18. The same in this individual complaint.
    >
    > When I tryed calling Steele, but didn’t suceed in getting in contact with
    > her at all.
    >
    > Then I tried to call Sgt. O’Brian on several phone-numbers I was given by
    > the central, and
    > by St. Ann’s police-station.
    >
    > I didn’t manage to get hold of Sgt. O’Brian eighter, and after trying to
    > get in contact with
    > Constable Steele and Sergant O’Brian for weeks, without getting hold of
    > them, and without
    > any of them returning my calls.
    >
    > Then I went to the Norwegian Consulat in the India Building, asking The
    > Consulate if they
    > had any advice for me, on how to get in contact with Constable Steele or
    > Sgt. Obrian.
    >
    > The Consulate-representative, Liz Hurley, went and called Sgt. O’Brian,
    > while I was at
    > the Consulate on 19/3.
    >
    > Liz Hurley said, that she had been talking with O’Brian, and that O’Brian
    > had told her that
    > ‘he remembered the case’.
    >
    > Yet, Sgt. O’Brian still didn’t call me back, even after recieving this
    > reminder by the Norwegian
    > Consulate representative.
    >
    > Sgt. O’Brian still hadn’t called me back when I sent you the complaint on
    > 3/5, and he still
    > haven’t called me back when I’m writing this appeal now on 26/8.
    >
    > I think this is very unprofessional of the Sergant. On the meeting on 1/3,
    > I showed the
    > constable and Sergant O’Brian the explanation I had written were I explain
    > about
    > my concern about what was going on in the company, and I remember the
    > Sergant
    > was reading the explanation, he got it from the constable.
    >
    > And I had written that it was clear to me that some of my collages in the
    > company was
    > under control by criminals.
    >
    > (I had written it in capital letters, because I was a bit tired of the
    > police not taking any
    > actions after I had gone to the police-station reporting about this
    > several times in
    > November, then in the meeting with Sgt. Cambel in January, and then in the
    > talks
    > with Constable Holmes also in January.
    >
    > I wasn’t sure if the police was taking this as serious as they should, so
    > I tryed to
    > write it in a document, why I think they should act. I even wrote some of
    > it in capital
    > letters, so to show that I meant this seriously, and to maybe get them to
    > wake up).
    >
    > And it was this document that I remember O’Brian read, and still they
    > didn’t even return
    > my calls, even after reading that document, and having seen how important
    > I thought
    > the case was.
    >
    > And in the meeting on 1/3, I also showed the Constable and the Sergant the
    > letter from
    > the Solicitor from 27/2, where the Solicitor writes that:
    >
    > ‘As I explained, Morecrofts do not deal with criminal law and would not be
    > able to advise you
    > on this aspect although some further perusal of your papers may reveal
    > some information that
    > will assist the police.’
    >
    > Even if I showed the Sergant this letter from the Solicitor, still the
    > Sergant didn’t want to investigate/
    > look at the papers/documents I had. And even if he had read this letter
    > and the the letter where
    > I explain that I’m worried about some of my collueges being under control
    > by criminals in the
    > company I used to work, and also even if he got a call about this from the
    > Norwegian Consulate,
    > still he didn’t even return my calls.
    >
    > I think this was very irresponsible and unprofessional by the Sergant. And
    > it was this behaviour from
    > the Sergant that I thought was the ‘final drop’, so to speak, and lead me
    > to complain about the
    > police to the CPS.
    >
    > And then, after recieving my complaint, the CPS adviced me to contact you,
    > so thats why
    > I sent you the e-mail with the complaint on 3/5.
    >
    >
    > Please tell us why you would like to appeal about the way your complaint
    > was handled:
    >
    > The police force didn’t record my complaint.
    >
    > Please explain why you want to appeal:
    >
    > Well, like I exlained above, I think that the police force should deal
    > with members of the
    > public in a professional and aproriate way.
    >
    > All of the 18 individual complaint I have mentioned, are situations, where
    > I think the police
    > have acted in a way which I think is below the standard you could expect
    > from a responsible
    > police force.
    >
    > And when I complain about the police not letting me report a crime (like
    > in complaint 1), and
    > the police acting irresponsible with sending me back to work even if the
    > complany was
    > controled by criminals (complaint 2), lying to me about the CAB being a
    > government
    > organisation (even if I discovered the lying later, complaint 3), the
    > police refusing to
    > investgate a serious criminal case, involiving people being held under
    > control, seemingly
    > like slaves, by criminals (complaint 4), the police lying to me again,
    > saying that
    > it would be a breach on the data protection act if they looked at some
    > documents
    > on my laptop. (complaint 5), that the police acted irresponsible, on
    > numerous occations,
    > when I was promised the police would call me back, but they didn’t. I
    > would think that
    > this happened to many times to it being coincidental, I would think that
    > some type of
    > misconduct is the reason for this way of treatment by the police (numerous
    > complaints, eg.
    > complaint 6, 8, 17 and 18).
    >
    > That the police constable didn’t give the documents I gave him regarding a
    > serious crime-
    > case to an investigator (complaint 9), that the police insulted me,
    > calling me ‘Miss Erik
    > Ribsskog’, in their letter from 16/2, when it should be obvious, as I have
    > got confirmed by
    > a British representative working for the Norwegian Consulate, that it
    > should be obvious
    > for Brits that Erik and Eric is the same name, and due to this, the police
    > were inpolite
    > towards me, since they called me ‘Miss’, even if they should know that my
    > name isn’t
    > a girls name.
    >
    > That Sgt. O’Brian was, I would go as far as to say he was harassing me,
    > and were
    > patronising towards me in the meeting on the police-station on 1/3,
    > described in
    > complaint 11-18.
    >
    > That Sgt. O’Brian was acting irresponsible in not investigating a serious
    > crime-case,
    > even if the Solicitor had written in the letter that she thought this
    > could be a matter
    > for the police, and even if he was called by the Norwegian Consulate, and
    > still didn’t
    > return my calls.
    >
    > And also that he left it to me, a member of the public, to find out how
    > the police had
    > been dealing with the case, instead of dealing with it himself.
    >
    > And also that he was ‘in a state’ in the meeting, not giving me a chance
    > to explain
    > about the issues in the way I had intended, due to having to focus on not
    > trying
    > to aggrivate the Sergant any more, that is to try to get him calm down,
    > taking
    > the focus away from presenting the actual issues I had gone there to
    > present.
    >
    > I think the harassment, patronisment, unprofesionalism from the Sergant in
    > the
    > meeting on 1/3 certainly qualifyes to problems with the liasons with the
    > police, like
    > I initialy complained about, but also to beind misconduct like I see now
    > that it has
    > to be, for the police to deal with the complaint.
    >
    > Also the other issues I’ve mentioned under this section ‘Why you want to
    > appeal’,
    > I think they also must be misconduct, like when the Constable didn’t want
    > to let
    > me report a crime in complaint 1, and the refusal to investigate a serious
    > crime-case
    > in complaint 2, the later discovered lying in complain 3 etc. (see section
    > above).
    >
    > So when I read in your e-mail from 14/8, that ‘I was informed by
    > Merseyside Police that they did not deem your complaint to be concerned
    > with allegations of misconduct against individual police officers and
    > therefore decided not to formally record your complaint under the Police
    > Reform Act 2002.’, then I can’t agree with the Merseyside Police that my
    > complaint isn’t being deemed as being concerd with allegations of
    > misconduct against individual police officers.
    >
    > I can’t see that the lying, the harrasment, the insults, the not alowing a
    > member
    > of the public to report a crime case, the refusal to investigate a serious
    > crime-case,
    > and the other mentioned issues (see above).
    >
    > I cant see that these things shouldn’t be considered as misconduct.
    >
    > Thats my view, I’m not sure how police are expected to conduct themselves
    > in this
    > country, but if I use my head and think by myself how I would have thought
    > that
    > the police were meant to conduct themselves, and then think about the way
    > the
    > police-officers have conducted themselves, which I have described in this
    > complaint,
    > then I’d say that the police-officers have misconducted.
    >
    > Also, while I’m dealing with this, I thought I’d mention some points from
    > the complaint-
    > procedure:
    >
    > The police called me a week before the meeting at Walton Lane police
    > station on 22/6.
    >
    > The police-woman that called on 15/6, didn’t tell me her name, even if I
    > asked who I should
    > say that I had spoken with.
    >
    > She just instructed me to report at Walton Lane police-station on 22/6 at
    > a certain time,
    > and ask to speak with Sgt. Smithe.
    >
    > I thought that they would probably ask me who had called me and told me to
    > meet there,
    > so I asked her who I should tell them that I had been speaking with.
    >
    > But she didn’t say her name, she just said that I should say that I had
    > been called by
    > the police.
    >
    > And she didn’t tell me at all what the meeting was about.
    >
    > I used to live in Walton about a year ago, and I’d also been in contact
    > with the police in
    > Walton (and also the St. Ann’s police-station), about some problems I had
    > been having
    > org. criminals in Oslo and Liverpool.
    >
    > And also when I lived in Walton, I rented a room in a shared house, and
    > there were also
    > problems going on in the house which I have reported to the Walton Lane
    > police.
    >
    > And also when I was living in the shared house, due to reasons unknown to
    > me, and I
    > hadn’t been living in Britain long enough then to understand about all the
    > things
    > surounding Council-tax.
    >
    > But for some reason, I don’t think any of the tenants revieved council-tax
    > bills (or tv-licensing
    > bills), when they were living in the shared house in Mandeville St. in
    > Walton.
    >
    > So I wasn’t completly sure about why it was that the police had called me
    > and instructed
    > me to meet at the Walton Lane police-station.
    >
    > I thought, of course, that it could be to do with the complaint. But I
    > wasn’t completly sure,
    > I thought it also could be with the cases I had reported about earlier
    > regarding problems with
    > org. criminials in Oslo and Liverpool.
    >
    > I also thought there could be a chance it was regarding the problem with
    > the missing council
    > tax and tv-licensing bills from the Mandeville shared house. (Problems
    > which I had intended
    > to bring up togheter with a lot of other problems, once I’d got set up a
    > dialog with the police,
    > once I’d got a contact-person and a dialog at the police, and could start
    > to focus on trying
    > to explain all details with the earlier reported problems in Norway and
    > Liverpool).
    >
    > And I wanted the police to deal with the things I had brought up
    > seriously. And I was a bit
    > afraid to ‘make a fool of myself’, if I called the Walton Lane
    > police-station, and asked to
    > speak with Sgt. Smithe, to ask what the meeting was about.
    >
    > Because then I reackoned that I had to explain who had called me about the
    > meeting, and
    > I couldn’t really be sure that the Sergant was working on Walton Lane
    > police-station
    > permanently. He could be in a specialised police-department for all that I
    > know, who dealt
    > with police complaint cases, and who was stationed somewhere else, maybe
    > even out of
    > town, for all that I knew. And only was supposed to be at the Walton Lane
    > police-station
    > for the meeting regarding the complaint-case.
    >
    > So, since I didn’t want to make a bad impression, (makine a fool of
    > myself), since I’m a
    > bit clumsy sometimes with my manners etc, since I haven’t been living in
    > Britain that
    > long, due to this, I found it best to just show for the meeting, and not
    > call to ask any
    > questions regarding the agenda.
    >
    > I also guessed that if it was meant for me to contact them back regarding
    > things surrounding
    > the meeting, then I would have got a contact-name there, like the
    > police-woman calling
    > would have told me her name, and told me that if I had any questions, then
    > I could contact
    > this and this person.
    >
    > But since no such contact-name was given to me, then I guessed that I
    > wasn’t meant to
    > know what the meeting was about, before the meeting.
    >
    > So I didn’t know exactly how to prepare for the meeting.
    >
    > And when the meeting started, I had to ask the Sergant if the meeting was
    > about the complaint,
    > to be sure.
    >
    > In the meeting, we didn’t discuss the issues regarding problems with the
    > liasons with the
    > police at all.
    >
    > Somehow, we ended up discussing the cases that I had complained about to
    > the Walton
    > Lane police-station before. (The problems with org. criminals in Oslo and
    > Liverpool).
    >
    > I wrote some notes down when I got home from the meeting, here are some of
    > the points.
    >
    > – Core of case: Followed by mafia in Norway, and this has continued in
    > England (Ppl. from
    > work etc).
    >
    > (This is about some problems I had in Norway, and which I have reported
    > about to the police
    > in Norway and England.
    >
    > It was on my workplace in Oslo. I was working as an
    > assistant shop-manager, while I was studying.
    > And then I got some problems with the my face being more or less distroyed
    > (its a long story), and
    > I still went to work a few days (I didn’t think it was so serious, so I
    > thought the problems with the
    > face-skin would pass), and then I overheard a couple of conversations
    > about me behind my back so to
    > speak, eg. one conversation I overheard I heard it being said (they were
    > talking about my face which
    > was more or less distroyed), and I head them say: ‘I’ve heard that he’s
    > also followed by the mafia’.
    >
    > And also I heard other customers say, about me, ‘he isn’t afraid (eg. he
    > goes to work as normal
    > I think they must have meant) even if he’s being followed by the mafia’.
    >
    > This was just some of what happened, I’ve tryed to explain about these
    > things to the police in
    > Norway and Britain, but I haven’t been able to find someone who want’s to
    > deal with and investigate
    > this, and let me explain all I know about this.
    >
    > But I mentioned it to the Sergant in the meeting on 22/6.
    >
    > But he writes in the answer-letter that ‘I have since had the oppertunity
    > to examine the issues you
    > raised in terms of organised criminality and the Norwegian Mafia.’.
    >
    > Well, I haven’t actually menioned anything about a ‘Norwegian Mafia’. I
    > have never heard of, or
    > menioned a ‘Norwegian mafia’.
    >
    > I always thought that the people I overheard at my old workplace in Oslo,
    > was refering to the
    > Albanian mafia, since this was the only mafia I had heard that were being
    > present in Oslo.
    >
    > So, when the Sergant is writing about ‘the Norwegian Mafia’ in his letter,
    > then I get a bit
    > concerned that maybe there have been some misunderstanings in the
    > comunications,
    > since I’ve never used the term ‘Norwegian mafia’, and I’ve never heard of
    > or refered to
    > any Norwegian Mafia, so I think we must have been speaking past eachother
    > a bit
    > in the meeting.
    >
    > We were also taling a bit of the Arvato company which I had reported the
    > problems
    > with being infiltrated by org. criminals.
    >
    > (I said I thought the problems with org. criminals in Liverpool probably
    > had to be connected
    > with the problems in Oslo, since I found it unlikly that the lightening
    > would strike at the
    > same place twice so to speak).
    >
    > I can see in my notes that the Sergant thought that Arvato had a Swedish
    > parent-company,
    > but I told him that it wasn’t Swedish, but German. (Bertelsman).
    >
    > I also told him that I thought it would be very fine to have a contact
    > person at the police,
    > since the police didn’t return my calls, and also since I had a lot of
    > information regarding
    > the different cases which I still hadn’t got an oppertunity to report to
    > the police, yet this
    > haven’t been addressed in the answering-letter.
    >
    > Like I’ve explained above, the police have been suposed to call me on more
    > than ten occations,
    > but they haven’t called me in 2007 at all.
    >
    > So I think they should take this problem a bit more serious. They are
    > ignoring this problem
    > in their answering-letter, and I can’t really say that I’m sure what to do
    > if some incidents
    > happens now, for which I would have needed the assitance of the police.
    > I’m not sure what
    > I should do if this happens, I don’t really want to call the police, just
    > to be ignored even
    > more.
    >
    > So I think they should have brought up this issue in their
    > answering-letter.
    >
    > In the meeting, the Sergant asked me what I wanted the police to do, and I
    > answered that I
    > wanted the police to investigate the case with the problems with the
    > Arvato-company
    > having problems with infiltration by org. criminals.
    >
    > I explained to the Sergant that I had a lot of documents that helped
    > showing this, and that
    > I think he should maybe have a look at these documents, in concetion with
    > his investigation.
    >
    > Yet, I wasn’t contacted back by the Sergant at all, before I got the
    > letter that he couldn’t
    > find any evidence to substantiatie my claims.
    >
    > So, I think that the Sergant should maybe have had a look at the documents
    > then, like I
    > suggested to him in the meeting. Maybe this could have helped him. He says
    > he haven’t
    > found any evidence to substantiate my claims. But when he didn’t even have
    > a look at
    > the documents, which I explained about to him that I had in the meeting,
    > then it’s seems
    > a bit to me that he didn’t really try that hard to find any evidence.
    >
    > Because in the meeting I told him that he could just contact me if he
    > wanted to have at
    > the documents I had from working in the company, but the Sergant didn’t
    > contact me
    > back about this.
    >
    > I’ve also been in contact with the Norwegian Embassy in London, regarding
    > the problems
    > with org. crime in Oslo and in Arvato-company and elsewhere in Liverpool.
    >
    > The Embassy, told me that if I wanted the British and Norwegian police to
    > cooperate
    > on these issues, then I had to tell the Brisish and Norwegian police
    > myself that I
    > wanted them to cooperate about this.
    >
    > So, I aslo see this in my notes, I made sure to tell the Sergant that I
    > wanted the British
    > police to cooperate with the Norwegian police about these issues. (I’ve
    > also earlier told
    > the Norwegian police the same, that I want them, like the Embassy adviced,
    > to cooperate
    > with the British police on this.)
    >
    > I also gave the Sergant the name of the Norwegian police-officer who knew
    > most about
    > the case in Norway. (Who was working in a similar Norwegian
    > Department, that is the
    > department that investigates the regular police). This because Sgt. Smithe
    > asked who
    > in Norway he could contact about this, and I didn’t really know who else
    > that knew
    > enough about this.
    >
    > Yet, in the answering letter, there is no mention about this, if the
    > British police have
    > been in contact with the Norwegian police or not, so I would have to asume
    > that
    > they haven’t been in contact then, even if I asked them to do this, on
    > advice from
    > the Embassy, in the meeting.
    >
    > I told the Sergant that I had even contacted the Norwegian Consulate, and
    > that the
    > Consulate-representative contacted Sgt. O’Brian, reminding him that I had
    > tryed to
    > get in contact with him regarding the case, but still, Sgt. O’Brian didn’t
    > call me back.
    >
    > And this is neigther addressed in the answering-letter.
    >
    > I gave Sgt. Smithe some copies of explanations about the further problems
    > with
    > criminals in Norway, that they tried to kill me on the farm belonging to
    > the woman
    > my uncle lived with there, in the summer of 2005, and thats why I went
    > away from
    > Norway again and settled in Liverpool.
    >
    > And I gave the Sergant the log-number from when I reported about the
    > problems
    > with criminals in Oslo and Liverpool to the Walton Lane police-station in
    > the
    > Automn of 2005.
    >
    > (I’ve also been in contact with the Merseyside police regarding these
    > problems
    > several times before this, and also after this, in the spring and summer
    > of 2006.
    >
    > And then also again with the frequent contact about the problems in the
    > Arvato
    > company from November 2006).
    >
    > I told the Sergant that it seemed to me, and that this was supported by
    > the
    > documents I had, that all the different departments on Arvato was involved
    > in
    > this problem, with being taken over/infiltraded by org. criminals.
    >
    > But the Sergant still didn’t contact me back to have a look at the
    > documents.
    >
    > I see from my notes that I told Sgt. Smithe that I had been in contact
    > with
    > a Norwegian Police-officer, in the special department that investigates
    > the
    > regular police, earlier the same week, about that had been surrounding
    > this
    > in Oslo.e problems in Oslo.
    >
    > Further from my notes, I see that I told the Sergant that it seemed to me
    > that
    > the police were worried, when they called me in the night, around
    > midnight,
    > in late Novemeber 2006, and asked me to contact higher management
    > at Arvato, regarding the problems I had been having with certain persons
    > working there. (It seemed to me that she was worried do to who these
    > people I had been having problems with were).
    >
    > –
    >
    > I’ll try to summarise the problems surrounding the complaint-process and
    > the meeting on 22/6:
    >
    > – The police didn’t tell me was calling when they called me on 15/6
    > instructing me
    > to met at Walton Lane police-station on 22/6.
    >
    > – The police didn’t tell me the agenda for the meeting on 22/6, before the
    > meeting.
    >
    > – The police didn’t address the individual complaints from the complaint
    > from 3/5, neighter
    > in the meeting on 22/6, or in their letter from 10/7.
    >
    > – The police didn’t investigate the documents I told them I had, which I
    > told them in the
    > meetin on 22/6, could help explain what went on at Arvato while I was
    > working there.
    >
    > – The police says in their letter from 10/7, that I have been raising
    > issues in terms of
    > ‘The Norwegian Mafia’. But I have never heard about or refered to the term
    > ‘the Norwegian
    > mafia’, so the police must have been misunderstanding what I said in the
    > meeting on 10/7.
    >
    > – In their answering-letter, the police haven’t addressed the issue I
    > brought up in the
    > meeting on 10/7, that I had been adviced by the Embassy to tell the
    > British and Norwegian
    > police to cooperate on the case. But in the letter from 10/7, it isn’t
    > mentioned at all,
    > if there has been any contact at all with the Norwegian police regarding
    > this.
    >
    > – In the meeting on 22/6, I mentioned to Sgt. Smite, that I had been
    > having problems
    > with the Merseyside Police, on repeted occations, having promised to call
    > me back,
    > but then not having called. I explained that this procedure made it
    > difficult to me,
    > to report about what I knew about the cases, and to get any meaningful
    > dialog.
    >
    > I threfore expressed in the meeting, a request, if I please could get a
    > contact-person,
    > in the Merseyside Police, which I could contact, and get a dialog with,
    > and tell about
    > the things I knew regarding the different crime-cases that had been going
    > on.
    >
    > Yet, in the letter from the police from 10/7, this isn’t brought up at
    > all, and I have
    > so far in 2007, not recieved a single call from the Merseyside Police
    > about this, or
    > about anything else.
    >
    >
    > So these problems from the meeting/complaint process, together with the 18
    > individual complaints
    > from the complaint from 3/5, which I have exlained about above, and which
    > haven’t been dealt
    > with at all in the Merseyside Police letter from 10/7, are the reasons for
    > which I am appealing.
    >
    > Also, my complaint from 3/5, is like I have explained above, regarding
    > problems with the
    > liasons, or contact, with the police.
    >
    > Like I’ve also explained earlier, I’m not an expert on police methods, and
    > I’ve been a bit
    > confused about why the police seemingly don’t want to cooperate with me.
    >
    > I’ve looked at it as certain, that maybe even if the Merseyside police
    > haven’t seemed to want
    > to cooperate with me about the problems at Arvato etc., I’ve taken it as
    > certain, that the
    > Merseyside police, like any responsilbe Police-unit, would investigate the
    > things that have
    > been going on at Arvato, when I’ve been telling them when I’ve met up at
    > the police-station
    > in Novemeber last year, on several occations telling them about my
    > concerns about org. criminal
    > activity in the company.
    >
    > When I’ve in the meetings with Sgt. Camel on 16/1, in the several talks
    > with Constable Holmes,
    > and in the meeting with Sgt. O’Brian on 1/3.
    >
    > When I’ve in these expressed my concern about what has been going on in
    > the Arvato company, and
    > also explained to them that I’m worried about my former collegues that
    > were still working there,
    > because it seemed to me that some of them must have been under control by
    > criminals.
    >
    > And when I also mention to the Merseyside Police that I have been in
    > contact with the Embassy,
    > and later also the Consulate, and I give a larger number, several hundred,
    > documents, that
    > helps show that there has been something goving on there.
    >
    > And when I’ve also sent e-mails, on my last day working at Arvato, to a
    > number of British and
    > Norwegian newspapers and tv-stations, and also to the parent-company, that
    > it’s clear to me
    > that there is a problem with organised criminal activity in the company.
    >
    > If the fact, that the police are still ignoring my plea to get a
    > contact-person and a dialog
    > with the police, to get a chance to tell them everything I know about the
    > problems at Arvato,
    > (and also about the other problems from Liverpool and Norway).
    >
    > If the fact that they are still ignoring this request, means that they
    > haven’t been investigating
    > the problems at Arvato at all, then I off course think that this is
    > serious. And I guess, since
    > I haven’t been reading about the problems at Arvato in the newspapers or
    > otherwere, and since
    > I see from the letter the Merseyside police sent me on 10/7, that the
    > police doesn’t seem to be
    > interested in letting me tell them what I know about (since they haven’t
    > commented on the problems
    > I have been having with the contact with the police at all).
    >
    > Due to this I have to presume that nothing has been done about the
    > problems at Arvato then.
    > Problems which to me seems like they are serious, and it seems to me that
    > some of the people
    > that were working there, at the same time I was working there, was under
    > control by criminals.
    > (This got clear to me at the end of the time I worked there, thats why I
    > sent the e-mails to
    > the newspapers etc., and this is also why I went to the police and told
    > them about this all
    > those times from November 2006.).
    >
    > I’ve also explained about what it seems to me must have been going on at
    > Arvato, to the Norwegian
    > Embassy, and the Norwegian Police, since there were many Norwegians and
    > Scandinavians working
    > at the Arvato campaign which I was working on.
    >
    > But if it even, after I’ve tryed to tell all of these about the problems,
    > if there still hasn’t
    > been investigating what has been going on at Arvato (Which I find highly
    > unlikly, since I think
    > any responsible police-force of course would have investigated serious
    > cases like this. But
    > I mention this anyway, due to the ignorance from the police regarding my
    > plea to tell the police
    > what I know about what has been going on).
    >
    > Because then, since it also hasn’t been about this in the news, then I
    > have to presume that the
    > problems at Arvato haven’t been investigated by the Merseyiside Police at
    > all, or by anyone
    > else, so then I think the only responsible think would be to try get
    > advice on how this problem,
    > with the semingly organised crime activity at the Arvato company, should
    > addressed, when the
    > police are igonring the problem.
    >
    > So if you at the IPCC have any idea on how to go forward then. I guess
    > thats a complaint about
    > the Merseyside Police as a police-force, as well as a complaint against
    > individual police-
    > officers, like it is in the complaints you are dealing with.
    >
    > But I reackoned that I might as well ask you now then, how I should go
    > forward, to get the police
    > to investigate the problems with the organised criminal activity at
    > Arvato, which seeems clear
    > to me from working there, and which I also have documents that supports
    > the occurance of.
    >
    > Sorry if I’m repeating myself a bit at the end here, but I think that
    > these problems should
    > be dealt with in a responsilbe way.
    >
    > And it doesn’t seem to me that the complaint with the problems with the
    > liasons is being dealt
    > with in a responsible way from the Merseyside Police.
    >
    > And this makes a bit worried about if the problems with my former
    > collegues from Arvoto which
    > it seemed to me must have been under control by criminal, also is being
    > dealt with in an
    > irresponsible way.
    >
    > Thats why I’m bringing this up now, even if I’m not sure if it’s the right
    > time and place, but
    > I hope that maybe you could maybe give some advice on how to go forward
    > with this problem as
    > well, with the org. criminal activity at Arvato, and the problems with the
    > people working
    > there seeming to be under control by criminals.
    >
    > Even if this complaint originaly only was regarding the problems with the
    > contact with the
    > police, because I was sure that the police would deal with a case like
    > that responsible,
    > no matter what they inform me about what they are doing.
    >
    > But I must admit that the way the police have been dealing with my
    > complaint from 3/5, with the
    > problems surrounding the meeting on 22/6, and the answering-letter from
    > 10/7.
    >
    > I think issues have been dealt with a bit unprofessional by the police, so
    > the unprofessionalism
    > from them surrounding these issues, has made me a bit uncertain as to if
    > they are dealing with
    > the problems at Arvato in a responsible way at all.
    >
    > So thats why I thought I’d bring this up now, while I was dealing with the
    > relating issues
    > in the appeal.
    >
    > So I hope that this is alright, and that it’s possible for you have a look
    > at the issues I’ve
    > brought up in this appeal.
    >
    > Yours sincerely,
    >
    > Erik Ribsskog
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    > On 8/15/07, Joanne Fitzgerald wrote:
    > >
    > > Dear Mr Ribsskog,
    > >
    > > Thank you for contacting the Independent Police Complaints Commission
    > > (IPCC).
    > >
    > > The information we require, should you wish to appeal the police’s
    > > decision to not formally record your complaint, is set out in the Appeal
    > > Form that I have posted to you. I have also now attached the relevant
    > > appeal form with this email for your consideration – this electronic version
    > > can be printed out, completed and returned by post. You may complete an
    > > Appeal Form or provide the same required information in an email.
    > >
    > > Please be aware that if you wish to submit an appeal we must receive
    > > your appeal within 28 days of the date of me informing you of your right to
    > > appeal.
    > >
    > > I hope this information has assisted you.
    > >
    > > Please contact me if you have any further questions,
    > >
    > > Yours sincerely,
    > >
    > > Joanne
    > >
    > > *Joanne Fitzgerald*
    > > Casework Manager
    > > Independent Police Complaints Commission
    > > 90 High Holborn
    > > London
    > > WC1V 6BH
    > > Tel: 020 7166 3182
    > > Fax: 020 7166 3642
    > > Email: joanne.fitzgerald@ipcc.gsi.gov.uk
    > >
    > >
    > > ——————————
    > > *From:* Erik Ribsskog [mailto:eribsskog@gmail.com]
    > > *Sent:* 15 August 2007 00:24
    > > *To:* Joanne Fitzgerald
    > > *Subject:* Re: Your Complaint Against Merseyside Police – 2007/006341
    > >
    > >
    > > Hi,
    > >
    > > thank you very much for your e-mail!
    > >
    > > I will definatly appeal against the decision not to investigate the
    > > complaint.
    > >
    > > I’m just a bit busy with work and other issues at the moment, but I’m
    > > going
    > > to look up in the letter about how one should appeal formally, one of
    > > the next
    > > days, and then I’ll send a more formal appeal if thats needed.
    > >
    > > Or else, please tell me if you think this e-mail can be considered as a
    > > formal
    > > appeal, if not, then I’ll send a new e-mail one of the next days.
    > >
    > > Hope that this is alright!
    > >
    > > Yours sincerely,
    > >
    > > Erik Ribsskog
    > >
    > >
    > > On 8/14/07, Joanne Fitzgerald
    > > wrote:
    > > >
    > > > Dear Mr Ribsskog,
    > > >
    > > > Thank you for contacting the Independent Police Complaints Commission
    > > > (IPCC).
    > > >
    > > > I have contacted Merseyside Professional Standards Department to
    > > > establish the current status of your complaint. I was informed by
    > > > Merseyside Police that they did not deem your complaint to be
    > > > concerned
    > > > with allegations of misconduct against individual police officers and
    > > > therefore decided not to formally record your complaint under the
    > > > Police
    > > > Reform Act 2002.
    > > >
    > > > If you disagree with the decision by Merseyside Police to not formally
    > > > record your complaint, then you have a right to appeal to the IPCC to
    > > > independently review the police’s decision. I have sent you the
    > > > relevant
    > > > appeal form today in the post (Appealing Against a Complaint Not Being
    > > > Recorded) and this form is also available online at our website
    > > > (www.ipcc.gov.uk), should this assist you further. Please note, should
    > > > you wish to appeal, we must receive your appeal form within 28 days.
    > > >
    > > > If you have any further questions then please do not hesitate to
    > > > contact
    > > > me.
    > > >
    > > > Yours sincerely,
    > > >
    > > > Joanne
    > > >
    > > > Joanne Fitzgerald
    > > > Casework Manager
    > > > Independent Police Complaints Commission
    > > > 90 High Holborn
    > > > London
    > > > WC1V 6BH
    > > > Tel: 020 7166 3182
    > > > Fax: 020 7166 3642
    > > > Email: joanne.fitzgerald@ipcc.gsi.gov.uk
    > > >
    > > >
    > > >
    > > >
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