This video analyzes the case of Henry Noak, a university student stabbed five times and killed by Vicram Diguar, where police officers handcuffed the victim moments before he died and delayed first aid for three minutes. Former police superintendent Martin Gallagher argues that decades of diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) training have conditioned officers to prioritize concerns about racism and feelings over actual crime response, potentially to the detriment of public safety. The video questions whether police are overcompensating for accusations of institutional racism, causing them to respond disproportionately to claims of racial abuse compared to physical violence.
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BREAKING: UK POLICE EXPOSED THEY CHOSE RACISM OVER STABBED TEENAñadido:
Finally, justice for Henry Noik's family, a young student who was stabbed five times. But in today's video, we're not just going to be talking about that.
We're going to be breaking down whether the police are too worried about DEI and racism rather than actual crime. We've got some really good clips to break down for you. So, please remember to like, share, and subscribe to stay and turn notifications bell on to stay updated with all future videos. And hit that heart button. It really helps push the video and the channel. And grab your thermal tumblers and your Combat Ready HQ coffee from combat readyhq.co.uk.
Link is in the description. Getting into today's video then, the student was stabbed five times, but the seek man has finally been found guilty of murdering a university student after stabbing him with a seek ceremonial knife. This is a kerpin. Okay, this is a 5 to 12 in curved knife that they carry for religious reasons only. Originally, it was a 30in knife, but due to British colonial laws that were brought in, they made it smaller. Vicram Diguar, 23, was found guilty at Southampton Crown Court, the murder of university student Henry Noak. He was also found guilty of carrying a knife in public. Mr. Noak was killed on December 3rd last year as he was walking home from a night out. He was stabbed five times, including a fatal wound to the chest by a 21 cm seek ceremonial blade. Dig's mother, Kiran Carr, also received a guilty verdict for assisting a defendant by removing the weapon from the scene. Absolutely shocking that she'd done that. Police have apologized for the treatment of Mr. Noak, including handcuffing the Tina just moments before he died. Um, given evidence, defendant told the court that Mr. Noak, who he described as weaving and stumbling from being drunk, had racially abused him before punching him and knocking his turban off. The court heard evidence from a pathologist who said the student was under the legal limit to drive and that there was no evidence that Henry was punching people with his hands.
So, from the off, he lied. Before we get into how the police are maybe institutionalized about racism and DEI rather than crime and how it's happening across other public services as well, which I'll share with you, we finally do have justice. But Vicram lied from the off from the phone call he made saying that he had been racially attacked. When police officers arrived on scene, somehow I wasn't there. I can't comment too much on that, but didn't notice the stab wounds and didn't listen to Henry saying that I had been stabbed. Okay. It took him three minutes from handcuffing him to then finally basically assisting and giving first aid. That is when he went unconscious. Um, and basically he died after that sadly. But the family do have justice. So that is good. But I know that they would rather Henry be here um than all of this happening. But what I want to do is just cover, how do we say it? the DEI, the wokeness as some people would call it that is just going on in Britain. We're going to check out the clip in a minute. Um, but have a look at, you know, to be honest, pretty shocking interview from uh I think he's the police um superintendent. So, let's have a look at this.
>> I'm sorry that he was handcuffed and arrested in the moments before. Sorry that Henry's life couldn't be saved that night. and he was handcuffed and arrested in the moments before he lost consciousness. When his killer made that call to police and he called the police, not the ambulance, he lied on that. He lied when police attended the scene. He continued to lie as Henry's condition deteriorated. It is clear and it is absolutely tragic that it took them 3 minutes before they started to administer their first aid. It is important though to say the pathologist has been clear there's nothing officers could have done which would have saved Henry's life.
>> Most probably nothing the officers could have done. Okay. But is it the training that is letting them down and letting the public down? Are you know it's all good saying sorry, but that's not going to bring Henry back for his family, is it? It's it's not going to bring his family back. And hopefully Vicram will get the sentence he deserves for lying on a phone call, for lying throughout um while on the scene, and then obviously fatally killing Henry. Um because if he did call an ambulance service, the paramedics may have been able to do something because they'll be able to get administer a lot more first aid than what the police officers can do. But before we check out this clip, former police superintendent has suggested the conditioning of officers may have led to the treatment of murdered teen Henry Noak. Speaking to GB News, Martin Gallagher reacted after Hampshire Constaby apologized for treating the 18-year-old as a racism suspect in the last moments of his life. The apology followed the guilty verdict of a seek man Vicram Digra for murdering a university student. Digra accused a late teen racing him as police arrived prompting them to handcuff him before he come to stab wounds. We've conditioned our officers not to be wise and not to be circumspect. The they prioritize certain behaviors above others probably to the detriment of the public and sadly it looks like it was detriment of Henry Novc. We keep on conditioning and conditioning officers around institutional racism. have a look at what he's got to say and then we break it down.
>> There are police officers to do. We've got someone who's saying they've been stabbed and in the other hand we've got someone who's saying they've been racially abused and in these circumstances the handcuffs have been applied to a person that's saying they're stabbed. So it comes back to real first principles of policing. At the Scottish policing college, the words above the entrance are be glick, be glit, which is ga for be wise, be circumspect. And my own experience in policing over the last three decades, is that we've conditioned our officers not to be wise and not to be circumspect.
And we've prioritized certain behaviors above others, probably to the detriment of the public, and sadly, it looks like to the detriment of Henry Novak in this case. But with the caveat, I wasn't there on the street and I didn't see and and hear what the officers did.
>> I think you raised an excellent point there uh Martin. We have had now decades, haven't we? Where we have seen the police service cow in a way uh after suffering a reputational kicking by those that accuse the police time and time again of being institutionally racist. Do you think that that has so absorbed itself into the DNA of police forces now that they're scared to think in any other way?
>> Well, the short answer is yes. And I fundamentally disagree with the concept of institutional racism. I I don't think it exists and I certainly don't think that racism is is prevalent in today's police force in the United Kingdom. Um I didn't leave that long ago. I did my 30 years and it's not something you encountered often and when you did the offenders were sought out but we're we keep on conditioning and conditioning conditioning our officers round about this diversity training started in 2004 that's 22 years when do we accept that society has moved on and that the police need to move on society's changed and the police need to reassess their priorities which should be about crime They shouldn't be about people's feelings.
>> I love that >> speech now is a crime in many cases. Is it the case that police officers consider racist abuse um it worse than than actual violence?
>> So So abuse was always a crime in Scotland. Again, we had the breach of the peace. It was different down in England, but there was always offenses related to racially abusing someone.
We've just we've completely um blown this up to that being a great societal evil um beyond as we see in this case an actual murder. And I think there has to be a pause here to think what what are we doing? Um what what are our priorities? Now again it comes back to those officers made the decision and the circumstances they were faced but I think if you were to go into the cops at large and I'm talking wide here in a strategic level and look at their decision making it's been grossly affected by this this constant messaging of them being racist which is not true.
So they're overcompensating for that.
>> So there we have it. Okay. Um that's what they've had to say. And look, before we break this down, I was not there on evening. I've not seen the police body camera footage, but what I would love to know and what I think should be released, and I'm not saying this is totally down to police officers, because if they have been trained incorrectly, if it has been drilled into them that DEI, racism, and other issues are basically above actual violence and crime, then yes, they're to blame in a sense because, you know, a guy's running at you saying, "I've been stabbed." and pretty brutally stabbed. How obvious is it? It's quite hard. It's at night. But what I want to know is where did the handcuffs get applied so quickly because of an racial attack? Why were they just not split up in a sense? Because I'm sure Henry didn't come at the police officers attacking him. That's, you know, pretty obvious in my opinion. I'm not saying that didn't happen, but he's just been stabbed. He's trying to get away from Vicrim if he possibly can. And somehow Henry has been arrested. Why are they not just taking him to one side, taking Vicrim to one side if they're not completely going at it, throwing punches that you need to get in the way and put handcuffs on someone straight away?
You're just basically taking Vickrim's word for it. You've put handcuffs on a guy on the ground and then he's passed out unconscious because he's bled out.
Like where where has that happened at first? Secondly, DEI wokeness, racism, all of it is just basically being thrown at everyone. When I was in the British Army, we basically every year had to put our aims and objectives. What courses you want to do, did you want to go overseas? Did you want to promote? What basically what you wanted to complete in that year and at the end of the year, you midway through the year, how you getting on, end of year, what did you complete? What didn't you complete? What can we move on to next year? number one aim and objective for everyone in the British I mean everyone had to put this was a DEI sentence I can't remember it word for word we had to put that we got told we had to put that even though it's just common sense you know it's instilled in us with our core values integrity discipline selfless commitment respect for others etc that was in loyalty that was instilled in us but we still had to put as a name objective so I lost a name and objective every year just for DEI is the same happening in the police that you know if someone comes at you and they're they're you know they're saying that they are being racially abused and attacked which I do not agree with definitely not put that out there if you do that you are wrong okay um but just because someone's made a phone call I've been racially attacked I've possibly been punched once uh and I've had my um religious headwear you know knocked off he's turban does that automatically react when you when you arrive on scene blue light it you put handcuffs on on a guy, is that justifiable? Is that reasonable? Is that proportionate? You know, the three things you need to use um force for, can they justify putting handcuffs on him?
Um, but I think and we've seen it and we we know it with people being arrested over tweets, tweets, Facebook comments, um, just speaking out, preachers, especially Christian speeches, uh, preachers, um, are being moved on and arrested for for preaching because someone isn't happy with what they're reading out of the Bible. Are they putting people's feelings, like he said, are they putting people's feelings well above someone that is being attacked, stabbed, whatever else? Because if they are, and that is what's going on, there is huge, huge issues within the police force. Because someone's life is worth a lot more than someone's feelings. I'm not saying I agree with racism, but I don't. But someone's life who has been stabbed is worse worth a lot more than someone that may have been attacked verbally, whether it's racism or not.
That's worth a lot more. But we see it so often now that people are being arrested and they're being charged for saying things. If you're generally like inciting violence and calling for someone's death, which we've seen at Glastenbury, um you can still do that and get away with it. But if you're if you're generally calling, you know, inciting violence and calling for someone's death, then yeah, that needs to be dealt with. But if you're just making a few comments, then yeah, be moved on, you know, have a little warning, a caution. But it's just going too far now. Like you said, this 22 years in 2004, they've been going on about this in the police force. Same within the British military and you know even in standard corporations now just around the UK HR and that will do DEI training and make sure everyone can fit in and feel welcome and you don't hurt anyone's feelings. It's got to stop because people are now losing their lives over it. Anyway, I'd love to know what your thoughts are on this. So, please do comment below. Be very interested to hear what you got to say.
Finally, justice for um Henry's family.
Rest in peace, Henry. I know they would have rather him be here, but at least they get some sort of justice and now let's wait out to see what the sentence is. Um, lied on a phone call, lied on scene, and obviously took someone's life. We'll see. Anyway, please do comment below. Thank you for watching. I appreciate all of your support and I'll see you soon.
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