New guidelines for police officers have been published
stating officially that there is nothing wrong with detectives employing
mediums, clairvoyants, psychics and witches to aid them in criminal investigations.
This is something that many officers do anyway on an informal level, but this
new document from the College of Policing
is the first one that officially acknowledges the tactic. It even goes as far
as to recommend that officers do not rule out the use of crystal balls and
cauldrons either, and says police officers should judge them "in the
context of the case". However the text does warn officers against these
methods becoming a distraction. This is not certified recognition that psychic
detectives have genuine supernatural powers per se; that really would be too
much to ask. It leaves open the possibility that the alleged psychic might have
gained their information through normal means, in which case officers should
not dismiss it because of the source; but it does not specifically state either
that psychic powers are unreal. What's more there are many cases of policemen
using mediums and clairvoyants to solve crimes in the belief that they have
real extra-sensory perception. Despite a few famous blunders, like Sylvia
Browne's search for the missing boy Shawn Hornbeck in which she told the
parents incorrectly on live TV that he was dead, four years before he turned up
alive and well, see: http://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.co.uk/2013/11/sylvia-browne-dies.html,
many officers have a lot of confidence in their telepathic comrades' abilities.
For some reason Australia
seems to be the country most open to this concept with multiple successful
outcomes. For example in Sydney in
1996 a clairvoyant called Phillipe Durant was brought in to help search for a
missing woman called Paula Brown. Using remote viewing and dowsing techniques, Durant
led police to a spot and the body of the woman was found there, see: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3216727/Ello-ello-ello-anybody-New-guidelines-say-police-not-rule-tip-offs-psychics-witches-clairvoyants.html.
Policemen who use psychic detectives to help them say something very important
about the philosophy of science, and this is very relevant to the Skeptic
movement. Policing is a profession which is fundamentally based on science,
rationality, logic and evidence, like almost no other. Therefore if an officer
tales advice from a psychic investigator then they do so for one reason alone- because it works. A Skeptic would never
use a psychic detective, in fact Oxford Skeptics in the Pub used to be run by a
policeman who spoke out against them, see: http://oxford.skepticsinthepub.org/.
It is therefore very obvious that an aversion to psychic detectives is purely one
of principle, not one of practicalities. This is despite the fact that the police
embody the slogans of the Skeptics more than anybody else. Such in essence, is
the difference between Skeptics with a K and sceptics with a c.
See here for more
information: http://hpanwo-radio.blogspot.co.uk/2014/03/programme-79-podcast-trystan-swale.html.
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