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That’s right, “two-tier policing” is definitely a thing, especially at Sussex Police, where if you’re a chum of its Chief Con Jo Shiner, you can get away with virtually anything.

I was assaulted by an East Sussex County Council Fostering social worker named Alison Jean Gulliver. Naturally, I complained, believing that the seriousness with which Children’s Services protected the rights of the children in their care would, in some way, be mirrored in incidents involving social workers and carers employed by the South Coast authority.

I was wrong—hilariously wrong, in fact—because instead of investigating and taking action, Children’s Services did its best to sweep this mess under the carpet. They were afraid, I suspect, of the reputational damage that would be done to Children’s Services if the facts of my case were ever made fully public.

So, I continued to complain, approaching the HSCC, Social Work England, The Local Government Ombudsman—the list goes on and on—but got nowhere.

Then, I approached Sussex Police. However, I was never asked in for an interview, not once, even though the crimes I was reporting were very serious. It turns out this was because Sussex Police Chief Con Jo Shiner and East Sussex County Council social worker Alison Gulliver were pals—very intimate ones, I believe.

In Chief Con Jo Shiner’s Sussex Police, the law comes second. And Jo comes first.

I’d all but given up ever bringing this corrupt cop to justice. Then an unplanned and unwanted consultation with a pharmacist at The East Cowes Medical Centre started a domino of events which will soon see Chief Con Jo Shiner locked up.

East Cowes Medical Centre
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