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Police ringing my doorbell when visiting my neighbour
Comments
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Thanks everyone - it is absolutely not urgent at all, this is an ongoing family issue (not criminal).
My bell and the bell of person they want are clearly marked. Neighbour upstairs is normally expecting them/waiting for them to turn up but it takes maybe a minute to get down from second floor and they wait maybe 5 sec and ring my doorbell.
There was 5 of them today, the Police that is.
I do not suppose it will go on forever but rather gets sorted at some point, stop and then start again as it does.
Guess I need to find out which station are they coming from and put a complaint in if this continues.
I do not want to be involved in any of this and I do not want to be disturbed - I am not a receptionist for the flats here.
Thanks for replies0 -
Door bell rings.
You walk to the hallway to see who it is.
You can tell it is the police again, so you walk back to your flat.
Police wait for intended person to actually come down and open the door.
Do that often enough and the police will stop ringing your bell. Problem solved?0 -
Have you rung the station to complain about being disturbed?
I would do that & explain there is a way of contacting the person they want to see without the need to ring your doorbell.
Ring the 'station' ????
You are having a laugh...........
Dixon of Dock Green days are long gone.:p
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gettingready wrote: »Thanks everyone - it is absolutely not urgent at all, this is an ongoing family issue (not criminal).
If it's not criminal then I would be complaining about the waste of police resources sending 5 officers at a time.0 -
unforeseen wrote: »Get an extra key cut for the communal door and give it to themfirefox1956 wrote: »Ring the 'station' ????
You are having a laugh...........
Dixon of Dock Green days are long gone.:p
We have - in our village - a local police station.
If we didn't, I'd ring 101.When should I use 101?
You should call 101 to report crime and other concerns that do not require an emergency response. For example, if:- Your car has been stolen
- Your property has been damaged
- You suspect drug use or dealing in your neighbourhood
- Give the police information about crime in your area
- Speak to the police about a general enquiry
On that link, there is a 'find your neighbourhood'.
If the OP puts in his/her postcode, it should give an email address.
See, sometimes, instead of trying to appear smart, it pays to think about things.0 -
I would have no problem assisting the police or helping a hard of hearing neighbour. It seems the community-spirited thing to do. Also, I wouldn't want to risk that someone could be in distress and couldn't get help because I get irked when my doorbell rings.
Am I just too nice for my own good?Mornië utulië0 -
Lord_Baltimore wrote: »I would have no problem assisting the police or helping a hard of hearing neighbour. It seems the community-spirited thing to do. Also, I wouldn't want to risk that someone could be in distress and couldn't get help because I get irked when my doorbell rings.
Am I just too nice for my own good?
Of course, they're getting help - 5 police officers are coming through the door.
It's not about assisting the police or helping a hard of hearing neighbour or even being nice.
The police have a perfectly good way of getting access to this person without disturbing the OP - they're just not using it.0 -
Too full of their own self importance to wait. If its not a criminal matter then why on earth so many officers? Must be the chief super's uncle or something. Ignore your bell unless your expecting someone and your bound to miss a parcel delivery!Mr Generous - Landlord for more than 10 years. Generous? - Possibly but sarcastic more likely.0
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gettingready wrote: »
My bell and the bell of person they want are clearly marked. Neighbour upstairs is normally expecting them/waiting for them to turn up but it takes maybe a minute to get down from second floor and they wait maybe 5 sec and ring my doorbell
They ring yours because the neighbour is slow and you are lightning fast?
Why not just wait a minute before you answer? You can listen out for the police or the neighbour going past and if you hear nothing you can assume it really is for you.
If you are expecting a parcel you can be quicker on that day but it's not everyday people have deliveries.0 -
gettingready wrote: »Neighbour upstairs is normally expecting them/waiting for them to turn up but it takes maybe a minute to get down from second floor and they wait maybe 5 sec and ring my doorbell.0
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