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Metropolitan Police officer does stop and search on Black Cyclists Network founder after ‘smelling’ marijuana

Mani Arthur says incident in central London yesterday was “degrading and humiliating”

A Metropolitan Police officer was filmed yesterday performing a stop and search on the founder of the Black Cyclists Network (BCN), claiming that he could smell marijuana on him. The cyclist, Mani Arthur, described it as “a degrading and humiliating experience.”

The incident happened at around 2.39pm yesterday afternoon at the junction of Woburn Place and Euston Road, with the officer stopping Mani Arthur, who was riding with two other BCN members, one of whom filmed what happened.

Posting the video to Instagram, Arthur said: “I was detained and searched by a police officer under the suspicion of ‘smelling’ of marijuana. I was harassed and humiliated in a public space.

“To say that I am pissed off is an understatement. Luckily for me, fellow BCN members Aaron and Hugo were present and recorded the incident.”

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Today was supposed to be a historic moment for @blackcyclistsnetwork and @devercycles. . . This afternoon at around 2.39pm at the junction of Woburn Pls and Euston Rd. I was detained and searched by a police officer under the suspicion of "smelling" of marijuana. I was harassed and humiliated in a public space. . . To say that I am pissed off is an understatement. Luckily for me, fellow BCN members Aaron and Hugo were present and recorded the incident. . . In short, I was waiting in traffic for a green light. Three police officers were crossing the road. The one in the video told me to reverse my bicycle back behind the white line were vehicles have to stop. I was not blocking the pedestrian crossing. . . I told the officer that I would be putting myself in danger if I reversed because a small HGV was sitting directly behind me and I would end up in the driver's blind spot if I followed his instructions. I explained to the officer that usually there are cycle box lanes ahead of vehicle stop lines to protect cyclists and because there is a lack of one, I was using my common sense to avoid putting myself in danger. . . The officer tried again but I resisted and he turned around to join his colleagues as they were walking away. The lights changed to green. . . I was riding off to join Aaron and Hugo, who by that point were in the middle of the junction when I heard a call from the officer to turn back. . . I walked over to the officer on the pavement. He asked for my I.D. and informed me that he smelled cannabis on me during our exchange. As a result he needed to search me for possession. He searched me by the side of the road. Before the search, I asked him and his colleagues if they smell cannabis on me. They said yes. After the search. They conveniently said they did not smell cannabis on me. . . I am very annoyed at having to go through such a degrading and humiliating experience. It seemed to me like a gross abuse of power by an officer who tried to show off to his colleagues and made up a reason as retribution for his failed attempt. . . . @metpolice_uk . .

A post shared by Mani (@blackcyclist) on

Recounting the background to the incident, he wrote: “In short, I was waiting in traffic for a green light. Three police officers were crossing the road.

“The one in the video told me to reverse my bicycle back behind the white line where vehicles have to stop. I was not blocking the pedestrian crossing.

“I told the officer that I would be putting myself in danger if I reversed because a small HGV was sitting directly behind me and I would end up in the driver's blind spot if I followed his instructions.

“I explained to the officer that usually there are cycle box lanes ahead of vehicle stop lines to protect cyclists and because there is a lack of one, I was using my common sense to avoid putting myself in danger.

“The officer tried again but I resisted and he turned around to join his colleagues as they were walking away. The lights changed to green.”

That seemed to have brought the episode to a close, but that was not the case.

“I was riding off to join Aaron and Hugo, who by that point were in the middle of the junction when I heard a call from the officer to turn back,” said Arthur.

“I walked over to the officer on the pavement. He asked for my ID and informed me that he smelled cannabis on me during our exchange.

“As a result he needed to search me for possession. He searched me by the side of the road.

“Before the search, I asked him and his colleagues if they smell cannabis on me. They said yes. After the search. They conveniently said they did not smell cannabis on me.”

He added: “I am very annoyed at having to go through such a degrading and humiliating experience.

“It seemed to me like a gross abuse of power by an officer who tried to show off to his colleagues and made up a reason as retribution for his failed attempt.”

Posting the same video to the Regent’s Park Cyclists group on Facebook, he added: “Anyone that knows me knows that I don’t smoke. I barely drink. This just adds insult to injury.”

British Cycling, when it published its Diversity in Cycling report in June this year, said that it had started “as a grassroots project that was sparked by a conversation between experienced road racer Andy Edwards and Black Cyclists Network founder, Mani Arthur.”

The governing body said that the report, which “sets out to explore the experiences of Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) cyclists taking up cycling as a sport for the first time,” would be shared with “its network of volunteers, clubs and members.”

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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104 comments

Avatar
TeresaDay | 4 years ago
16 likes

Despicable. Still institutional racism in the met.

Avatar
Hirsute | 4 years ago
14 likes

Loitering with intent to use a pedestrian crossing
Looking at me in a funny way
Walking around in a loud shirt in a built up area.

Avatar
EddyBerckx | 4 years ago
7 likes

Agree with everything above.

 

We don't have a jaywalking rule in the UK that bigoted cops can use to humiliate people with (and sometimes criminalise with) so they pull this shit. Heard too many stories of this sort of thing happening in the past. It's now 2019 FFS. This is why people don't want a return of widespread stop and search - it gets abused too often and leads to a huge amount of resentment.

Avatar
Philh68 | 4 years ago
6 likes

Why are your sniffer dogs in uniform? And why are they off leash?

Avatar
Secret_squirrel | 4 years ago
12 likes

Same old story - there is a class of copper who treat reason and logic as a challenge to their authority and react accordingly - especially if you are a PoC.

It shouldn't happen.

Avatar
Pilot Pete | 4 years ago
4 likes

Yes, bloody shocking. I grew up in London and am not sorry to see the back of the place. If Mani is reading this, get in touch if you fancy a weekend away and a decent, copper free ride in the Peak District with a bunch of non-racist white guys. 

PP

Avatar
hawkinspeter | 4 years ago
22 likes

Maybe if the police (or at least the MET) want to earn a bit of respect, they should stop with this kind of shit. They have a difficult job to do and this kind of incident is making a mockery of their job and their colleagues.

Avatar
Legin | 4 years ago
9 likes

The only time I've ever been stopped by the police for doing nothing was when I was in a car driven by a black West Indian friend; he had also done nothing. That was 1977 and funnily enough "nothing" hasn't changed it's still a reason to stop black people.

Perhaps those officers can visit Southend High Street on a Saturday or Rochford Station on a morning commute; lots of them white folks smelling of and smoking the wacky backy; nobody seems to care.

Avatar
Bmblbzzz replied to Legin | 4 years ago
7 likes
Legin wrote:

Perhaps those officers can visit Southend High Street on a Saturday or Rochford Station on a morning commute; lots of them white folks smelling of and smoking the wacky backy; nobody seems to care.

Yep, smoking it in public has been effectively decriminalized by absence of enforcement – except when the police decide it hasn't. And a law that's only randomly enforced ceases to be a meaningful tool of order.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Bmblbzzz | 4 years ago
4 likes
Bmblbzzz wrote:
Legin wrote:

Perhaps those officers can visit Southend High Street on a Saturday or Rochford Station on a morning commute; lots of them white folks smelling of and smoking the wacky backy; nobody seems to care.

Yep, smoking it in public has been effectively decriminalized by absence of enforcement – except when the police decide it hasn't. And a law that's only randomly enforced ceases to be a meaningful tool of order.

Decriminalise it and reap the tax benefits (and also reduce the money going towards organised crime etc.).

Avatar
ktache | 4 years ago
19 likes

I feel for this bloke.  I can never possibly know his frustration.

Obviously guilty of the crime of cycling whilst Black.

Avatar
Sriracha replied to ktache | 4 years ago
1 like
ktache wrote:

I feel for this bloke.  I can never possibly know his frustration.

Obviously guilty of the crime of cycling whilst Black.

From what I saw and read the cyclist never brought colour into it. Why must you? Because he's black?

Avatar
vonhelmet replied to Sriracha | 4 years ago
9 likes
Sriracha wrote:
ktache wrote:

I feel for this bloke.  I can never possibly know his frustration.

Obviously guilty of the crime of cycling whilst Black.

From what I saw and read the cyclist never brought colour into it. Why must you? Because he's black?

You're right, it was certainly just a coincidence.

Avatar
roubaixcobbles replied to Sriracha | 4 years ago
8 likes
Sriracha wrote:
ktache wrote:

I feel for this bloke.  I can never possibly know his frustration.

Obviously guilty of the crime of cycling whilst Black.

From what I saw and read the cyclist never brought colour into it. Why must you? Because he's black?

 

Yes, it's absolutely pure coincidence that the police should choose to perform this sort of search on a black cyclist wearing a Black Cyclists Network top. I mean, I myself have been cycling regularly in London for thirty-five years and have never once been stopped by an officer for smelling of marijuana (even when, in my younger days, I might well have been). This has nothing to do with the fact that I'm white, of course.

If you think the rider's colour had nothing to do with this, you're part of the problem.  For decades I have seen my black friends singled out of crowds for "random" searches, stopped and questioned when crimes have been committed in the neighbourhood "by a black man", ignored by taxi drivers when they try to hail cabs, stopped and asked for proof of ownership when driving expensive cars, etc etc etc ad nauseam. This is very much part of that pattern.

Mani, if you're reading these comments mate, please (if you have the energy, quite understand if you're so sickened by this crap you can't be bothered) make a complaint to the IPOC.  They will take you seriously and they will hold the Met to account with the evidence you have.

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