Whitehall 1212
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Asking any Met LE experts. Is it feasible that an officer could be finishing a shift at 9pm or thereabouts and be heading home in his own car? Are there standard shift patterns?
Another way of approaching her might have been to get out of the car and show his ID and tell her that there's been an incident, some violence, gang related incident, whatever on the road ahead and that it might not be safe for her to continue on her route and offer a lift?
Or of course if he was a neighbour/landlord he could have done the same thing.
If he had quickly bashed her over the head he could then have de-activated her phone and made his way out of the area.
There are a whole litany of theories.
It seems that the mention of the arrested person being a police officer leaves many thinking that it must have been an officer on duty. I think that is highly speculative and most unlikely.
It is statistically much more likely to be someone known to SE, possibly an rejected former partner and that this incident took place outside of his duty times.
In answer to your question on shift patterns. There will be a lot of variation to make best use of limited resources depending on the demand.
Even though there is likely to be a published 52 week rota for officers who work shifts, to comply with Police Federation agreements, there is huge scope for change to this with overtime, voluntary changes, police regulations allowing for change at short notice during a national crisis, unforseen operational demands etc.
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