Trigger Happy wrote: » Shifted a ban guard one night. Grand lass.
Wanderer78 wrote: » Was arrested, detained, strip searched and questioned, but still have enormous respect for them, very difficult job
touts wrote: » The vast majority are ordinary decent lads and ladies who are doing a **** job with awful pay no resources and no real support. They have been worn down by years of abuse from the criminal class who are protected by the powerful legal industry and self appointed rights groups who all make more money the higher the crime rate. I wouldn't be a guard and I would strongly advise my son never to become one. But I have the highest respect for them.
El_Bee wrote: » if you drug tested every gardai going on duty on a monday morning you'd have some very interesting results.
Yer Da sells Avon wrote: » A few years ago, I was almost shoved to the ground (saved by my low centre of gravity) by one, for the crime of walking too slowly past a protest on Kildare Street. Other than that, my experiences with the filth have been entirely positive. Even on occasions where I was caught speeding, and probably deserved a bollocking, they were perfectly respectful and polite towards me.
Allinall wrote: » Yet you still call them the filth. Charming.
[Deleted User] wrote: » I've been pulled in a few times for speeding and they were fine. It was very much a case of "now young lady you've been driving a bit too fast" and me going "oh I am sorry Guard" Got stopped in the North once for I'm not sure what. I was told it was because I was driving too close to the car in front. But sure I was opening a bottle of water and box of panadol at the same time so God knows what I was at. He was part of the "mind how you go lassy" brigade as well. And something I notice is how attractive they all are!
punisher5112 wrote: » Were you showing off the assets
[Deleted User] wrote: » Well I might have put on fresh lip gloss. Every little helps.
punisher5112 wrote: » Ohhhhhhh ya have me shivering...,. ;-) I've tried that but every time I got pulled it was a guy...... Just shows ya I have no luck.... Saying that was walking through town the other day and got a lovely hello off a fine one.... Lady of course.
[Deleted User] wrote: » If you think the Guard is gay then you could pretend to be too. Worth a try.
elperello wrote: » A while ago something belonging to me was stolen from someone else's property. I had to go to GS to make a statement. First off you have to meet the Investigating Garda any old Garda won't do. Between their shifts and time off I finally got an appointment at 9pm one night. Brought into interview room. Grim place with furniture bolted to the floor. Apparently that is standard so miscreants can't throw chairs about the place if they get upset. Sort of took the gloss off the design precaution to see a bicycle leaning against the wall beside me. It was like helping a kid with homework as I had to tell the story and it was all written down in longhand biro on sheets of A4. Crossing out spelling mistakes etc. Explaining detail of item stolen, make, type, serial no. etc. All had to be read back to me solemnly and then signed. Pulse no. issued. Never heard another word about it. There was no insurance claim. Several other people lost property in the same incident so I presume this procedure was repeated for each one. Really as an initial report of a theft it could have been done by email with follow up and actual interview if necessary as a second step.