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:''For the University of Tennessee broadcaster, see Tim Priest (American football).'' Tim Priest, is a former New South Wales Police Detective Sergeant in Australia. He served in the Sydney suburb of Cabramatta and led a police revolt against his commanders for failing to take action on gang crime and heroin dealing in South West Sydney. He wrote a book called ''To Protect And To Serve'' with Richard Basham about his experiences dealing with the drug trade and the police service.〔Priest, T. & Basham, R. 2003. ''To Protect and To Serve : the untold truth about the New South Wales Police Service.'' New Holland, Sydney. ISBN 1-74110-040-2〕 In 2002 he gave evidence to an enquiry into the crime- and drugs ridden suburb of Cabramatta and attracted national and international headlines. His testimony led to the resignations or sackings of the State's Police Minister, Education Minister, Police Commissioner and Deputy and Assistant Commissioners. Major changes were made to the NSW police force and the way that police handle gangs and drugs in Sydney. The Cabramatta Parliamentary Enquiry's final report (2002) recommended that the Government adopt some of the initiatives that Priest had offered as a means to solving the crisis in Cabramatta. Ultimately the NSW Government adopted the recommendations and the NSW Police implemented them in 2002. In 2003, he gave a talk at a ''Quadrant'' dinner in November 2003 titled "The Rise of Middle Eastern Crime in Australia" in which he also talked about his experiences policing specific households of people of Lebanese descent, and criticised police commissioner Peter Ryan and journalist Mike Carlton.〔()〕 However, in 2006 ''The Sydney Morning Herald'', said of Priest's talk: "It has become a celebrated story, told by the whistleblowing former policeman Tim Priest. The trouble is, it isn't true. ... Priest was compressing good detail to make a point, and saw nothing wrong with that... Priest observed "All it did was open the debate because for whatever reason there are a number of people in academia and in the government that did not want to talk about Middle eastern crime".〔()〕 In the same speech he warned of the consequences of ignoring "middle eastern" crime and pointed to the Sydney suburb of Cronulla as a likely trouble spot involving "mid eastern" gangs. In 2005 the Cronulla riots erupted over a 48-hour period across Sydney as caucasians went on a violent rampage, attacking youths thought to be of Middle East descent and police, in retaliation over an earlier incident at Cronulla Beach. He endured a long campaign of hateful media articles engineered by former police officers whom Priest had exposed as either corrupt or incompetent. Priest eventually sued ''The Sydney Morning Herald'' (twice), Author Chris Masters and publisher Allan and Unwin over various publications. All matters were reportedly settled out of Court with Priest winning substantial payouts and apologies from those concerned. In 2003 Prime Minister John Howard announced that Tim Priest would be the new Chairman of the Prime Minister's Crime Advisory Group (Sydney) and advise the Coalition Federal Government on Crime Prevention initiatives. He has written a number of best selling books since 2003 including ''Enemies of the State'' and ''On Deadly Ground- the John Newman Assassination''. ==References== * "Blame Race Riots on Police Force neglect", ''The Australian'', 13 December 2005 * "Trouble in the Premiers Patch", ''The Sydney Morning Herald'', 14 January 2006 * "Police too afraid to get tough on our criminals", ''The Sydney Morning Herald'', 6 August 2009 * "The Rise of Middle Eastern Crime in Australia", ''The Australian'', January 2003. * Report of the General Purpose Standing Committee No.3, (Cabramatta Policing Enquiry) New South Wales Parliament, 2001/2002 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Tim Priest」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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