No SIA Licence, No Response? AstraZeneca Cambridge Complaint Breakdown 🛡️📩⚠️🏛️🎬
Автор: SA 4 Justice
Загружено: 2026-03-02
Просмотров: 1671
Описание:
AstraZeneca Cambridge | No SIA Licence Displayed? | Abusive Manager | Accountability Follow-Up
Back in February 2025, I visited AstraZeneca, York House, Hills Road, Cambridge to lawfully film from a publicly accessible area 🎥
What followed raised serious questions about:
🛡️ SIA licence display compliance
🏢 Corporate professionalism
📜 Public Order Act thresholds
📩 Complaint handling & regulator follow-through
During the visit:
A building manager referred to me as an “awkward prick”
A security guard appeared to have no visible SIA badge displayed
Formal complaints were submitted
No substantive responses were received
This video revisits that case with legal precision and structured accountability analysis.
Because growth matters.
And so does professionalism.
⚖️ The Legal Context Explained
Under the Private Security Industry Act 2001, licensed security operatives must display their SIA licence where it can be clearly seen while on duty.
Under Section 5 of the Public Order Act 1986, offensive language only becomes criminal if it is threatening or abusive and likely to cause harassment, alarm or distress.
Case law such as DPP v Orum (1989) confirms that context determines criminality.
Not every unpleasant interaction is criminal —
but professional standards operate above the criminal threshold.
📩 Complaint & Escalation Process
Complaints were submitted to:
• AstraZeneca
• Securitas
• The Security Industry Authority (SIA)
This case highlights an early learning curve in escalation — and how structured follow-up now forms part of a documented accountability pathway:
Employer → Formal Complaint → Regulator → Review → Documentation Trail
Because silence is not resolution.
We follow through — not just film.
📰 Related Public Context
This case is compared with publicly reported incidents involving security staff engaging in hostile or unprofessional conduct toward members of the public — including England Cricket team security and a 7 News cameraman.
The theme remains the same:
Professionalism in public-facing roles matters.
🎬 Fair Dealing Notice
This video may include short clips and reference material used under fair dealing provisions of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 for the purposes of:
• Commentary
• Criticism
• Reporting
• Public interest analysis
All content is used lawfully and proportionately.
📂 Suggested Playlists
This case fits within:
🛡️ Security Guard Conduct & Compliance
Private Security & SIA Accountability
📩 Accountability Follow-Ups & Case Updates
🧾 Regulators, DSARs & Legal Follow-Ups
Corporate & Property Management Accountability
📂 Paper Trails & Accountability Evidence
📌 Why This Case Matters
This wasn’t about headlines.
It wasn’t about prosecution.
It was about process.
Accountability requires structure.
Legal precision matters.
Professional standards are not optional.
If you're interested in:
• Public place filming rights
• SIA compliance
• Corporate accountability
• Complaint escalation strategy
• Private security conduct in the UK
You’re in the right place.
Like 👍
Comment 💬
Subscribe 🔔
#ScorpionAudits #Accountability #KnowYourRights #PrivateSecurityIndustryAct #SecurityCompliance #PublicPlaceFilming #SIA #CamerasDontLie #CorporateAccountability #PolicingByConsent
Повторяем попытку...
Доступные форматы для скачивания:
Скачать видео
-
Информация по загрузке: