British Sprinter Accuses London Police of Racial Profiling

British Sprinter Accuses London Police of Racial Profiling
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British Sprinter Accuses London Police of Racial Profiling

British Sprinter Accuses London Police of Racial Profiling

British sprinter Bianca Williams and her partner have accused London police of racial profiling after officers stopped and searched the couple's car, with their 3-month-old son inside.

Williams and Ricardo dos Santos, a Portuguese sprinter, are both Black and were stopped in their Mercedes on Saturday afternoon. The 26-year-old Williams said Metropolitan Police "put out a fabricated report" about driving on the wrong side of the road.

"Time for change and for actions to have consequences," Williams wrote Sunday on her Instagram account. "Still incredibly hurt and shaken by my ordeal yesterday."

"They say the uk isn´t racist," Williams wrote in a Twitter post that linked to her response in The Times newspaper.

Williams, a sprint relay gold medalist at the 2018 Commonwealth Games and 2018 European Championship, told the newspaper that "it's always the same thing" and that dos Santos has been pulled over many times.

"The way they spoke to Ricardo, like he was scum, dirt on their shoe, was shocking. It was awful to watch," Williams said.

Video of the incident has circulated on social media. A woman, who appeared to be recording the incident, says "he didn't do anything" as the man exits the car. She is then pulled from the back seat. A female officer is heard saying they plan to search the car for weapons.

Williams told The Times that they plan to meet with a lawyer on Monday to consider legal action against the police.

The video was posted by British Olympic gold medalist Linford Christie, who is training both Williams and the 25-year-old dos Santos for next year's Tokyo Olympics.

"Racist police aren't just in America," the 60-year-old Christie wrote on Twitter.

In a separate post, he added: "Was it the car that was suspicious or the black family in it."

Williams also posted the video to her Instagram account.

Metropolitan Police issued a statement that said nothing illegal was found and that no arrests were made. They said the stop was made because the car was "driving suspiciously, including driving on the wrong side of the road" and because the driver sped off when directed to stop.

Officers from the Directorate of Professional Standards reviewed footage from social media and the officers' body cameras.

"We are satisfied that there are no misconduct issues," Commander Helen Harper said. "The officers were deployed to a high violence area of London and (because) the manner of the driving raised suspicion, it is only right that they act on it.

"We are open to discussing the incident with the individuals involved if they wish to do so," Harper added.



Marquinhos Asks Brazil Fans to Keep the Faith

Brazil's player Marquinhos gestures during a press conference following a training of the Brazil national football team at the Manuel Barradas stadium in Salvador, Bahia State, Brazil, on November 17, 2024, ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup qualifier football match against Uruguay. (AFP)
Brazil's player Marquinhos gestures during a press conference following a training of the Brazil national football team at the Manuel Barradas stadium in Salvador, Bahia State, Brazil, on November 17, 2024, ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup qualifier football match against Uruguay. (AFP)
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Marquinhos Asks Brazil Fans to Keep the Faith

Brazil's player Marquinhos gestures during a press conference following a training of the Brazil national football team at the Manuel Barradas stadium in Salvador, Bahia State, Brazil, on November 17, 2024, ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup qualifier football match against Uruguay. (AFP)
Brazil's player Marquinhos gestures during a press conference following a training of the Brazil national football team at the Manuel Barradas stadium in Salvador, Bahia State, Brazil, on November 17, 2024, ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup qualifier football match against Uruguay. (AFP)

Five-times World Cup winners Brazil have struggled to impress in South America's qualifiers for the 2026 tournament but defender Marquinhos had called on fans to stick by the side ahead of Tuesday's home game against Uruguay.

With a run of five wins, four losses and two draws, Brazil are fourth in the standings on 17 points, five behind leaders Argentina, with the top six qualifying automatically for the World Cup in North America. Uruguay are second on 19 points.

Brazil were held 1-1 in Venezuela on Thursday, with Vinicius Jr seeing a late penalty saved, and stand-in skipper Marquinhos said the players still took pride in playing for the shirt even when results did not go their way.

"Even though many things might cause people to lose hope in the national team, we ask that they never lose their passion for it," the 30-year-old told a news conference on Sunday.

Brazil, who were beaten by Uruguay in Montevideo last year, are in a transitional phase under head coach Dorival Junior and it will take some time to iron out the problems, he added.

"We will still make some mistakes because this transition is still very new, with all these changes of players and teams," said Marquinhos, who deputizes for regular captain Danilo.

"But we will make fewer and fewer mistakes and that makes us happy.

"We don't worry too much about the standings as long as we're in a comfortable position. We want to win to move up the table, make the work flow better, and gain confidence."

Brazil go into Tuesday's match without a host of top players with defender Eder Militao and forwards Neymar and Rodrygo among those sidelined due to injury.