AG百家乐在线官网

Eyewitness

How UK's elite police officers respond to terror attacks

Mark White was with the Met's Territorial Support Group when they received reports of a major incident.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Embedded with the police during the London Bridge attack
Why you can trust Sky News

They are front and centre of the fight against violent crime, but the Met's Territorial Support Group (TSG) is also a key unit in the response to terrorist incidents.

Sky News has been filming for several weeks with 3 area TSG, based in Romford, east London.

Little is ever routine with this elite unit, but today was meant to have been a day of anti-violence patrols in the east London borough of Tower Hamlets.

London Bridge: Heroism of passers-by who stopped 'attacker'
London Bridge: Heroism of passers-by who stopped 'attacker'

The unit's officers were preparing to head there when the call came through about a major incident unfolding on London Bridge.

As a convoy of TSG vehicles headed to the scene, regular updates were coming through the officers' radios, indicating events on London Bridge were extremely serious.

Reports of multiple people stabbed - that a suspect may have been shot - and that the danger was far from over.

Many of these TSG officers had responded to the last terrorist attack on London Bridge in 2017.

More on London Bridge Attack 2019

It was an unprecedented year of terrorist activity for them, with five attacks, including four in the capital.

Sergeant Simon Barrell, in charge of our unit, told me the initial reports are always confusing in the early stages of any major incident and that his officers had to be prepared for anything.

The unit were on the scene 20 minutes after the call
Image: The unit was on the scene 20 minutes after the call

These officers are well-trained in dealing with violent suspects and many wear Taser stun guns.

But as always with a marauding terrorist attacker, it is firearms officers who are the preferred teams to deal with such suspects.

Like the London Bridge attack in 2017, it was a City of London police armed response team who confronted and shot dead the attacker this time round.

:: Listen to the Daily podcast on , , ,

That unit was on scene within five minutes of the first emergency calls.

Battling through Friday afternoon traffic from the outer reaches of east London, it took TSG officers a little over 20 minutes to reach the scene.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Moment police fired at attacker

The TSG teams gathered on Eastcheap just yards from the north end of London Bridge, the spot where their armed colleagues had confronted and shot the terror suspect.

Although one attacker had been dealt with, officers didn't know how many others might still be at large.

Hundreds of other first responders continued to arrive from all directions.

Armed officers from the Met, City of London and British Transport Police secured the area, as a team of specialist counter terrorism firearms officers arrived.

They are the most highly trained Metropolitan Police armed units, the teams who push forward and confront the most dangerous of armed suspects.

Armed police at the scene
Image: Armed police at the scene

TSG officers assisted as the armed teams began a systematic search of nearby buildings to ensure they were clear of other suspects, before members of the public inside the buildings were led to safety.

It's a job these officers have trained for.

They've done it multiple times already.

No one we were with today believes it's the last time they'll be called into action.