Stephen Nolan has spoken out about the eye-opening experience as he spent two years filming with the PSNI for a new BBC docuseries, titled Peelers: The PSNI for Real
A BBC radio and television presenter has revealed what he learnt after spending two years filming alongside police officers.
Northern Irish broadcaster Stephen Nolan aims to expose the reality behind one of the most challenging occupations, having dedicated two years to filming with a squad of seven Police Service of Northern Ireland officers while being granted extraordinary access.
He observed 999 emergency calls being received and officers rushing to crime scenes, including a tense confrontation involving an irate mob and a sex offender at his residence in east Belfast.
This was all captured for a new BBC documentary series, entitled Peelers: The PSNI for Real. The description promises: “Unfiltered and up close. The realities and challenges of 24/7 policing in Belfast. Stephen Nolan gets a powerful insight into law and order on the front line.”
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Speaking on BBC Breakfast on Tuesday, April 28, Stephen discussed the challenges he encountered as he accompanied police during the revealing experience, reports the Mirror.
A preview displayed the fraught moments Stephen experienced with officers in a vehicle with its sirens blaring, speeding towards a crime scene.
“I’m terrified in the middle of this volatile environment, and yet these young officers are calm,” Stephen remarks in the documentary series.
Following the viewing of the footage, he contemplated on BBC Breakfast: “I didn’t realise they worked so hard, I knew they worked hard but my goodness, they’re out for long, long shifts.
“And of course, this is the backdrop in Northern Ireland, the police station has just been bombed over the weekend and they’re under threat.
“The work that these people do, I am impartial, but I wouldn’t be doing my job if I didn’t say it’s incredible what they do.”
He continued: “What struck me was you’ve got relatively young officers making split second decisions every day of the week, and we know how big organisations work.
“Sometimes, executives take a month to make one decision and they’ve got a whole group of people around them, and these are officers everyday, and the accountability in Northern Ireland, the scrutiny in Northern Ireland is absolutely huge.
“I wanted to tell the real story of what they do, because I’m one of the guys in Northern Ireland who does give the police a hard time, I do ask questions a lot and I’ll continue to do that, but I think if we’re being fair we need to tell the whole story about them.”
Stephen highlighted the particular difficulties faced by the PSNI, set against the legacy of The Troubles in Northern Ireland and a deeply-rooted mistrust of policing in the region.
Nevertheless, alongside some of the more “intense” moments, Stephen also shed light on the touching camaraderie shared amongst the officers.
He explained: “One of the things I also learnt, when these guys are in really tricky situations, what gets them through it is the bond with each other, and when you see the banter they have, it’s the police family, and they talk about it a lot. They trust each other and they need to.”
He continued: “It’s just incredible the thinking but also the danger that they can be in at any stage.”
In a previous piece for the BBC, Stephen reflected on the eye-opening experience he encountered, drawing parallels to BBC drama Blue Lights.
He noted: “The police officers face split-second decisions that could mean the difference between de-escalation or things getting dangerously out of control.
“It’s the kind of dilemma that could come up on the award-winning cop drama Blue Lights.
“But this is real life, and my heart is pounding. I’ve been working for the BBC for more than 20 years, but it is nights like this that have had the most profound effect on me in all my years in journalism.”
BBC Breakfast airs weekdays from 6am on BBC One and iPlayer. Peelers: The PSNI for Real is available to watch on iPlayer.

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