Drug Squad
Drug Enforcement IntelligenceDescription
Event Involvements
Events with structured involvement data
The Drugs Squad is directly referenced by Catherine as the group excluding her from critical intelligence. Their covert operations and selective sharing of information are central to her frustration, as she feels shut out of higher-level decisions and strategies. The Squad’s actions symbolize the broader institutional barriers Catherine faces, reinforcing her sense of being sidelined and ineffective.
Through Catherine’s descriptions of their covert operations and exclusionary practices, as well as her venting about being kept in the dark.
Exercising authority over Catherine by controlling access to intelligence and higher-level operations, reinforcing their hierarchical superiority.
The Squad’s actions create resentment and frustration among frontline officers, potentially undermining collaboration and morale.
Tensions between the Drugs Squad’s need for secrecy and the frontline officers’ desire for transparency and inclusion in operations.
The Drugs Squad is invoked indirectly through Catherine’s bitter remark (‘First dabs, every time. I just tidy the streets, me.’), highlighting her marginalized role in the investigation. The squad’s exclusion of Catherine from critical intel reinforces their hierarchical control over drug enforcement, creating friction between patrol officers and higher-ups. This moment underscores the institutional barriers Catherine faces, fueling her resentment and obsession with Gascoigne—a figure who, despite his corruption, operates with impunity due to his connections.
Via institutional protocol (exclusion from critical intel) and Catherine’s resentful commentary.
Exercising authority over Catherine, limiting her access to information and marginalizing her role in the investigation.
Reinforces the tension between institutional protocols and individual officers’ desires for justice, highlighting the systemic barriers that hinder Catherine’s pursuit of Gascoigne.
Factional disagreement between patrol officers (like Catherine) and specialized squads (like the Drugs Squad), with the latter exerting control over information and operations.
The Drugs Squad is invoked indirectly through Clare’s question about handing Gascoigne over to them. Catherine’s defensive response ('Oh yeah. First dabs, every time. I just tidy the streets, me.') reveals her limited role in the investigation and her frustration with institutional hierarchies. The Drugs Squad represents the higher echelons of law enforcement that control critical intelligence and case outcomes, leaving Catherine to perform cleanup duties. Their involvement in Gascoigne’s case symbolizes the systemic barriers that prevent her from achieving meaningful justice, reinforcing her cynicism about the system’s fairness.
Via institutional protocol (Catherine’s obligation to hand over cases to the drug squad) and Catherine’s bitter acknowledgment of her limited role ('tidying the streets').
Exercising authority over Catherine and other patrol officers, limiting their agency in investigations. The drug squad’s control over Gascoigne’s case reinforces their hierarchical dominance, leaving Catherine to perform peripheral tasks.
Reinforces Catherine’s sense of powerlessness and the systemic barriers that prevent her from achieving justice. The drug squad’s involvement in Gascoigne’s case highlights how institutional priorities often prioritize image and control over accountability.
Tensions between patrol officers (e.g., Catherine) and specialized units (e.g., drug squad) over case ownership and investigative autonomy. The drug squad’s control over Gascoigne’s case may reflect internal debates about how to handle high-profile suspects—balancing public perception with legal rigor.