Oh, right. I just happened to stumble upon the only instance of this ever happening in London and by chance, someone was filming it.
Someone was filming it because it was a Rolls-Royce Phantom. It just so happened that he caught the Rolls being parked in a careless manner. I fail to see how you finding this video means this kind of parking is common place in London. Also, what is your experience of London? How often have you been? How can you possibly pass judgement? I'm speaking from experience, being British, and knowing that this kind of behaviour would certainly raise a few eyebrows.
That's the only time the police get involved? BS! I've gotten plenty of speeding tickets in my lifetime (when no other cars were even around) to raise legitimate question as to who it is that's being a complete fool. You're seriously telling me municipalities ONLY get involved in redlight running infractions when someone gets hurt? Jesus, which sewer did you pull that one out of? I've been in cars where the driver was cited/fined for failing to come to a complete stop or failing to wear a seatbelt; at no point was anyone injured or any cars damaged.
Are you actually READING my posts?! When referring to "police getting involved" I was quite clearly talking about when damage to property has occured! Why do you keep bringing running red lights and speeding up?
OK. Let me break it down for you so it's simple for you to understand.
Running red lights, speeding etc. This is a road traffic offence and is therefore subject to on the spot fines or whatever the process the police have in their powers, be that a court case if the offence is deemed serious enough. In a lot of countries, offences like this carry fines which is a revenue source, and because of this the process of prosecution is made as simple as possible in order to deal with the thousands of offences which occur on a weekly basis. Certain people, such as police officers, are given powers to give on the spot fines in order to speed this process up futher.
When damage to property has occured, depending on the circumstances, this is a civil offence, and therefore the police will often not get involved. An example of this would be damaging somebody else's car whilst parking, or a minor road traffic accident. The reason the police will not get involved is because this is not in the public's interest and they do not have the resources. It DOES NOT, however, mean an offence has not been committed. It just means that unless it goes to court in a private prosecution, there will be no redress.
Police WILL get involved in road traffic accidents when one of the parties drives away without exchanging insurance details, or one or all of the drivers are suspected of being intoxicated, or somebody has been injured or killed. This then becomes subject to a police investigation and if enough evidence is gathered, a public prosecution.
Now, if I had enough evidence, and a big enough bank balance, I could take somebody to a private prosecution if I suspected them of damaging my car due to negligence when parking. The judge would not throw this out of court by saying "but you live in New York. Everybody does this". An offence has been committed and they will have to pay. If I took somebody to court because somebody looked at me the wrong way whilst walking down the street (also a risk in New York), no matter how much money I had, the judge would throw this out of court immediately because no offence has taken place.
Is this simple enough for you to understand?