After the fall of the LF government in 2011, Left parties disappeared from street-level agitations. As a CPI(M) politburo member lamented, they never expected the police to turn against them so quickly. Indeed, even though Mamata Ban-erjee’s Trinamool government withdrew recognition to police associations, the force remained docile. Initially, it tried to play by the rules: when troublemakers were detained in Calcutta’s Bhawanipore, Mamata herself rushed to the police station. In Magrahat, South 24 Parganas, people attacked the police when they tried to prevent the largescale, illegal ‘hooking’ (theft) of electricity. The police fired a few rounds to disperse the crowd. A furious Mamata suspended the SDPO. On Christmas 2011, a sexual assault on Park Street created an uproar. Mamata saw only a CPI(M) conspiracy and denied any assault. Damayanti Sen, the deputy commissioner, detective department, later confirmed rape. She was called before the CM, forced to tell a different version to the press and shunted out. Next, IAS officer Godala Kiran Kumar was arrested by Siliguri police commissioner K. Jayaraman, for his involvement in a Rs 200 crore scam from the Siliguri area development fund. Promptly, Godala was released and Jayaraman was removed. Mamata’s message was understood across the police force, and it started working as TMC henchmen. When CBI officers went to interrogate the then Calcutta police commissioner Rajiv Kumar at his official residence in connection with the Saradha Ponzi scam, the CM denied them entry. The same night, she started a sit-in protest, alleging interference by the Centre. In truth, local TMC leaders have replaced the CPI(M). In the past year, as the BJP has emerged as the principal opposition party in Bengal, its supporters find themselves on the wrong side of the police.