WE'RE GUILTY OF SPEEDING UNTIL PROVEN INNOCENT
MCN INVESTIGATION, BY STEVE FARRELL, 6 December 2006
Camera partnership says it's up to us to prove we didn't break law - but we have to go to court to do it
SPEED camera authorities have told riders they don't need to show us any evidence to back up their accusations because we're all automatically guilty and it's up to us to prove we're innocent.
Riders who ask for speed camera photos to prove they weren't speeding are told they must go to court and risk a £2000 fine and double the points on their licence in order to see them.
Gatso photos can be used to verify speed by making a simple distance¬-over-time calculation. The distance travelled by the bike is determined by counting how many of the two¬-meter-apart lines it has crossed between the first and second photo, and that figure is then divided by the half-second interval between the two.
Last year MCN reader Bryn Carlyon was supplied with these pictures and MCN used them to prove he was innocent, saving him the ordeal of going to court. After our story, camera authorities around the country agreed photos would be issued on request as a matter of course.
But now camera authorities, including Staffordshire Casualty Reduction Partnership, have said they will only supply one of the two pictures - making the calculation impossible. Riders are told they must go to court to see the second photo because they are presumed guilty.
Carlyon said last week that he feared the policy could lead to innocent riders accepting fixed penalties for speeding because they fear stiffer penalties threatened by partnerships if they go to court. Asked why the second photo was not supplied when requested, Staffordshire Casualty Reduction Partnership spokeswoman Jeannie Hoddinott said last week: "The onus is on the driver of the vehicle to prove their innocence, not on the Partnership to prove guilt. Therefore if any driver is adamant that they were not doing the speed they were allegedly detected at, then they have the right to go to court and prove so."
She said the partnership didn't set court penalties but that "a driver can be fined up to £2000 and have six points placed on their licence." A driver or rider who accepted a speeding fixed penalty without going to court would only face three points and a £60 fine.
Carlyon, 48, from Mid-¬Glamorgan, said: "A lot of people won't go to court. They're afraid to go to court just in case they are wrong."
MCN reader Richard Brown, 53, from Worksop, Nottinghamshire, has requested both Gatso photographs of an alleged offence from the Staffordshire partnership and been refused. He said: "It's absolutely diabolical. It's disgusting. With that threat hanging over me I'm obviously going to take the easy option and accept the £60 tine and three points."
Hoddinott claimed the partnership was acting out of generosity by supplying just one photo. She said: "We are not obliged to send out any form of photography and we do so only out of courtesy, so the registered keeper can identify the driver of the vehicle. Some partnerships send out no photography at all. Therefore Staffordshire's approach to this is quite lenient."
A spokesman for West Midlands Camera Partnership said both photos were issued on request but that the road markings would be deliberately cropped out make the distance-over-time calculation impossible. He said: "They send you them both but they're cropped down so it's just showing you and the vehicle." He added: "It's only for the purposes of identification."
Other partnerships said their normal response to a request for evidence would be to send one photo and that they would only send both if specifically asked.
If you have been sent one Gatso photograph by a camera partnership or told you can't have both, e-mail your details and a daytime phone number to
steve.farrell@emap.com`They're afraid to go to court, just in case they are wrong'
WRONGLY ACCUSED BIKER BRYN CARLYON