toonbarmy wrote:
MrsMiggins wrote:
make speeding caught by camera fine only, paid by the RK.
what would happen for minor non injury accidents,
What's that got to do with speeding?
I agree with MrsMiggins - if s172 were repealed then speeding could simply be made into a minor civil offence, for which the vehicle keeper were responsible. Of course if it were de-crimininalised in this way it would no longer be possible to endorse licences for it, as there would no longer be any admissible evidence of who the driver was.
In a way this would be pretty apt, as it would show camera-detected speeding up for the pure revenue collecting scheme that it really is, just like decriminalised parking. It would be great for the cash-camera partnerships who would be able to collect much more money from drivers as they would no longer be at risk of being banned once they'd been nabbed four consecutive times.
They would of course have to stop bleating about trying to make the roads safer, but seeing as no-one believes them any more that wouldn't be a big deal would it - they'd just be seen as another branch of revenue collectors like parking wardens.
Of course "proper" motoring offences would be unaffected, that is to say any motoring offences detected by a policeman who stops the driver at the time, as here there is no need for s172 and/or any form of enforced self-incrimination. This would eventually lead to the beneficial situation where points on licences would have a much stronger correlation to bad driving, something which is being steadily eroded under the present regime.
So from all angles there are a number of positives should the ECHR uphold this appeal. However the two huge imponderables in that case are:
1. How many fines would they have to reimburse for drivers caught in the past, and how much compensation would they have to pay out to people who have consequently been wrongly banned, lost jobs etc.?
(Or would this not be such a big deal? Would it only affect cases where drivers had pleaded Not Guilty and fought the case in court?)
2. This could actually lead to a dangerous proliferation of speed cameras. Time and again we hear drivers say they don't mind the fines, they just don't want the points on their licences. There is clearly a danger that if points were no longer dished out for camera offences then opposition to cameras might actually decrease, leading to yet more of the bloody things along with all the associated negative side-effects.
Or will the ECHR fudge it, and give our Government a handy little rabbit hole to disappear into, and retain the status quo?
It pains me to say it, but I'd rate it about 80% probability of the latter...
