Flying Dodo wrote:
In that situation though, if there could only be a husband or wife who might have been driving the car, whilst I agree the police have a duty to try and prove who was driving, if you keep quiet and refuse to say, isn't that trying to pervert the course of justice?
In cases where one person uses the car to drive to work every day, and the car has been caught exceeding the speed limit the way to work, I don't have much sympathy with someone refusing to say who was driving.
I/ve interviewed umpteen "suspected" criminals in the past with a solicitor present and just getting "NO COMMENT"
Basically though - all this means is that we have to ensure that all evidence we supply to the CPS for prosecute the case properly has to be 100% accurate.
Our job then is to prove the person did whatever we suspect very strongly he or she did.
We can do this with the video evidence - but photos of a headrest can be a bit difficult if the person claims he was elsewhere at the time or whatever claims made.

But there may be reasons for his being elsewhere that he may not wish to disclose if he was perhaps "throwing a sicky"

and exchanging one pile of poop for another
Now the problem we have with the speed cam paperwork as it stands is trying to get the person you suspect was driving to actually own up. Some people may feel a bit like "Judas" if they name their spouse/child on these forms. I do not think an employer necessarily has the same feeling.
The other problem faced though is if no record kept as to who drove the car in question and the RK is then forced to admit to a crime he did not commit to avoid a harsher penalty. That seems to me to be the nub of some of these problems. At least in this area - our " two noughty"

drivers have no escape. We cop 'em red handedly "at it" and I am pleased to say most you cop in person accept a "fair cop and advice as to how not to attract us to their driving in the future

) We are even more draconian in urban settings though
The other problem as well seems to lie in a "lottery" as not all those cams are "live" with a cam actually mounted in them. To a great many - this also undermines justice in their eyes - especially if they were pinged at 35 mph whilst others pass the cam on the other side of the road with no "live" cam or even out of film at 40 mph.
The whole issue of enforce by automation, then, needs a serious rethink. Lancs have gone down a fairer route by widening the criteria for the speed course and warning the lower blippers by letter.
An FOI of their speed course/warninletter data as to re-offends would appear to reflect very positively on their revised stance. Only time will tell if the DIS/Speed Awares are working and perhaps they are playing part in the marginal annual improvements nationwide. Our problem seems to be more in our ability to cross a road safely - and I-Pods/Mobile phone engrossment whilst on foot seem to be part of this increased collision between pedestrians and cars and even pedestrians and cyclists.
Current campaigns are set to target with a view to increasing public awareness to this particular phenomenum - aimed at all road users however they travel
These issues, along with our experience that folk will slow for a cam and then just drive at speed thereafter, were part of the criteria which our last guv took into full consideration when he weighed up the pros and cons. There were a lot of other issues which also formed his decision not to go the "partnership route" but to equip his RPU with the right training, fleet and equipment to do the job of enforcing traffic laws fairly, squarely and without alienating the public too much. Sure - drivers in this area are not too pleased when we nick 'em and we have complaints from speedy staff going to and from their work on a certain C road where our van "plays cat and mouse"

But.. the road in question? Twisty, nasty and dangerous at speed above lolly. It took time, but we got the average speed down as pennies dropped that we were deadly serious about reducing our time spent clearing up prangs on that road

We still monitor and overall we are prosecuting less on that road
