Claire

A truly excellent response!
SafeSpeedv2 wrote:
chunky123 wrote:
He would have stood in the witness stand and said his ban would have created hardship for others. Is that not what pepioo and safespeed recommend?
What makes you say that ? Safe Speed is for taking responsibility for your driving.
You will have to ask Pepipoo what they think of this themselves, I cannot answer for them.
We are not legally qualified so never place recommendations to anyone.
His position give him prominence which he appears to have not taken seriously.
His number of points might imply great concern.
I endorse this commetn 100%
Of course it causes grate concern. This guy fronts a main and nationally acclaimed training supplier. BSM has a decent reptutation which he has brought into disrepute. It is akin to Merry Hughes' transgression (arguably on a safe road in safe circumstances - but still a huge embarrassment and compromising detriment to his position at the time) and he had the moral and professionally ethical decency to stand down from his post as the Road Safety chap within ACPO at the time.
"safespeedv2 wrote:
Safe Speed is very concerned that the wrong road safety messages are not able to get through because the wrong emphasis on 'a numeric value' is over-riding them. So import road safety fundamentals are not being encouraged that lead to safe driving, and try to ensure that people always choose a safe and appropriate speed for the conditions (that is one that enables you to stop in the distance that you can see to be clear).
To be devil's advocate and quote the much spouted grumble from a multitude of folk out there
much used opinion by umpteen members of the public out there wrote:
- he may have been on an empty road when he drove over 50 mph..
but as the boss of a driving school - | would expect him to obey the lolly sign or at least see a big yellow thing with tell-tale road markings. I would also expect him to be able to state who was driving the car at the time in all reality
safespeedvs wrote:
chunky123 wrote:
The magistrates have chosen to believe him.
It is good to have a justice system that enables us all to have a fair trial. However it is becoming ever more so that the more money that you can spend on legal representation, the more you are likely to 'walk free' as it were. This system is at fault, and ALL people need to have a properly conducted & fair trial. But more people find themselves acting for themselves with no legal training at all, this is unfair. The Gov want the defendant to start paying too even if they win! This erosion of decent and good moral values is appalling.
Nick Freeman and his ilk .. cost a lot of cash. The precendents they set though - should be available to all and used by all unless superseded by a higher court

Note .. police only enforce a law and provide evidence to CPS. Police officers are not lawyers and their evidence and system are evaluated/appraised/even judged by the courts

A policeman's lot ain't such a happy one at times

But I fully understand what you are saying and concede a point well made

Justice rather demands an equal footing for all.
safespeedv2 wrote:
The system then from 'above' downwards, also needs proper laws and guidance, whist it has been in place, generally, it is in danger of having State organised roaming magistrates, that 'advise' juries, (!) and this is really big problem, that will more or less end the 12 peer panel acting for themselves.
The Government Policies concentrate too much on speed fines, that make magistrates have no alternative, but to issue fines and penalties, yet the accident stats change little, and trends do not reduce at all, or with any significance.
If we are to reduce accidents then we need better drivers, and the government is failing in this task.
Yep..we need better training. Unfortunately, the boss of the main training establishment has proven that
1. speed cams do not deter bad habits
2. accumulation of penalty points without any corrective training does not improve matters
3. Complacent attitudes result - especially amongst those who can afford legal "smooth talkers" to be very cynical for once.
I doubt if chunky123 or Greenshed can suggest any realistic solution. Mine has been try to educate .. punish as last resort - but to keep a learning rubric within the FPN by way of acid lecture by our staff out there on the hard face. Sure .. if you do an FOI on this patch - you'll find we have a high statistic on inconsiderate/careless/dangerous charges but a fairly low return on speeding raps when compared and contrasted with other areas. AN FOI on stats reveale we crush more uninsured heaps than elsewhere... and have a more than decent record on road safety percentagewise n KSO figures. We would rather this stat be zero .. but that's sadly a bit of a pipedream given human nature as we all know it. Heck . I am a realist. I do not deceive myself as to human faults - and am aware of my own .. and try to correct them.
I guess the difference between me and Steve Greenshed (or chunky

) (and we want the same result - ROAD SAFETY FOR ALL ) us that our patch accepts folk make mistakes and we try to correct them whereas a speed cam cult cannot do so with the same immediate impact - as it's a bit too remote from the situation.
I am not saying we are omnipresent .. but nor are fixed or mobile cameras

We monitor known hot spots ... after all

in our cosy van and equally cosy stealth and marked-mobiles
