You're a twisty one GS and no mistake. Lets go ahead and break this down before the thread gets too much longer, and your slithering is lost in the background noise of all the calls for you to answer questions that you have avoided, yet again.
The original post contained a quote in which "the council" alluded to people caught by a CSW programme having been punished by way of fixed penalty.
It was asserted that the word of CSW operatives carried no legal force. (Obviously meaning no legal force above that of any member of the public giving testimony.)
You claimed this to be incorrect, and stated that all that is required for a speeding conviction is the testimony of two lay people.
Now it is perfectly possible that someone at the enforcement unit got it wrong, and sent out NIPs based on the evidence of CSW; come on, its not like it'd be the first howler made by the speed camera regime! Its equally feasible that the recipients accepted these as having been correctly issued, completed them, and were issued with fines and penalty points, again, this wouldn't be the first miscarriage of justice via this procedure.
Its interesting that you specifically took care to bold the assertion that CSW held no legal force and claimed it to be incorrect:
GreenShed wrote:
Johnnytheboy wrote:
Correct, no legalforce.
No announcement yet on when the SCP is closing down...
Incorrect; all that is required is 2 witnesses neither of whom need be a police officer.
You were immediately then asked for a real world example of this happening by PeterE, a request which has since gone without adequate response, you merely pointed back to the detail-less BBC news report in the OP, but certainly the first request for substantiation, thus putting the lie to your assertion that "you asked first".
Here's the thing, two people could be utterly convinced that the way their cat meowed at the neighbor this one time meant that he was a persistent speeder. A case
could be brought against the neighbor on the basis of their testimony, however their word would carry no legal force (above and beyond the word of people randomly claiming stuff, if you want to plead semantics) and the case would no doubt fail. It is the CPS's job to consider cases not only on their merits in terms of public interests and the interests of justice, but also on their likelihood of success, so this case would be unlikely to ever be brought.
I put it to you that this is little different to your assertion that only two lay people's words are required to secure a conviction for speeding. Its technically possible that a case could be brought on this basis, but their words would have no legal force, and the case would seem doomed to fail.
It appears you have made the mistake that many who are not conversant with the law do, which is to mistake statute and law; just because something can be manipulated to seem to fall within the wording of statute does not make it legal. Statute does not become law until enacted by the courts, it is for them to deduce it's meaning in any specific case, and therefore, giving you one last chance to come good on your twisting and turning, I will slightly modify and restate my earlier question, which has so far gone unanswered:
Greenshed, can you or can you not provide either caselaw, or such sufficiently tightly worded statute that a court would be bound to accept it, that substantiates your claim that the word of two lay-people would be sufficient to secure a conviction for the strict-liability offence of speeding?If not then all we have is your unfounded opinion as a lay-person that it would be sufficient, and we have seen how keen you are to deride unfounded opinion. It would seem rather hypocritical of you to do so while offering one of your own, but I don't think anyone here is under the misconception that you are above hypocrisy.