On Wed Oct 06, 2010 07:00 malcolmw said
malcolmw wrote:
This has got to be incorrect interpretation of the situation by the reporter. AFAIK the Speedwatch has no legal force and a policeman with a calibrated device must have been drafted in to get the prosecutions.
On Wed Oct 06, 2010 07:31 Johnnytheboy said
Johnnytheboy wrote:
Correct, no legalforce. ...
I said on Tue Oct 19, 2010 at 21:52
greenshed wrote:
Incorrect; all that is required is 2 witnesses neither of whom need be a police officer.
And on Wed Oct 20, 2010 at 19:28 Gave that legal force as:
greenshed wrote:
statutelawdatabase wrote:
Road Traffic Regulation Act 1984 (c. 27)
Speeding offences generally.—
89.
(1) A person who drives a motor vehicle on a road at a speed exceeding a limit imposed by or under any enactment to which this section applies shall be guilty of an offence.
(2) A person prosecuted for such an offence shall not be liable to be convicted solely on the evidence of one witness to the effect that, in the opinion of the witness, the person prosecuted was driving the vehicle at a speed exceeding a specified limit.
On 23 September 2010 at 12:46 the BBC said
BBC wrote:
…Community Speed Watch (CSW) schemes were still monitoring and catching persistent speeders, the council said.
Most recently, three were fined in the village of Dauntsey near Malmesbury and given penalty points on their licences.
Still worthwhile
The CSW scheme, which is supported by Wiltshire Council and Wiltshire Police, trains residents to use hand-held devices to monitor the speed of vehicles in their local communities.
Five drivers in Dauntsey were monitored on three separate occasions exceeding the speed limit.
The vehicle details and movements were passed to Wiltshire Police.
The council said the fact that some people had been caught speeding using the CSW scheme showed it was still worthwhile despite the abolition of the Wiltshire Safety Camera Unit.
The legal force exists, it is in statute and prosecutions have resulted from the evidence of CSW volunteers. Of course you may not believe the BBC and Wiltshire police but now bring the evidence that their report is incorrect or the police have given them the wrong information and more importantly bring evidence from UK law that CSW have “no legal force” because that is what you have alleged and I have challenged.