See
http://www.eastriding.gov.uk/safetycame ... myths.html
This states:
Humberside safety camera partnership website wrote:
There is a legal requirement for a Police Officer to be involved in some stage of the speed enforcement process. Here in Humberside the Police Officers are based in the mobile enforcement vehicles because their role involves making a judgment on whether a vehicle is speeding and then activating the speed camera equipment to obtain the necessary evidence.
Q1. So does a mobile camera operator have to be a policeman?
Q2. What are the implications if they are not?
Q3. If a FPN has been sent out, and no Police have been involved, is this legally valid?
A quote from another thread (Inside out):
Quote
Anton wrote:
The makers of the lti20/20 cleverly designed it so it does not display car speeds that are complying.
In other words, the camera operator can freely check the speeds of
all cars, and there's no difference on the video between checking a speed of a vehicle below the limit and not checking the speed.
Q4. Is the statement above correct, or am I misinterpreting something - or has Anton got it wrong?
Q5. How many of you have known that you are driving within the speed limit, when a PC (Or other operator) with a speed detection device still checks your speed?
Q6. How would a conviction of, say, 32 mph in a 30 mph area stand? Surely, it would be up to the operator to be able to tell consistently the difference between a vehicle travelling at 30 mph and 32 mph without a camera. I know this speed is below the recommended limit in the ACPO guidelines, but there have been prosecutions this close to the speed limit.
I do believe that speed cameras are
so completely relied upon to be accurate, that camera operators regularly abuse the 'prior opinion' checks, and simply check every single vehicle. Come to think of it, I can't remember a single occasion when I have been able to see a PC or camera operator (i.e. they weren't behind a closed window), when they have
not checked my speed. On one occasion I even remember being checked when I was doing 20 mph in a 30 mph limit.
If they did this regularly, then the issues raised in the inside out program would not be as pertinent as they are. If the speed was checked only when the operator believed that the vehicle was going to fast, the device would only be confirmatory, and vehicles travelling below the speed limit would not suffer from being unfairly prosecuted. The only remaining issues would be that someone driving at, say 40 mph in a 30 mph limit, might be prosecuted for 50 mph due to instrument error. Of course, all camera operators should say to themselves - "This vehicle can't possibly be travelling
that fast. I'd better note this one down as an error, and we won't prosecute."
