Can i illustrate the difference between law and policy?
An officer in cambs police was threatened with prosecution after he had a crash, exceeding the speed limit (30mph i think). He was not a trained police driver, a new recruit in a marked car. He was hung out to dry, but the Police Federation rightly pointed out that he had a defence in law to his actions, effectively "police driver self defence". All they could do was shout at him a lot under police internal policy, in that the chief decided untrained drivers cannot use lawful speed exemption. PC Milton automatically has the law on his side as he was on duty. It is for a jury to now decide whether or not he was correct in his use of that law.
I think there is no problem with PC Miltons driving, only the actions now taken against him/it. His Force support hisactions behind the scenes, until it reaches public disquiet. The day after recieving the Vectra GSI he couldhave been in it on a pursuit of a stolen porsche 159mph, which is more dangerous than driving alone.
The head lights issue, yes i meant dipped beam. I would say that 95% of drivers do not routinely use main beam at night.
80 in a 30. What sort of 30? There is a stretch of A1 in north london signed as 50, more suited to 120mph than the A1 Southoe bends. In grimsby, a section of the DCW is signed a 30 despite being better fenced in than most of the A1. 100 in that 30 is perfectly safe in my opinion.
Poor form of me to forget about Pepys, i take that with a reddened face

.
To usea scuba diving term, visibility is the distance you can recognise your buddy underwater. In driving i would say on a clear day visibility is measured in 100's of metres or more. At night, visibility extends to the limit of your headlamps and no further. On a dark road, travelling at 6omph nad stunned by oncoming traffic, how many people really actualy slow and near stop, there limit of visibility all but removed? Id say no-one i know. At night, with MB on, vis would be in my car about 150metres. this would equate to nearly 500 feet, and within the stopping distance of 100mph. To use the term again, The Road is Seen to be Clear - not within effective headlight range. If ambient lighting illuminates the road 1/3 mile away, but headlights do not, the trained police driver will act on that and drive accordingly, maybe reducing or increasing speed.
The other point of general discussion is that of speeding. You must be convicted of a speeding offence, in doing so the alleged illegal speed must be presented in evidence. No speed, no evidence of offence, thank you your worship. A police driver is allwoed to break the speed limit. There is no legal stipulation by how much and there never will be. If he thought he was able to speed, he can do so legally. there is no discussion on the matter of his attained speed. 31mph in a 30 or 150 in a 70, it is still speeding. He was testing the car as taught so at any speed he is innocent. they cannot say that he is guilty of speeding because 150 is too high, but 80 is acceptable. One speed, all speeds. When i decide to speed, it is either flat out or not at all. My power allows me, the risks and outcomes will be mine too. If you think you can speed at 38mph in a town centre, it is the same law being broken as doing 150mph on a DC/W or M/W.
I genuinely feel that the idiot who reported him was after some form of promotional credit as we call it, and didnt expect it to get this far. now the CPS is committed to it they cannot be seen to drop it, so round goes the handle, lots of government/police management handwringing, press releases like confetti, people will shout about hipocracy, Igor at the Home Office will grunt a little and everyone back to work on monday, embarrassed and trying to avoid the subject.
I have, and am on the recievign end of this kind of action. It happens every day.
LP