safedriver wrote:
a fairly heroic assumption given the known faults in the Lti 20-20
We had one of these brought to a hearing once. The bench, the CPS, the defence solicitor and the defendant all had a go and were unable to produce a faulty reading that wasn't accompanied by a fault code indication.
Of course we may be the only people who every got one to work properly.
safedriver wrote:
2. The 'dangerous driver gets off scot free' case would seem to have been well made by the paper that published it.
I disagree and I had access to all the information.
For a professional person to do 150 hours of hard physical work will be extremely demeaning. Having to confront his anger will not be easy, as the boss of his firm he is used to shouting and getting his own way. If he fails in any of it, off to jail he goes.
safedriver wrote:
I have seen bans given to youths without licences, and actually younger than the minimum age for driving ! - just what sort of punishment is this, I have to ask?
It gives a court custody as an option if they drive during the course of the ban, which is not available for driving without a licence.
safedriver wrote:
The fact is the scroats are laughing at us, and you can see this on the various TV programs on motoring crime. One sees really quite awful criminality and recklessness on display. It is clear they have no fear at all of being caught as the punishment always seems to be minimal compared to what is given for very minor offences.
For those of an age to appear in the Youth Court I am sure you are right. Youth courts are required to concentrate on the prevention of further offending and not punishment.
If they keep offending after they reach 18 their youth record and the failure to respond to previous sentences can see them in jail fairly quickly.
They also don't realise that with a substantial history of driving offences they are unlikely to get affordable insurance when they are of an age to drive.
safedriver wrote:
18 months in jail, or in other words, out in 9 months or less.
Given the current state of affairs out in much less I fear.
On the TV you see the bravado. In court when you look them in the eyes and say "this offence is so serious that only a custodial sentence will do" the bravado quickly disappears.