Stephen wrote:
Everyone seems to be missing the point, ...
Sorry, Stephen, but AFAICT
you are missing my point.
The rules
allow you
on suspicion that a vehicle is uninsured, to impound that vehicle and if the owner (
not the driver, and hence not the person who would be guilty of an offence) cannot prove to your (
not a court of law's) satisfaction that the car is insured, you (the police)
without requiring higher authority (such as a court of law) can have that car destroyed.
Again AFAICT,
if your suspicions are wrong, the owner is not entitled to compensation and, to add insult to injury, must pay to get his property back
even though it was morally wrongfully confiscated. There also exists the possibility that a blameless individual could be permanently deprived of his vehicle and would not be compensated for the morally wrongful penalty, that could amount to tens of thousands of pounds, levied upon him.
In addition, the confiscation of property amounts to
imposition of criminal penalty without due process in a court of law. At the very least, this is contrary to the spirit of the ECHR because
the penalty is imposed without fair trial.
It stinks.
Now this is not a personal attack against you, or indeed any member of your profession; it is an expression of my disgust at yet another poorly planned piece of legislation so typical of the present government. They see something that they want to address and then don the metaphorical blinkers and don't consider the side effects, which are often worse than what they wanted to cure in the first place.