stevei wrote:
I would have no problem with them pulling me over if that is the price I have to pay for catching all the other drivers who register their vehicles to false addresses.
Except that, while that ANPR unit is busy dealing with your innocent reason for being on their database, how many other genuinely pull-worthy vehicles have they had to let go by? I don't have a problem with the police wanting to crack down on false addresses if they don't have anything else to do, but I do have a problem with any idea that has the potential to poison the ANPR database with false positives.
If we had sufficient resources to pull every untaxed/uninsured/unroadworthy vehicle and *still* be left with units to spare, then maybe adding registrations associated with offences where the police are after a driver rather than the vehicle itself might be fair enough, but when we still have a very real and quite serious problem with untaxed/licenced scrote-mobiles cluttering up the roads, we ought to be prioritising the resources we do have on getting them off the roads before worrying about drivers who might not even have committed an offence.
Quote:
If the driver at that time had nothing to do with the original offence, tough, they need to explain to the police who they are, and how they have come to have use of the vehicle, so the police can trace who should be prosecuted for the original offences
This sounds worryingly close to "guilty until proven innocent". The driver has commited no offence. The vehicle is road-legal. Why should they *need* to explain *anything*? I see your point-if tracing the RK is such a big deal, then any info the driver can provide may be useful-you just make it sound as if you're OK with the idea of treating everyone with suspicion unless they're able to verify their ID and provide a sufficiently plausible and confidently-delivered explanation to satisfy the officer who's carried out the pull, which they may not be able to achieve at the roadside...
...you wouldn't happen to also be in favour of mandatory carrying of ID cards, would you?
It's bad enough that the reliance on cameras, combined with politically-motivated reductions in limits, is causing decent and essentially law-abiding people to end up on the wrong side of the law, but if the flaws and loopholes in the camera enforcement system are then also responsible for causing genuinely law-abiding people to also end up being, even temporarily, treated as suspects, then isn't it time to take a big step back, a deep breath, count to 10 and re-assess the whole sorry mess before things get even worse?