supertramp wrote:
It is indeed a gallant intention to "protect the ill lady", but if the quality of the controls is so poor, perhaps the "ill lady" is not really ill, and has dishonorable motives for serving an ASBO on the other party...
The problem is that ASBO law, in the early stages at least, is civil law with hearsay evidence admissible. So the court only have to decide which version of events is more likely to be true.
On the one hand you have the council officer who will have brought a list of alleged harassment episodes and evidence of the harm suffered by the injured party - usually a doctors letter confirming stress or depression.
On the other hand you have the proposed subject of the ASBO who says it wasn't her.
If it was a criminal case with the need for a beyond reasonable doubt verdict it would probably be fairly easy for the subject to provide the necesary doubt. In a balance of probabilties scenario, reasonable doubt does not work.
The court imposed an interim ASBO. Unlike a criminal case where there would be a punishment an ASBO is only intended to prevent further offending. As the subject wasn't doing any of the alleged activities it doesn't seem that this would be too much of a problem to obey.
In this case the subject was given adequate time by the court to obtain evidence to overturn the order. Which happened the first time the subject presented any evidence.
I am sure it was a nasty experience for her and should not have happened but when evidence - for either side in a case - is presented in the form of a list of events backed by evidence of illness as result of those activities and only countered by "I didn't do it" the result is pretty sure to go with the evidence.
Courts can't guess, they must go with the evidence. In this case it seems that the presenting officer for the council fully believed the evidnce he gave so there would be no chance of a court picking up signs of nervousness commonly associated with knowingly telling lies under oath.
supertramp wrote:
reckless and unjustified use of the ASBO (evan an interim one).
I have seen no suggestion that the granting of the ASBO was reckless, or in the light of the evidence presented, that it was unjustified.
supertramp wrote:
Sorry, fisherman, but this is too serious to be treated so inconsiderately by the legal profession.
As far as I can see the court went with the evidence on both occasions.