eyeopener wrote:
It appears that they accept the word of one group based on questionable evidence and process that may be ignored. I cannot say is ignored because I have not seen proof of them setting their cameras etc up correctly or not but there is enough evidence to raise doubts that they do not always tell the truth or act honourably.
I am not having a personal go at you but those two sentences illustrate the problem very well.
You say
Quote:
It appears that they accept the word of one group based on questionable evidence
You also say
Quote:
I cannot say is ignored because I have not seen proof
And therein lies the problem, you have no proof but you still think it happens. Courts can't guess, we must have proof from the CPS or reasonable doubt from the other. In general, a statement that "I wasn't speeding" is not enough. It needs some sort of support to give credence to it.
eyeopener wrote:
Also my opinion is that the magistrates should raise questions themselves if they want information or if they know that an injustice may be done.
Two points there. We are not allowed to ask questions except to clarify what has already been said. We must not go looking for new evidence. To change that would probably need the whole justice system to go over to the french method of inquisitorial justice - which may well happen anyway as we gradually give up all our freedoms to Europe.
The second point raises the subject of "the interests of justice". I asked a question recently as I thought that there may have been something very unfair to the defendant going on. This produced new information about another offence to which he had already pleaded guilty ( but not been sentenced as it had happened on the same occasion as the offence for which he was on trial.) Result? trial abandoned to be reheard before a different bench with all the attendant hassle for the defendant. I think I did the right thing, the defendant doesn't. I suspect he will tell his friends about the JP who messed up, convienently omitting to mention I did it to help him.
eyeopener wrote:
Also for many the costs of legal representation is beyond their means and again, I may be wrong, but I am sure you cannot get legal aid to assist in fighting these cases.
For once we are in agreement. Legal aid has all but disappeared and many are seriuously disadvantaged by the fact. The legal profession and the judiciary (at all levels) are unhappy about this but the government won't listen. They know they can pitch it as saving tax payers money which will get them votes.
eyeopener wrote:
However, what I find most abhorrent in this is the fact that people seem to think that a speed sign stating 30mph or whatever is a safe speed and that you should not exceed this.
I take the view that a democratically elected government has the right to pass whatever laws it wants, knowing that if the law is wrong in the eyes of enough people they will lose the next election. As I am sure you are aware automated speed enforcement didn't figure nationally at all at the last election. There are signs that we may have an election fairly soon. I wish you luck in acheiveing a higher profile this time.
eyeopener wrote:
As magistrates you are a homogenous group who if you felt that the system was wrongly administered are a strong enough group to change it.
As individuals and as a group we lobby about many aspects of law. As there are only 30,000 of us, widely scattered through England and Wales we have very little power.
eyeopener wrote:
I say well done to the Magistrate who reecently resigned because he was disgusted with the process, I think, anyone remember this? It was not the guy who walked out over the woman and the veil.
i know about the one over the veiled witness, who didn't actually resign. I don't know the other one you refer to.