Safe Speed issued the following PR (supporting and extending the Times article) at 02:53 today.
PR236: ACPO aims to plug one speed enforcement blunder
News: for immediate release
The Times newspaper today reveals that ACPO plans to introduce new rules
concerning the distance at which mobile speed camera van may operate. This
results from concerns that operators may not be following the law which states
that speed measurement apparatus may only be used to confirm a constable's
prior opinion that a vehicle is exceeding a speed limit.
Laser speed meters (As used in mobile speed trap vans can measure speeds at
distances of up to 1,000m (and more in some cases), but it is very unlikely
that the operator could make the legally required judgement when a target
vehicle is more than 1KM (5/8th mile) away.
Safe Speed has heard from very many motorists who have been prosecuted in
circumstances where there was little or no opportunity for the operator to
form a prior opinion of speed. In our opinion this abuse of the legal process
is likely to be widespread and is highly indicative of the slipshod way in
which greedy camera partnerships operate.
Our knowledge from talking to motorists together with the news from ACPO
suggests that many recent convictions have not been carried out in proper
accordance with the law. Motorists may be entitled to have their cases
reopened.
Paul Smith, founder of the Safe Speed road safety campaign
(
www.safespeed.org.uk) said: "Partnership speed enforcement is running on
little more than bluff, threat and public gullibility. When motorists take the
time to investigate the case against them in detail, it's far from unusual to
find a fatal flaw."
"The biggest flaw of all is that the resources simply don't exist to prosecute
motorists in court - the system entirely depends on motorists paying a fixed
penalty notice without a fight. With large scale errors being reported in the
news every few weeks I would urge all motorists to test and examine the
evidence against them in very fine detail. Call their bluff. Ignore their
threats. And show that you're not gullible."
Basic Checklist:
* The speed limit must be correctly signed in accordance wit the regulations
(Folly Bottom, Wylye, North Wales)
* A speed limit order must apply correctly to the location in question.
(Lincolnshire, London)
* The paperwork must be correct and in accordance with all laws and
regulations. (Dorset)
* The paperwork must be delivered on time
* The Notice of Intended Prosecution (NIP) cannot be served by second class
post. (South Wales)
* The equipment must be calibrated correctly.
* The operator must use the equipment in accordance with rules and guidelines.
* The operator must form a prior opinion of speed in excess of a speed limit.
* Arguably only a Police constable is qualified to for a prior opinion of
speed
in excess of a posted speed limit.
* Communications equipment must be switched off while measurements of speed
are taken (including the operator's mobile phone).
* The site must be suitable (restrictions include near power lines)
* The equipment must be working properly.
* Evidence must be disclosed to the defence 7 days before the trial on request
or it becomes inadmissible.
* If you don't know who the driver was at the time of the alleged offence you
may well have a statutory defence in RTOA1988 S172(4) as amended
* The court must be impartial (And since the Magistrate's Court Service are
usually a camera partnership member it is far from clear that the court has
the required degree of impartiality.)
* The process must not breach your Human Rights (A 'right to silence' case is
ongoing to be heard in 2006 in Strasbourg.)
* In the case of Gatso fixed speed cameras the transit of the calibration
marks in the two photographs must match the speed recorded by the radar speed
meter.
* The prosecution must turn up in court with the correct paperwork.
* Witness statements cannot be signed by machine. (North Wales)
<ends>