Gatsobait wrote:
In Gear wrote:
I see my role as apprehending people who constitute a danger to the public at large...
There goes your promotion prospects mate.

[sarcasm] The public at large are a danger to themselves and need constant nannying. [/sarcasm]
Still got promoted despite being a rebel

I'll pm the actual rank sometime...
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In Gear wrote:
I can see his point regarding
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But Sir Ian, addressing the annual conference of the Police Superintendents' Association, said it was unsatisfactory that a disqualified driver could be arrested and released, and immediately get back in a car. In such cases, officers should be able to seize the offender's vehicles.
I can understand his frustration but i can't see his point. We have prisons don't we?
Ah... but some are full and according to Nanny - we have now to make sure our crims are locked up within family visiting distance and allowed conjugal rights and so on....(OK - so I can sympathise with spouse and kids to some extent as they are also punished - not inhuman - but prison is supposed to punish in the main by depriving the criminal of such pleasures and privilege. )
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They're used to keep persistant offenders in as well as serious offenders, right? Yes, it is unsatisfactory that a disqualified driver can get nicked, released and drive again as soon as he's out of sight of the BiBs, but that car Ian Blair wants to seize, and presumably squash, without due process might be used by someone else in the family who would be unfairly deprived if it was taken away.
True. Why we tend to tow to the car pound here. If the car is viable and unclaimed - we put up for auction if we can. But normally - car's an unviable throwaway and all to easily replaced. Why this area should be tightened first. OK - so this may hurt low wage drivers who can only afford these - but case of insisting sale depends on production of documents, insurance which addresses both driver risk and vehicle value, and that cars are at least road worthy before sale.
I would rather they purchased a road worthy car than risk lives in a dodgy one. Owning a car is an expensive responsibilty regardless of income - and this repsonsiblity includes budgeting for the personal perk of personal mobilty. Afraid options here are limited.
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Besides which, the persistent offenders will all end up driving 50 quid throwaways (assuming they're not already

) and really won't give a toss if they're seized, like you said. The problem is that they still have opportunities to keep driving, and they will retain those opportunities as long as they keep being released regardless of how many cars Ian Blair takes away from them.
Another reason why these dodgy merchants should be targetted first. Remove these and we remove a significant part of the problem in my opinion. Sir Ian is clutching at straws here methinks ..
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Surely the solution is don't

ing release them. Like you said, remove the means for persistent offenders to carry on. Rather than Ian Blair wanting his officers to take over the roles of judge and jury I think he'd be better off pressing for custodial sentences for the real problem drivers. I'm not talking about a guy who drives a couple of weeks before his ban runs out because of an emergency - I'm talking about the type who gets given a lengthy ban in court and gets pulled by the BiBs three or four times over the next couple of months. If they drive badly enough to warrant a ban (and I know that not all bans are warranted, but that's another issue) and won't respect it then you have to ask why they keep getting released. I imagine it's pretty difficult to drive a car from the inside of the Scrubbs.
True. I think we need to weigh up the cost of imprisonment in the case of the truly dangerous with the cost of clearing up the accidents they cause.
As said previously - I do not think it right for police to act as judge and jury in any form of law enforcement. Our role is to apprehend the true threats to our public and provide the proof to convict and thus protect the public. Our society is one which has a reputation for equity, fairness, Justice and has never been a society which would support or accept a police state in any shape or form - and this has been the case since King John signed the Magna Carta.