fisherman wrote:
JT wrote:
What I find really strange about all of this is that it seems to imply that our Police forces and camera partnership are using a device to prosecute tens of thousands of motorists every year, yet there is no-one in the country capable of demonstrating beyond reasonable doubt to a court that it works properly.
I would prefer to say that the CPS are taking the defendant seriously.
Quote:
Indeed I wouldn't be surprised to hear that hints had been dropped to the defendant about the costs they were racking up
Would you prefer they did not inform the defendant of the financial situation?
I can just imagine the fuss if they had stuck him with a bill for £25,000. You would have been the first to complain and say that he wasn't given the chance to drop out before the bill got so big.
I accept the logic behind what you say, and agree that we clearly seem to be putting two different perceptions on the intention behind what has gone on here.
In these sort of situations I often find it is useful to apply the test of "which seems most likely?". So in this instance is it most likely that:
(a) In response to an appeal over a relatively minor charge of speeding, the CPS have brought an expert witness all the way over from America solely to ensure that the defendant gets the fairest possible treatment, and in the honest belief that there is nobody available in the UK capable of answering any likely technical questions about the device in question, notwithstanding its massively widespread use in the UK.
or
(b) the CPS decided to "make an example of" the defendant in the case, and brought the top man over from the States in the hope that he would carry sufficient weight to put the issue of "LTI20:20 inaccuracy" to bed once and for all; but failing that to send out a loud and clear message to others that appealing against minor speeding charges might well incur costs out of all proportion to the original case.
For myself I find it very hard to believe that the CPS were acting in the best interests of justice, or of the defendant. You may be right, but I find he latter seems a far more credible explanation.