Speed Camera Loophole Exposed Do Not Sign There Contracts
Extract from The Western Mail
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Magistrates' courts could grind to a halt if thousands of motorists
exploit a legal loophole unwittingly exposed by a Welsh driver.
Magistrates had no choice but to find Phillip Dennis, of Whitford,
Flintshire, not guilty of speeding when his case was heard on Thursday.
He had omitted to sign the standard form which is sent to the
owner of each vehicle caught by a speed camera - and Mold magistrates said they couldn't accept the form as evidence.
Police have no power to compel car owners to sign the form and have been expecting someone to spot the loophole.
Yesterday the Association of British Drivers, representing about 2,500
motorists, predicted drivers would soon get wind of the court case.
"Motorists are always very quick to seek any way to avoid
paying
for their speeding ticket, particularly when they've been caught by
cameras because they resent very much the way the cameras operate," said
spokesman Tony Vickers.
"The cameras have very much reduced public respect for the police and local authorities.
"People are only too glad to find a way to beat the system."
He said motorists who receive a speeding ticket after being caught on
camera could opt to have their case heard in court, rather than pay the
fine without quibble.
"If a lot of people take up this option it will have another
side-effect, which will be to clog up the magistrates' courts with
hundreds or thousands of motorists all trying to avoid paying the fine.
"The implications for the legal system are interesting, to say the least."
Although the ABD did not condone breaking the highway laws, it said it
would place details of the loophole on its own website for other drivers
to read.
"I'm sure a lot of people will try it on and see whether it gets them anywhere."
The prospect of using the loophole could look especially appealing to
people who already had endorsements on their licences, said Mr Vickers.
"They should bear in mind that if they fail, they will end up paying
the full fine rather than the 50% they would pay if they put their hand
up."
When a police camera takes a photograph of a speeding vehicle, the
vehicle's registered owner is sent a form asking who the driver was at
the time.
It is an offence not to
complete the form and name the driver - but the owner does not have to sign it.
If the form has not been signed, the courts cannot take any notice of it.
Magistrates in Mold were asked to prove a case of speeding against
Phillip Dennis, 34, of Gwibnant Farm, Downing Road, Whitford, near
Holywell.
But clerk Paul Conlon pointed out that the form naming the defendant as the driver was unsigned.
The driver had provided the information required of him but there was
no requirement under that section of the law for the form to be signed.
Magistrates said they were not happy but had to find the defendant not guilty in his absence.
Chairman John Beard suggested the police should go back to defendants and ask them to sign the form.
But he was advised that as the law now stood the only requirement was
to stipulate the name of the driver, and that there was no legal
requirement to sign it even if police did go back and
request a signature.
Nobody was available from North Wales Police to comment yesterday.
But one police source said there had been concern that once the loophole was spotted "it could open the flood gates."
He said, "The police generally have been waiting for someone to appeal against a conviction on this point but no one has yet.
"We have basically been keeping our heads down.
"Some of my colleagues say we should just make sure people sign the
forms but others are a bit concerned that to do that is tricking people
into something they do not have to do.
"The trouble is when this is highlighted they will all be sending the forms back unsigned."
RoadPeace, the charity for road-accident victims, said the loophole
showed that cameras and computers were no substitute for a police
presence on the roads.
Chairman Zoë Stow said, "It illustrates that we can't just deal with
these things as a bureaucratic issue and send forms through the post.
"It's disappointing that the law is poorly drafted and nobody seems to care enough to do it properly."
Speed cameras have proliferated in South and North Wales since the Home
Office gave police permission to use fines to pay for enforcement,
rather than
sending the money to the Treasury.
Latest figures show that in 2001 the number of speeding
tickets issued by South Wales Police was 38% higher than in 2000.
North Wales Police registered a 19% increase in 2001, although its
Arrive Alive speed-camera campaign wasn't launched until late that year.