Cheers Rastus - however I read the act (and fuck me was it boring!)
The closest thing I could find was this section:
Which only relates to the indentification of a defendant and IMO does not waive the need for the Crown to produce evidence that an offence occured, only that an Officer's sworn testimony when following a formal procedure is admissable for identification45 Admissibility of visual identification evidence
(1) If a formal procedure is followed by officers of an enforcement agency in obtaining visual identification evidence of a person alleged to have committed an offence or there was a good reason for not following a formal procedure, that evidence is admissible in a criminal proceeding unless the defendant proves on the balance of probabilities that the evidence is unreliable.
(2) If a formal procedure is not followed by officers of an enforcement agency in obtaining visual identification evidence of a person alleged to have committed an offence and there was no good reason for not following a formal procedure, that evidence is inadmissible in a criminal proceeding unless the prosecution proves beyond reasonable doubt that the circumstances in which the identification was made have produced a reliable identification.
(3) For the purposes of this section, a formal procedure is a procedure for obtaining visual identification evidence—
(a) that is observed as soon as practicable after the alleged offence is reported to an officer of an enforcement agency; and
(b) in which the person to be identified is compared to no fewer than 7 other persons who are similar in appearance to the person to be identified; and
(c) in which no indication is given to the person making the identification as to who among the persons in the procedure is the person to be identified; and
(d) in which the person making the identification is informed that the person to be identified may or may not be among the persons in the procedure; and
(e) that is the subject of a written record of the procedure actually followed that is sworn to be true and complete by the officer who conducted the procedure and provided to the Judge and the defendant (but not the jury) at the hearing; and
(f) that is the subject of a pictorial record of what the witness looked at that is prepared and certified to be true and complete by the officer who conducted the procedure and provided to the Judge and the defendant (but not the jury) at the hearing; and
(g) that complies with any further requirements provided for in regulations made under section 201.
(4) The circumstances referred to in the following paragraphs are good reasons for not following a formal procedure:
(a) a refusal of the person to be identified to take part in the procedure (that is, by refusing to take part in a parade or other procedure, or to permit a photograph or video record to be taken, where the enforcement agency does not already have a photo or a video record that shows a true likeness of that person):
(b) the singular appearance of the person to be identified (being of a nature that cannot be disguised so that the person is similar in appearance to those with whom the person is to be compared):
(c) a substantial change in the appearance of the person to be identified after the alleged offence occurred and before it was practical to hold a formal procedure:
(d) no officer involved in the investigation or the prosecution of the alleged offence could reasonably anticipate that identification would be an issue at the trial of the defendant:
(e) if an identification of a person alleged to have committed an offence has been made to an officer of an enforcement agency soon after the offence was reported and in the course of that officer’s initial investigation:
(f) if an identification of a person alleged to have committed an offence has been made to an officer of an enforcement agency after a chance meeting between the person who made the identification and the person alleged to have committed the offence.
Unless I have missed something in the act?
Physics; Thou art a cruel, heartless Bitch-of-a-Mistress
Of course, the onus of proof is on you to prove you didn't do it - e.g. you are dead and have a death certificate and a body to prove it. If the cop says you did, then that is all the "evidence' required for the prosecution. Sounds like guilty until proven innocent to me.
(\_/)
(O.o)
(> <) Peace through superior firepower...
Build your own dyno - PM me for the link of if you want to use it (bring beer)
I think you have actually pinpointed part of the problem in explaining the difference between feet on the street and a camera: cameras use and require focus. People can't, or won't, focus. They want to get the maximum perceived benefit for the least effort.
You said your team was set up specifically to target intersection crashes at specific intersections. Then you talk about going after people for general road safety, or infringements, such as no seatbelt or cellphones. I would have thought that if the focus of the operation was intersection safety, then it would be intersection specific behaviour you would target, such as failing to stop, failing to give way, accelerating through an intersection, failing to indicate, etc. If the offender was also on a phone or not wearing a seatbelt that throw that at them as well. Failing to wear a seatbelt, or even having a wof or reg, has very little to do with intersection safety specifically, until after there is an incident. The problem is that targeting the behaviour you really want to change cuts down on the easy revenue.
Keep on chooglin'
The real issue turned out to be that when you are looking for people going through red lights, you'll see 10 seatbelt offences and 12 cellphones for every traffic light offence you see. At least. You don't just ignore those just becauise they're not on your target list.
The Intersection Safety Team was disbanded 4 years after it started, as the boss needed the staff for the next project.
Keep on chooglin'
Since maybe 1995 seat belts have been one of the three main pillars of our work. The others are speed, and drink drive.
Those are things that, as an organization, we have continued to focus on. So whatever we do, those things will always be a focus for us.
I keep saying that, tho I'm leaving in 33 days. It's going to be a big step for me.
I'd have thought people running reds while not wearing seatbelts would self eliminate themselves from being a long term road safety problem...
This is a classic case though of how the govt is NOT about protecting the general population and merely effecting a token effort to justify taxation to fund the police. Given the stated financial cost of a fatal by the LTSA one has to ask why we don't have red light cameras at ALL traffic light junctions. Just like how the Telco's throttle back our internet speeds to force us to pay more for 'better' connections the govt artificially restrict police resources so we are always more worried about other peoples bad driving than how the economy is being driven.
Every great cause begins as a movement, becomes a business, and eventually degenerates into a racket - Eric Hoffer
The law of diminishing returns.
The more cameras you have the less effective they appear.
Also the more you put up the more the civil liberties group complain. Far more efficient use if your tax dollars to target the 10 riskiest intersections every year.
Stupid phone / Tapatalk, apologies in advance.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks