I guess criminals don't consider those issues...we allow Banks to know about us, credit card companies, internet sites...like KB...so I am not sure we can complain if the Police are allowed to do a few simple checks when they stop someone for a traffic offence...just in case that person has the potential to disturb our civil liberty and personal privacy potential which we want to protect....if the person is clean etc, they drive away with little impact on these principles
Your analogys are flawed. Banks, Internet sites, credit card companies have to have our agreement to check us out. They can't demand to do it as a matter of right.
And they don't normally keep us waiting on the reoadside while they do it.
If, after my producing my licence , a cop were to say "OK, I'm just going to call through to check our records, will take just a couple of minutes, that OK ?", I'd say (normally) "Sure".
And if I were a cop and someone objected, I'd think maybe he wasn't who the licence said.,So I'd reply something like "Well, Sir, your answer makes me uncertain whether this is indeed your licence or not. So I'm going to have to check the question of your identity a bit further". Which would keep it all within the fifteen minutes.
But, if a cop wanted me to stay at the roadside for an hour while he buggered around trying to prove a point, then I'd be a mite pissed off too, and invoke my right to clear off.
In practice, a reasonable cop is never going to have a problem. And it shouldn't take more than five minutes at most.
Originally Posted by skidmark
Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
Even so - does the cop then have the right to bugger off with it?
And, I remember more than once asking to see a constable's warrant card (plain cloths cops). They would never allow me to touch it. They'd hold it out, close enough to read, but far enough away to prevent a grab. Sauce for goose, etc.
If a cop can't read a licence held out to him at a distance of a few inches (he's standing right by the car window - where does "a metre away" come into it), then he needs his eyes checked.
In practice of course it's easier for everybody to just hand it over. But I'm not convinced the cop has a right to demand that. Nor does the law give him any right to "inspect" the licence. It must be "produced". Where would "inspection" end ? "OK, I'm taking your licence away for a few weeks for it to be inspected by a forensic lab " ?
Originally Posted by skidmark
Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
Codified by the magna carter about 13th century, right to roam and the right to 'live'.
The Police swear their oath to the Queen, not the government, part of the separation of powers.
It is a pity that forein citizens taking up residency in new zealand know more of our history, laws and rights than natural citizens.
In a pedantic way I agree flawed, however, in reality I don't think so and as Citizens we agree to abide by the law which is upheld (yes I know what you are thinking) by the Police.
If they fail to do their duty properly then you have the right to complain, however, I would guess that in most cases it only takes 5/10 minutes so there should be no complaints for the reasons I raised.
There are two issues, though:
1. Boundary cases, such as the actions of our ginger friend in the northwest, and the apparently-rather-unreasonable lady who pulled over Mr Duff - such individuals should not be allowed to get away with excesses or abuse of their authority.
2. Frog in the Pot Syndrome; gradual erosion of standards over the years can make what you and I would both clearly define as 'fascism' something that our grandchildren would excuse with mealy-mouthed weasel words.
All that is necessary for the triumph of evil, etc...
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
What about any special conditions that might be detailed on the back of the licence? I have this mental image of a motorist holding their licence up to a closed window while the cop bends at the waist and peers into the window in an attempt to read the details on the licence and then uses sign language to get the motorist to flip the licence over so he can use his magnifying glass to read the conditions printed on the back of the card.
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