Pye_End
Well-Known Member
Point 5 still does not ring true, I have never heard of police taking a member of the public against his will to a hotel. Usually they are taken to the cells. But a hotel? If so what was to stop him immediately leaving said hotel? Or did they lock his room door and take away the key? And place bars on the windows? And allow them to eat only via room service?
Perhaps he was coerced rather than forced. In Germany a few years ago I was 'done' for not having the correct nav lights (even though I did), but the fear of getting tangled up in their legal system (with a bit of heavy handedness of the side of the officer concerned), giving in to the 'demands' seemed the easiest and quickest way out of the situation. Perhaps the boat owner in this case felt the same. It would have been interesting to have been a 'fly on the wall' for this part of the conversation.
Perhaps 'the authorities' then wrongly considered it an abandoned wreck. If they wanted to take gear off for safe keeping then they knew who and where the owner was, and they could have discussed it first, so it doesn't sound as though this wasn't the case.
It will be interesting to hear what all concerned have to say about the matter, but it certainly looks badly managed and decidedly heavy handed from what we have seen so far.