T
timbartlett
Guest
Sorry for the delay in responding: I've been away.
and provided you have a huge amount of time and money taking on an opponent for whom both are provided by the taxpayer and are therefore effectively unlimited....we have a good legal system in this country along with a fair amount of legislation to protect our rights - provided that you know how to access it.
Hmm. I'm afraid that is debateable. Most secondary legislation is generated by civil servants and signed off by ministers with no (or very little) parliamentary scrutiny. And whilst organisations such as the RYA might find themselves on the consultation list for new legislation, it is pretty much a cast-iron certainty that ACPO will bePeople need to realise that neither the police nor the MCA make the law and if their ideas are wrong then they need to be challenged.
Nor do I. But I have enormous sympathy for someone who was clobbered with a fine that was several times bigger than that imposed on other professional seamen whose actions resulted in significant actual damage -- rather than a couple of near misses. And I see no relevance whatsoever in the implication that he compounded his error by failing to respond to the radio, given thta there is no legal requirement for the vessel concerned to have a radio, or to maintain a listening watch.As to the particular case in point - I have little sympathy for a professional sailor who was going the wrong way in the TSS
Most of the cases brought for TSS infringements in the Dover Strait go to the same court -- Folkestone. And whether it represents official policy or not is, frankly, irrelevant. The income generated from fines all goes into the same pot....given that they were handed out by Magistrates I don't see that that can represent any form of official policy.
So it's OK, in our magnificent legal system, to break the law if you're a local, but not if you're not?[/quote]Magistrates often seem to represent the views of the community in which they live so it may, for example, to be hard to get a Magistrate from a fishing town to impose a significant fine on a fisherman.
I suspect the case you are thinking of is the guy who got hammered for various "infringements of safety regulations" because (amongst other things) he failed to carry a fire axe and several buckets of sand, and had horseshoe lifebuoys instead of rigid round ones approved by the DoTI am not aware of an amateur sailor being prosecuted, although I have a vague memory of someone being fined for having out of date flares or something on a 45' Motorboat