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| uk.legal.moderated (Legal Topics Relevant To UK Law - Moderated) (uk.legal.moderated) To enable contributors who have genuine legal problems to ask for practical advice from other people (lawyers or laymen) who have had to deal with similar problems in the past. Advertising is forbidden. |
| Tags: act, order, public, section |
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#1
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Would anyone be able to suggest any answer to this? The situation is being charged under the act mentioned above with making an offensive gesture to a passing motorist, with an 80 pound fixed penalty on the way. If one were to refuse to pay the penalty and the CPS were to decide it worth prosecuting, what sort of penalties are usually meted out for this "offence"? |
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#2
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The situation is being charged under the act mentioned above with making
an offensive gesture to a passing motorist, with an 80 pound fixed It doesn't answer your question, but I'm curious as to what the passing motorist did to prompt your alleged action? There is a reasonableness defence. |
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#3
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A fine is the only available penalty, but it may well be more than the PND amount, and
there will be CPS costs on top. |
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#4
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#5
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#6
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On 22 Jul, 23:35, " wrote:
The situation is being charged under the act mentioned above with making an offensive gesture to a passing motorist, with an 80 pound fixed It doesn't answer your question, but I'm curious as to what the passing motorist did to prompt your alleged action? There is a reasonableness defence. And whether the action was actually sufficient to have caused "harassment, alarm or distress". Toom |
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#7
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The magistrates are able to charge several hundreds of pounds costs,
and are quite likely to do so if they don't think the matter should have ever come near them, and that the defendant can afford it (IANAL). If it were me, I'd say a max £1000 fine (if that's still the case) and a few hundred pounds costs would be an acceptable gamble in order to avoid getting a criminal record. I don't if it is the case, but one person's word against another's with the prosecution having to prove to a criminal standard and that the alarm or distress was a sufficiently serious to merit a restriction in the right to free expression seems reasonable odds. Of course that's balanced by my suspicion that magistrates just convict on section 5 by reflex. Anyone here who hasn't muttered an expletive whilst watching a motorist do something stupid? |
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#8
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The magistrates are able to charge several hundreds of pounds costs, and are quite likely
to do so if they don't think the matter should have ever come near them, and that the defendant can afford it (IANAL) Nowhere near right,I'm afraid. Costs are in the discretion of the bench, but for a simple summary offence on a guilty plea are unlikely to be more than about £60.. Costs are not used to punish anyone. If you plead not guilty and papers have to be prepared, counsel briefed, and witnesses brought in, then of course costs will be higher. If you are acquitted, there won't be any costs at all and you get your own refunded. |
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#9
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On 23 Jul, 10:20, " wrote:
The magistrates are able to charge several hundreds of pounds costs, and are quite likely to do so if they don't think the matter should have ever come near them, and that the defendant can afford it (IANAL). If it were me, I'd say a max £1000 fine (if that's still the case) and a few hundred pounds costs would be an acceptable gamble in order to avoid getting a criminal record. I don't if it is the case, but one person's word against another's with the prosecution having to prove to a criminal standard and that the alarm or distress was a sufficiently serious to merit a restriction in the right to free expression seems reasonable odds. Of course that's balanced by my suspicion that magistrates just convict on section 5 by reflex. Anyone here who hasn't muttered an expletive whilst watching a motorist do something stupid? Well, as a relaxed and defensive driver who drives just within the limit, and slows down to allow others to pass when it is safe to do so, I have one failing, and that is to give two fingers to tailgaters who annoy and endanger me and then overtake when it is unsafe, I'd be inlclined to plead unreasonbleness on their part, should someone complain about that, or that they are obviously too insensitive and stupid to be 'harassed alarmed or distressed' by my act, but I've never had to put this to judical test. Toom |
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#10
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" wrote in
news
The magistrates are able to charge several hundreds of pounds costs, and are quite likely to do so if they don't think the matter should have ever come near them, and that the defendant can afford it (IANAL). If it were me, I'd say a max £1000 fine (if that's still the case) and a few hundred pounds costs would be an acceptable gamble in order to avoid getting a criminal record. snip As a matter of interest, does paying the fixed penalty give one a criminal record? -- Percy Picacity |
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