I understand your point, but surely there are times to take a stand and times to let sometihing go and move on. .
How far would you bring this. Speeding , careless driving , how about if it was shoplifting , how about a minor assault.... what crime should you start the defend yourself for ?
I like where your taking this, you seem to have totally understood my point. Look at from the guards viewpoint. He sees a man driving with one arm on the wheel and the other up to the side of his head, he stops him and caustions him, but the man said he wasn't on the phone he was merely resting his head whilst driving (some might say that was dangerous driving). Should the guard say ok sir because I never heard that excuse before or should he go with his instinct. I think the guard did the right thing because he genuinely didn't believe the offender. So in that instance if I was wronged I would be very annoyed and then after awhile I would think 'is it easier to pay €80 or should I engage a solicitor and take on that guard for my absolute minor injustice' in this case i would have taken the hit.
Your other list of crimes would be a lot harder to misjudge by a guard and they are also criminal offences that could have jailtime so what do you think i would do?
The OP said it was a matter of principle? How does that measure up to his having an English licence for three years in this country. Great craic for getting out of speeding/toll situations.
Hi
I was driving along with the window down and my arm was on the side door and i was resting my head on my hand.
Thanks,
Steve
I thought it was a requirement to have a (home) licence in place for insurance purposes. If I'm wrong, apologies. But he still gets away with Eflow?You are no longer required to change your license. He is 100% legal to keep it.
I thought it was a requirement to have a (home) licence in place for insurance purposes. If I'm wrong, apologies. But he still gets away with Eflow?
The guard will have to stand up in court and testify that he saw the defendant with a mobile phone in his hand (or the case gets thrown out). If he will lie about that then why won't he lie about the others ?
The law is quite clear , unless the guard sees a phone there is no crime. He might have had one is not enough.
MrMan I disagree with you.
Assuming what the OP is saying is correct, then the guard did not see a mobile phone in his hand. The guard is not entitled to assume or guess that he was holding a phone, and charge him with an offense. The guard was out of line, and should not have charged him.
that means that you are calling the guard a liar as it stands, if the guard believes that he is telling the truth then it is a bit much to question his integrity.
he guard did not see (see not assume , or guess, or looked like) a mobile phone then he will be telling a lie on the stand...
I agree that we are taking the OP's word on this but even so, if he believes 100% that he has seen what he says he has seen, he won't be making a guess or an assumption he will be making a human error like many of us make every day. If he is forthright in his decision to stand over what he (thinks) has seen then it is OP versus the guard, and I just think that a guard would be given more credit in this instance by a judge. I'm just making the logical point that just because the op says the guard was wrong doesn't make the guard believe that he is wrong.
So based on this logic a person should admit a charge they are not guilty of because it's morally wrong and insulting to the guard because they made a mistake?
It doesn't matter how minor the charge or penalty, if you're not guilty of it you're not guilty of it. The guard has to have stronger evidence than "they think they might have, possibly, maybe, well it kinda looked like they did were" using a phone before he wrote the ticket.
If driving with and arm on the window and resting head is dangerous driving then the guard should have cited him for that offence and not one that they were in no position to prove.
We don't know the position of the OP, maybe he has to drive for work, maybe his employer has a policy in place on not using a mobile phone while driving. If he accepts the charge, when he didn't do it, this could open up a can of worms with his employer.
I can't understand any possible defence for the guard involved, honest mistake or not, if he wasn't sure and didn't have the proof he shouldn't have written the ticket.
The guard wasn't out of line if he believes what he thinks he saw, it is credible for him to have thought to have seen a man holding a phone to his ear ...
... i asked him to check my phone to see if there were any incomming or out going calls or texts and he wouldnt.
By the way the OP said he was resting his head on a hand (singular). I see this quite regularly, particularly in evening traffic!... because how many of us simply drive whilst resting our head in our hands?
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