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Video: Aberdeen police didn't think this close pass footage was close enough to follow up on

Inverurie police did though

Twitter user Aberdeen Cycle Cam said that when this incident was reported, Aberdeen police said they did not consider it to be too close.

The incident took place in Westhill in January 2016 and was reported via the 101 line.

However, while the Aberdeen police officer who took a statement did not consider the pass to be too close, Inverurie police decided to charge the driver.

Six more police forces looking to run close pass operation

In November 2016, Aberdeen Cycle Cam went to the Aberdeen Sheriff Court to testify against the person that was allegedly driving the car at the time of the incident.

After being interviewed by the Procurator Fiscal in Court, they were told that the trial could not continue as there was not sufficient evidence to establish who was driving that car at the time. Aberdeen Cycle Cam writes on YouTube that this was “regardless of the accused having responded to a Section 172, identifying himself as the driver.”

A letter from the Procurator Fiscal’s office subsequently explained that two sources of evidence are needed to identify the person responsible with a physical description often serving as supporting evidence.

Aberdeen Cycle Cam has since published this video of another close pass which was reported to police on January 26 of this year.

On this occasion, an Aberdeen police constable emailed to say: “I appreciate the overtake was slightly close however this was not dangerous or careless driving. I will however still trace the driver and advise them on leaving extra room when overtaking cyclists in the future.”

Alex has written for more cricket publications than the rest of the road.cc team combined. Despite the apparent evidence of this picture, he doesn't especially like cake.

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47 comments

Avatar
Gweeds | 7 years ago
6 likes

Amazing 

 

I did it. Totally got me bang to rights. It's a fair cop guv. 

 

No you didn't. 

 

I totally did. It's my car and everything. 

 

Nope. On your way son. 

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riddoch | 7 years ago
0 likes

Effectively yes (according to Wikipedia) a confession in itself is not enough to convict you. I think there are some specific crimes that will be different and I suspect speeding is one of them. 

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ChrisB200SX replied to riddoch | 7 years ago
2 likes

riddoch wrote:

I think there are some specific crimes that will be different and I suspect speeding is one of them. 

Makes perfect sense... because exceeding an arbitrary speed limit is somehow worse than nearly hitting someone with a car?
Surely, if they are both traffic offences then the same rules apply in driver identification?!

Avatar
ktache | 7 years ago
7 likes

So, say if someone was to find out where he lived and went round to his house and smashed all his car windows, as long as no one saw you, you could admit with pride it was you, say on social media, and the law cannot do anything about it?

Just wondering and not advocating this in any way.

Avatar
kevinmorice replied to ktache | 7 years ago
1 like

ktache wrote:

So, say if someone was to find out where he lived and went round to his house and smashed all his car windows, as long as no one saw you, you could admit with pride it was you, say on social media, and the law cannot do anything about it?

Just wondering and not advocating this in any way.

 

Your social media post and any admission in court or to any other witness would be two. Also your social media post bragging about a crime would potentially be a separate crime. 

 

You also have fingerprints on the tool you use, security camera evidence where your age/height/sex might be corroborating (as pointed out by the procurator fiscals letter),  any witness that sees you nearby close to the time, and so on and so forth. 

 

 

 

 

 

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xbnm | 7 years ago
5 likes

Must make it difficult to convict drivers for speeding especially in the dark

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kevinmorice replied to xbnm | 7 years ago
0 likes

xbnm wrote:

Must make it difficult to convict drivers for speeding especially in the dark

 

Yes, which is why speeders are very rarely taken to court in Scotland unless they have been stopped by the Police at the time, have been extreme or have some other corroboration (sole person on insurance, witness, front-facing camera etc). Most people take the points and fine as a plea bargain rather than contest them because the cost of fighting it is higher (even if you win you have lawyers fees that will exceed the original fine).

 

As to the suggestion that the drivers phone GPS might be considered corroborating. It would be, but he would have to give it over freely and he can just refuse access. 

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WiznaeMe replied to kevinmorice | 7 years ago
0 likes

kevinmorice wrote:

xbnm wrote:

Must make it difficult to convict drivers for speeding especially in the dark

 

Yes, which is why speeders are very rarely taken to court in Scotland unless they have been stopped by the Police at the time, have been extreme or have some other corroboration (sole person on insurance, witness, front-facing camera etc). Most people take the points and fine as a plea bargain rather than contest them because the cost of fighting it is higher (even if you win you have lawyers fees that will exceed the original fine).

 

As to the suggestion that the drivers phone GPS might be considered corroborating. It would be, but he would have to give it over freely and he can just refuse access. 

s

 

Not sure about this. The Safety Camera Partnership report drivers in large numbers and achieve many convictions for speeding.  

People are convicted simply because they plead guilty.  That is a confession.

As far as I am aware phones can be seized and the data obtained (although highly unlikely outwith a serious injury crash).

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kevinmorice replied to WiznaeMe | 7 years ago
0 likes

WiznaeMe wrote:

People are convicted simply because they plead guilty.  That is a confession.

As far as I am aware phones can be seized and the data obtained (although highly unlikely outwith a serious injury crash).

 

They achieve many plea deals from drivers willing to avoid court. Read the letter next time you get one. 

 

The phone can be siezed. There is no onus on the individual to consent to unlock it or hand over the data on it. Bad driving is unlikely to breach the warrrant threshold to allow a forced breach of the phone to extract the GPS data without consent. (The Police have now resorted to undercover muggings of drug dealers whilst they are making calls in order to get around phone locks, if they can grab the unlocked phone they can keep it unlocked).  

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Silver Rider replied to kevinmorice | 7 years ago
0 likes

kevinmorice wrote:

 

The phone can be siezed. There is no onus on the individual to consent to unlock it or hand over the data on it. Bad driving is unlikely to breach the warrrant threshold to allow a forced breach of the phone to extract the GPS data without consent. (The Police have now resorted to undercover muggings of drug dealers whilst they are making calls in order to get around phone locks, if they can grab the unlocked phone they can keep it unlocked).  

Triangulation data is not stored on the handset, it is held by phone companies, hence no handset seizure is required.  Getting hold of it involves quite a bit of hassle with paperwork/warrants hence it isn't generally obtained for more trivial offences.

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riddoch | 7 years ago
0 likes

accidental double post.

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psling replied to riddoch | 7 years ago
9 likes

riddoch wrote:

accidental double post.

 

Oh, I thought it was corroboration!

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riddoch | 7 years ago
0 likes

Unfortunately there are 2 legal systems in the U.K. and under Scottish law you need  corroboration for any given fact, if the video evidence had shown the driver or the rider been able to identify them that along with the confession that probably would have been fine.

 

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psling | 7 years ago
2 likes

I imagine some kind of funny handshake was involved.

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tritecommentbot | 7 years ago
3 likes

GPS/Cellular triangulation surely.

 

Sue him for distress in the civil courts? Kickstart the funds.

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OldRidgeback | 7 years ago
4 likes

Appalling

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steviemarco | 7 years ago
9 likes

So he/she admits it was themselves driving the car and they still get off without any punishment for driving far too close. Think I might break the law in the dark, admit it and get let off as no one else can say I was male/female or guess my age! The law needs a good kick up the ar*e here in the UKno

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