Police Action Over Pavement Cyclist!

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MontyVeda

a short-tempered ill-controlled small-minded troll
we've got nobbers in police cars and nobbers on the radio.

does a police officer (plastic or proper) have to authority to just confiscate something, such as a four year old's bike?
 

glasgowcyclist

Charming but somewhat feckless
Location
Scotland
The basic situation is a reasonable number of people in uniforms don't actually know the law (in this case).

metpolicetwt.jpg


GC
 

400bhp

Guru
does a police officer (plastic or proper) have to authority to just confiscate something, such as a four year old's bike?

No

I wonder what I would have done in the circumstances. Part of me says fight or flight, but part of me says roll over and watch the carnage ensue as the story unfolds when I went to the press.
 

buggi

Bird Saviour
Location
Solihull
Can somebody make clear what was wrong with the CTC case? I assume we are talking about the man on BBC Breakfast. I know that there is a difference between a child breaking the law and whether they can be prosecuted for it. Was that it?
My understanding is that the only real law on this is the one from the 1860s that forbids velocipedes being ridden on a footway beside a carriageway. The (presumably) CTC guy on TV said this had been modified by a Home Office ruling in 1999 that permitted cycling on the pavement as long as it was done considerately. Is that about right? This is all a bit theoretical as I do not, personally, ride on pavements, but I would like to know what the rules actually are.
It is illegal to ride on the footpath unless it is deemed a cycle path. However, the Home Office have given the Police guidance that if the rider is considerate and riding on the pavement because they feel the road is dangerous, the PC can use his/her discretion to not give a ticket. This would have been an appropriate time to use that guidance.
 

davefb

Guru
They can 'break the law' but they cannot be charged with anything?

https://www.gov.uk/child-under-10-breaks-law

"Children under 10 cannot be charged with committing a criminal offence. However, they can be given a:
  • Local Child Curfew
  • Child Safety Order"
 

summerdays

Cycling in the sun
Location
Bristol
Is an adult who encourages or allows a child to break the law committing an offence? Conspiracy to cycle on a footway maybe?
Not sure in a general sense but when I spoke to a local police officer that I sometimes chat to, he said that if there was persistent dangerous cycling by a young child they they would speak to the parents but possibly also to social workers as there may be wider issues.
 
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