News1 min ago
Is It Right For The Police To Put Temptation In Peoples Way?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think on balance they are a good thing. There is a fine line between opportunistic theft and incitement, but this seems to stay just the right side of the Law to my mind.
Would you feel tempted to rob a car if you saw a satnav, or a phone or a computer on display inside of it Sandy? I would not, nor would the vast majority of the public. We do need to weed out those that do not think the same way....
Would you feel tempted to rob a car if you saw a satnav, or a phone or a computer on display inside of it Sandy? I would not, nor would the vast majority of the public. We do need to weed out those that do not think the same way....
It's very close to entrapment isn't it?
http:// en.wiki pedia.o rg/wiki /Entrap ment#En gland_a nd_Wale s
Local to me I have also seen marginal behaviour where police have switch off the radar activated speed reminder signs before setting up a speed trap
I recall a thread a while back about someone who'd had too much money paid into her bank account and there was a lot of support for her to keep it.
If that had been put there by the Police to 'weedle out' the dishonest I'm sure there would have been an outcry
http://
Local to me I have also seen marginal behaviour where police have switch off the radar activated speed reminder signs before setting up a speed trap
I recall a thread a while back about someone who'd had too much money paid into her bank account and there was a lot of support for her to keep it.
If that had been put there by the Police to 'weedle out' the dishonest I'm sure there would have been an outcry
A simple and good test is "Did the police do no more than present the defendant with an unexceptional opportunity to commit a crime?" [R v Loosely, cited in the link, and a European case, Teixera de Castro v Portugal]
Leaving a car with something worth stealing inside it is doing no more than genuine victims do. When the police make themselves conspirators in a fake crime, to do a fraud which seems undetectable, for example, and approach complete strangers to lure them into doing something which only the great inducement of gain would have them do, then the evidence is likely to be excluded
Leaving a car with something worth stealing inside it is doing no more than genuine victims do. When the police make themselves conspirators in a fake crime, to do a fraud which seems undetectable, for example, and approach complete strangers to lure them into doing something which only the great inducement of gain would have them do, then the evidence is likely to be excluded
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