Motoring0 min ago
Motoring offences
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.When you commit one of a number of listed moving traffic offences, including speeding, a Notice of Intended Prosecution (NIP) must be sent to the registered keeper of the vehicle within 14 days of the date of the offence. If it is not, then you cannot be prosecuted.
Note the various provisos here.
First, NIPs only have to be *sent* within 14 days, and proof of posting within this time is sufficient evidence that notice has been served.
Second, they don't have to notify the *driver* of the vehicle within this time limit, only the registered keeper (who must then supply the driver's details for later notification).
Third, the NIP has to be sent to the last recorded address on file at DVLA, so if you haven't notified them of a change of address or vehicle purchase, tough (and they can, if they want to get nasty about it, prosecute you for this as well).
Once notice has been served, they have up to six months from the date of offence to place the matter before the courts. Note that this means the *court* must be informed by the six-month deadline: the court will then inform you of a hearing date, and will typically take several weeks to do so, so don't breathe a sigh of relief after six months. Best to wait a further month before tentatively cracking open the champers, but there is actually NO fixed deadline for the courts to get around to writing to you.
It sounds like they have either got the real driver and vehicle or they have abandoned this line of enquiry.