ChatterBank1 min ago
Customs - dismantling things
If the customs stop your car and dismantle it and find nothing, do they have to put it back together? I remember reading somewhere that they do put it back together usually but they don't have to.
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No best answer has yet been selected by R1Geezer. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Yes,I've read that too, but can't give chapter and verse. It may have been some author's speculation or a deduction or it may be on express authority, or it may be just myth.
It does make a certain sense. Customs are really supposed to act on reasonable suspicion.In any event, customs have always had greater powers, more draconian powers, than other bodies . When police arrest somebody on reasonable suspicion and that person is deprived of his liberty pending investigation, he has no redress in practice. In fact, if he's charged, tried and the case is thrown out by a judge , he doesn't get proper redress e g for loss of earnings .Putting those together, I can well see that customs would just answer 'Tough!' and be entitled to leave the person the job of reinstating the car. What stops them is that it looks bad, whatever their rights in law|The press would have a field day in most cases and customs would lose whatever public sympathy they have.
It does make a certain sense. Customs are really supposed to act on reasonable suspicion.In any event, customs have always had greater powers, more draconian powers, than other bodies . When police arrest somebody on reasonable suspicion and that person is deprived of his liberty pending investigation, he has no redress in practice. In fact, if he's charged, tried and the case is thrown out by a judge , he doesn't get proper redress e g for loss of earnings .Putting those together, I can well see that customs would just answer 'Tough!' and be entitled to leave the person the job of reinstating the car. What stops them is that it looks bad, whatever their rights in law|The press would have a field day in most cases and customs would lose whatever public sympathy they have.
Of course, if they don't put your car back together, one has to wonder how you'd get it out of their search bays. I like the idea of a car just left in pieces, but no doubt I'd not be laughing if it happened to me. The closest analogy I can draw is when airport customs unpack a suitcase- they usually repack it afterwards, presuming they find nothing. It's not exactly a comparable situation though!
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