Driver/person behind the steering wheel and ID
Driver/person behind the steering wheel and ID
Author
Discussion

Frane Selak

Original Poster:

605 posts

11 months

Yesterday (19:27)
quotequote all
This popped up on facebook (yes I know) a while ago and I was quite surprised. Its a tedious watch and I even fast forwarded it to the end but the jist was someone was sat behind the wheel of a car in what appears to be a car park, don't know if it was council or private etc and the police "stopped him" and demanded his details.

Now I know generally if you aren't suspected of a crime you don't have to give any info to the police but if you are driving then you are obliged to even if its only for a spot check. This bloke though was adamant that law only applied to driving and not sat in a vehicle with the engine off somewhere. He says the police have to catch you driving or its obvious you have just been driving, because they approached him already sat in a car in a car park they have no proof he drove anywhere.

The coppers asked how did the car get there then but he's obviously not obliged to answer that, he wasn't the registered keeper so it could have been the owner that drove it there or it may have got delivered there on a tow truck etc. Is this correct, does the right to demand details only apply to driving a vehicle and not in a stationary vehicle with no proof its been driven by the driver.

PS I was hoping he was going to say "I'm just waiting for a mate".

https://www.facebook.com/reel/2094263661483637

Starfighter

5,325 posts

204 months

Yesterday (20:12)
quotequote all
A car park is classed as a public road so the car can be checked. Sitting in the driver seat makes the person “in charge” as far as the cops are concerned. They do not need a reason for a vehicle check for tax, not, insurance and if the driver is licences and insured. If the documents are not in order then the person “in charge” is going to to be on the back foot and need to prove they were not actually doing anything wrong.

Frane Selak

Original Poster:

605 posts

11 months

Yesterday (20:51)
quotequote all
This is what one of the comments said

163 is a demand to stop, and 164/ 5 does not apply here because he was not driving (he was stationary on the phone) and he wasn't SEEN driving. There's no law against sitting in the driver's seat of a parked car, -- if there was they'd nick my 6 year old son he frequently sat there to "pretend drive".

A snippet of the legislation I saw said something like ....driving or is suspected of recently driving a motor vehicle.

Super Sonic

13,278 posts

80 months

Yesterday (21:16)
quotequote all
Your looking for advice on a total strangers alleged police 'stop' when the only details you have are what they put on Facebook.

paul_c123

2,134 posts

19 months

Yesterday (21:22)
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If he's going to argue he wasn't "driving", then we ought to address the fact he's moaning they don't have powers to stop him when he's already stopped......

skyebear

1,161 posts

32 months

Yesterday (21:30)
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He's a road pirate who was docked at the time.

InitialDave

14,699 posts

145 months

Yesterday (21:51)
quotequote all
I got maybe 15 seconds into the video before deciding there was a 90% chance he's a sovereign citizen, freeman on the land fruitcake or some close relative of such.

Frane Selak

Original Poster:

605 posts

11 months

Yesterday (22:38)
quotequote all
Super Sonic said:
Your looking for advice on a total strangers alleged police 'stop' when the only details you have are what they put on Facebook.
I was just wondering about the situation, lets say I was a passenger in a friends car and we stopped for him to go shopping whilst I waited in the car, If I climbed over into the drivers seat to see what it felt like, (maybe I was thinking of buying it) would I be required to give my details if a copper approached the car.

Super Sonic

13,278 posts

80 months

Yesterday (23:21)
quotequote all
Frane Selak said:
I was just wondering about the situation, lets say I was a passenger in a friends car and we stopped for him to go shopping whilst I waited in the car, If I climbed over into the drivers seat to see what it felt like, (maybe I was thinking of buying it) would I be required to give my details if a copper approached the car.
Frane Selak also said:
A snippet of the legislation I saw said something like ....driving or is suspected of recently driving a motor vehicle.

mikecassie

669 posts

185 months

Frane Selak said:
I was just wondering about the situation, lets say I was a passenger in a friends car and we stopped for him to go shopping whilst I waited in the car, If I climbed over into the drivers seat to see what it felt like, (maybe I was thinking of buying it) would I be required to give my details if a copper approached the car.
If I was in this situation, I'd give my details. Why be awkward, you could wait for your mate to return to confirm your story if the police didn't believe you. I think you'd be really unlucky to get done for being in that situation. The police are generally decent and like in every walk of life, there's a bad one amongst the larger group.

Sydney Aqueduct

286 posts

91 months

Let us all know when you’re on Traffic Cops/Police Interceptors so we can watch and see what happens

gshughes

1,328 posts

281 months

Starfighter said:
Sitting in the driver seat makes the person in charge as far as the cops are concerned.
Is this definitely the case in law? Kids have sat in the drivers seat and pretended to drive forever. Does this make them 'in charge' in the eyes of the law?

ac.cobra

120 posts

52 months

Common sense applies in that situation.

Milkyway

13,042 posts

79 months

When I was young, my Dad told me about the 'in charge' rule... I'm sure that the key had to be in the ignition for it to apply.
The thing was, if the handbrake was released & the car rolled into something... one turn so that the steering lock won't go on.
(Obviously... a lot has changed since then.)

NB: As a kid, I used to do a lot of car cleaning for pocket money, so I must have been taking a big risk... as I wasn't insured.
(ID would probably been my library card).


Edited by Milkyway on Thursday 11th June 10:28

alscar

8,710 posts

239 months

Bit difficult to prove he drove there but a fairly safe assumption.
Both he and the younger policeman would certainly fail the attitude test though.
Judging from the masks worn though it looks like Covid time ?

kestral

2,171 posts

233 months

gshughes said:
Is this definitely the case in law? Kids have sat in the drivers seat and pretended to drive forever. Does this make them 'in charge' in the eyes of the law?
It does not work like that. The children (or anyone) would only be 'in charge' of the vehicle if there was a law that existed (there is no law without law) that related to being 'in charge' of motor vehicles AND it was proved in a court that they were 'in charge' of that vehicle in accordance with the applicable law.

What happens in reality is that a policeman may form a reasonable belief that a person is 'in charge' of vehicle and is committing an offence accordance with an existing law, he can then request details and documents from that person, if they do not give them the commit an offence under the RTA 1988 section 165 (1) (c) at least.

In the case in the video, the officer would have been well within the law to form a reasonable belief and suspect that the person sat in the car was under the influence and request a breath test for alcohol and or a saliva sample for controlled drugs for being 'in charge'.

The suspect neither has to be driving or have driven the vehicle for in charge offence.

This should be good.biggrin

Milkyway

13,042 posts

79 months

kestral said:
It does not work like that. The children (or anyone) would only be 'in charge' of the vehicle if there was a law that existed (there is no law without law) that related to being 'in charge' of motor vehicles AND it was proved in a court that they were 'in charge' of that vehicle in accordance with the applicable law.

What happens in reality is that a policeman may form a reasonable belief that a person is 'in charge' of vehicle and is committing an offence accordance with an existing law, he can then request details and documents from that person, if they do not give them the commit an offence under the RTA 1988 section 165 (1) (c) at least.

In the case in the video, the officer would have been well within the law to form a reasonable belief and suspect that the person sat in the car was under the influence and request a breath test for alcohol and or a saliva sample for controlled drugs for being 'in charge'.

The suspect neither has to be driving or have driven the vehicle for in charge offence.

This should be good.biggrin
DIC: Drunk / Druggie In Charge.

Frane Selak

Original Poster:

605 posts

11 months

kestral said:
gshughes said:
Is this definitely the case in law? Kids have sat in the drivers seat and pretended to drive forever. Does this make them 'in charge' in the eyes of the law?
It does not work like that. The children (or anyone) would only be 'in charge' of the vehicle if there was a law that existed (there is no law without law) that related to being 'in charge' of motor vehicles AND it was proved in a court that they were 'in charge' of that vehicle in accordance with the applicable law.

What happens in reality is that a policeman may form a reasonable belief that a person is 'in charge' of vehicle and is committing an offence accordance with an existing law, he can then request details and documents from that person, if they do not give them the commit an offence under the RTA 1988 section 165 (1) (c) at least.

In the case in the video, the officer would have been well within the law to form a reasonable belief and suspect that the person sat in the car was under the influence and request a breath test for alcohol and or a saliva sample for controlled drugs for being 'in charge'.

The suspect neither has to be driving or have driven the vehicle for in charge offence.

This should be good.biggrin
That's a law relating to being in charge and committing an offence though, I was asking about a spot check, if you are stopped walking along a road for a spot check there isn't any law saying you need to give details but if you are driving then there is even though there is no offence committed. My question is if you've done nothing wrong but are sitting behind the wheel is there still an obligation to ID yourself or do you actually need to be driving or recently been driving for that law to work.

Take the sleeping in a car thing, if you are drunk then there is a possibility of an offence so the law comes into play, if you are asleep but sober on the back seat I wouldn't think you have any need to ID yourself in those circumstances.


Yellow Lizud

2,859 posts

190 months

mikecassie said:
If I was in this situation, I'd give my details. .
Exactly this, why give yourself a load of unnecessary hassle? And why waste time even thinking about it?



donkmeister

12,178 posts

126 months

Frane Selak said:
Take the sleeping in a car thing, if you are drunk then there is a possibility of an offence so the law comes into play, if you are asleep but sober on the back seat I wouldn't think you have any need to ID yourself in those circumstances.
I wouldn't be so sure - the one time I have ever been stopped by British police whilst driving, they ID'd me and breathalysed me in that order. It's probably quite rare for a sober person to decide to sleep in their car Vs a drunk person too, so they'd have their reasons to be suspicious.

(I was pulling up outside my house, the chap had misunderstood my motives for turning after he had pulled out behind me. Quite funny as he explained his reason for stopping, then asked for my name and address... My address being "here" hehe)