Sussex wrote:
I think the court/DfT are saying that the balance of probability now applies against the license holder, in that the onus is more on him to disprove the council's case rather than the council's case to prove their's. In respect of sexual/violence allegations.
So no it doesn't mean that any allegation will mean the driver loses their license, just that it will be easier for councils to revoke and harder for drivers to defend.
Well that certainly sounds a bit more, er, nuanced than the crude way that the council portrayed it
Can't say I'm an expert on these things, but I don't think the *standard of proof* has changed. It's still on the balance of probabilities. What has changed, I think, is the burden or onus of proof, which is now on the licence holder. Which is obviously a difficult thing to even write about in theory, and get your head around, never mind in the context of a licensing committee
But, in a nutshell, the way the council have portrayed it here makes it sound, to me at least, that the standard of proof has changed, when it hasn't. It's the burden of proof that's different.
Quote:
Times have changed, and when one reads all those articles from the recent past about the mass abuse of school girls, then maybe it's time they did.
Indeed, but the problem is maybe that some councils will go to the other extreme, and innocents will be caught up in their gung ho approach. And that's one ongoing problem with licensing and law enforcement more generally, in my opinion. I could cite a few examples, but maybe not.
However, the Alex Salmond case is possibly illustrative. Of course, some of the charges were serious, while others pretty trivial. But might never have gotten to court a few years ago, and probably wouldn't have even been investigated if Salmond had been an ordinary member of the public, like the manager of a back street pub.
By the same token, in the Three Rivers case, I suspect there was something in it. But suppose someone had a vendetta against the driver, and spurious complaints were lodged by different girls, who seemed unconnected, but in reality were acting in concert. Doubt if that actually was the case, but stranger things have happened.
And indeed that's effectively what Alex Salmond's supporters are accusing the Sturgeonites of - basically conspiring to concoct and exaggerate stuff in order to bring him down and make sure he's a spent force in politics, and thus no threat to Nicola
Which is maybe getting a bit away from the Three Rivers stuff, and I'm not saying they're wrong. But there's just something about the council's attitude here that's not right.
Check out the highlighted text here, for example. Kind of sounds like they're bragging a bit about how they can take a driver out on the flimsiest of allegations:
Three Rivers District Council wrote:
The driver, formerly licensed by Three Rivers District Council, had his application to renew his private hire driver’s licence refused after it emerged that he had been the subject of a number of allegations – although he had not been arrested or charged (let alone convicted) for any offences.