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Police Powers in Great Britain

Police Powers in Great Britain. Table of contents. Police aims Historical development of the police force Main police powers Exercises. Police aims.

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Police Powers in Great Britain

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  1. Police Powers in Great Britain

  2. Table of contents • Police aims • Historical development of the police force • Main police powers • Exercises

  3. Police aims “The primary object of an efficient police is the prevention of crime: the next that of detection and punishment of offenders, if crime is commited. To these ends all the efforts of the police must be directed. The protection of the life and property, the preservation of public tranquility, and the absence of crime will alone prove whether those efforts have been successful and whether the objects for which the police were appointed have been obtained.” Leonard H. Leigh

  4. Historical development • Until the early 1800s most crime was combated by local constables with the help of the occasional citizen patrol • As cities became more crowded, individual companies organized police forces to protect their interests • The Thames River Police was created by West India Trading Company in 1798

  5. The Thames River Police • 80 full-time men • Patrolled the London port • The private police force so effective that Parliament authorized money to add men to their patrol

  6. Robert Peel • Sir Robert Peel (1788-1850), a Conservative Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1834-35 and again from 1841-46 • Created the first professional police force in 1829 • Peel sponsored the Metropolitan Police Act which was passed by Parliament

  7. Metropolitan Police Act of 1829 •  For the first time in Britain’s history, the Act established an organized police force in London, with 17 divisions of 4 inspectors each, its central base at Scotland Yard, under the purview of the Home Secretary.

  8. “Bobbies” • The men on patrol became known as “peelers” or “bobbies” after R. Peel

  9. Bobbies The first thousand of Peel’s police began to patrol the streets of London on September 29, 1829 Requirements: 6 ft tall and no history of wrong-doings

  10. Blue tail-coats and top hats to look more like ordinary citizens

  11. Peel’s vision • The police force should operate from a centrally located headquarters accessible to the public • Recruitment, selection and training • Proper uniforms • Weekly wage • Familiar figures to the public • Friendly image

  12. London City Police, 1959

  13. Main police powers • Arrest • Search • Entry • Seizure • Detention

  14. Arrest • The police can arrest persons suspected of having committed an offence with or without a warrant issued by a court • For serious offences (“arrestable offences”) a suspect can be arrested without a warrant • General arrest power (to prevent injury or damage)

  15. Search • The official examining of a person or a place • A police officer has the power to stop and search people and vehicles if there are reasonable grounds for suspecting that stolen goods or weapons will be found • The officer must state and record the grounds for taking this action • Regulated by the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act of 1994 • An unlawful search constitutes assault

  16. Entry • The right of the police to enter private property to find the wrongdoer • The police can enter premises to make an arrest and search them to find their suspect • Unlawful entry constitutes the tort of trespass

  17. Seizure • The instance of taking possession of somebody’s property by the authority • When a lawful arrest is made, the police can seize articles and documents that could be used in evidence against the suspect • The police can take any weapon or article that the suspect could use to harm himself or others

  18. Detention • An arrested person must be taken to a police station • The suspect has a right to speak to an independent solicitor free of charge • A suspect may refuse to answer police questions (”the right to silence”) according to the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act of 1994 • For lesser offences, a suspect can be held in police custody for 24 hours • For serious offences up to 96 hours without charge

  19. Importance of the law related to police powers • Important from the political standpoint (police interference with the freedom of the individual) • Important from the legal standpoint (issues of civil and criminal liability depend on the lawfulness or unlawfulness of the use of these powers)

  20. Vocabulary • Search – pretraga • Seizure – zapljena • Detention – zadržavanje • Warrant – nalog • Tort of trespass – ometanje posjeda • Civil liability – građanska odgovornost • Criminal liability – kaznena odgovornost

  21. Complete the definitions: • _______ is the right of the police to enter private property in order to find the wrongdoer. • _______ is the act of taking hold of a wrongdoer by the authority of the law. • ________ is the instance of taking possession of somebody’s property by the authority. • ________ is the official examining of a person or a place for stolen property or other important details.

  22. Answer key • ENTRY is the right of the police to enter private property in order to find the wrongdoer. • ARREST is the act of taking hold of a wrongdoer by the authority of the law. • SEIZURE is the instance of taking possession of somebody’s property by the authority. • SEARCH is the official examining of a person or a place for stolen property or other important details.

  23. Conditional clauses If the custody officer decides that there is insufficient evidence ___________ (charge) the suspect, the suspect must be released. If the custody officer has reasonable grounds for ___________ (believe) that detention without charge is necessary ___________ (secure) or _____________ (preserve) evidence relating to an offence for which the suspect is under arrest, or to obtain such evidence by ______________ (question) the suspect, he or she may order further police detention. The grounds for the detention _____________ (must, record) in writing on the custody record.

  24. Answer key If the custody officer decides that there is insufficient evidence to charge the suspect, the suspect must be released. If the custody officer has reasonable grounds for believing that detention without charge is necessary to secure or preserve evidence relating to an offence for which the suspect is under arrest, or to obtain such evidence by questioning the suspect, he or she may order further police detention. The grounds for the detention must be recorded in writing on the custody record.

  25. Complete the following statements about arrest: • A person is guilty of the crime and tort of assault if __________________. • If the arrested person escapes from custody, he __________________. • If the arrest is unlawful, the policeman ___________________. • The policeman will be guilty of assault if __________________.

  26. Answer key • A person is guilty of the crime and tort of assault if he uses force to resist. • If the arrested person escapes from custody, he will be guilty of an offence. • If the arrest is unlawful, the policeman will be guilty of the tort and crime of false imprisonment. • The policeman will be guilty of assault if he uses force to effect the arrest.

  27. Translate the following: • An unlawful search constitutes assault, and the person searched is entitled to use reasonable force to resist. If, on the other hand, the search is lawful, the position is reversed: the policeman is entitled to use reasonable force, and resistance is assault.

  28. Thank you for your attention!

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