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Bound over to keep the peace

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vic73 | 11:39 Thu 05th Nov 2009 | Law
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Hi, about 20 years ago I was I got into fight and was arrested for being drunken and disorderly, I appeared at a magistrates court and I was bound over to keep the peace for one year I am applying for a job working in a school and obviously I will have an enhanced CRB check done.
On the application form for the job it asks the following two questions
Have you ever been convicted of a criminal offence?
Have you ever been cautioned for a criminal charge?
How should I answer these questions?
Do I need to disclose being arrested for being drunken and disorderly and
how should I answer these questions?
Thanks
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Currently a bind-over is used when no conviction is recorded. It is up to the prosecutor to suggest that the bench impose a bind-over, and if they do, the defendant has the right to refuse. (If he does, the prosecution then have the option to begin a normal prosecution.). I’m not sure, but I believe this was the case twenty years ago when your incident occurred.

If so, the answer is that you do not have a conviction, and you did not receive a warning, so you can answer “No” to those two questions.

However, the bind-over must have been recorded against your name (if for no other reason to have a record of it should it have been broken). How long that record would have been kept, and whether it would show on an enhanced CRB I could not say.

If you are asked whether you have ever been arrested then you should say yes.

On a wider note, your quandary is typical of the situation many people now find themselves in when asked to prove their “innocence” when they may not have been convicted or even charged with any offence. Many employers now ask a question along the lines of “Have you ever had your fingerprints and DNA taken and retained by the police?” Increasingly large numbers of people, unconvicted or even not charged, must now answer that they have. It has created a third class of citizen: those who are innocent; those who are guilty; and those who have been involved in an incident of some kind but not charged or convicted of an offence. Those, in fact, whose details the police like to hold on to, “just in case” - not quite innocent enough for their liking.
Question Author
What do people think should I put down on the application form that I was arrested for being drunken and disorderly and after appearing at magistrates court I was bind over just in case it does show up on the CRB check that the school do or leave it blank and hope for the best.

I!m not dishonest and would sooner tell the truth

What would you do?
Tell the truth, vic.

If your prospective employers are so fussy that they would let such a minor misdemeanour committed so long ago turn them off you, they are probably not worth working for.

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Bound over to keep the peace

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