Arrested over 12 months ago (November 1, 2012), Freddie Starr has been bailed and re-bailed three times this year without charge. Today he was re-bailed again until February 2014.
I would agree with you that the police abuse their powers with the use of extended and repeated bail requirements.
Neil Wallis, under investigation over the newspaper hacking allegations, was treated in much the same way and wrote a piece about it earlier this year;
''Proceeding with enquiries''. Maybe. Wonder how many complaints would need more 12 months to investigate. Meanwhile he is still only allowed to have contact with his two young children when his wife is present. Hmmmmmm
sir.prize - i am sure that the police are not in the business of putting themselves in the way of six or seven-figure compensation claims for not having followed proceedure, and indeed the law.
If they are following this path it is because they obviously feel it is appropriate, and legal, for reasons which we are not party to.
It is impossible to judge whether there is any unfairness involved in this until the verdict of the trial is known. I personally don't see what is unfair about being allowed your liberty with certain conditions, under the circumstances.
it does seem troubling. Some cases clearly take a long time to investigate - complicated fraud matters, for instance. It's not so easy to see why what are presumably allegations of sexual abuse should take more than a year, even if the alleged events happened a long time ago. What's likely to turn up that hasn't already done so?
precisely jno. One wonders how many complaints have been made against an individual. Surely 12 months is long enough to investigate - unless perhaps asuspect has run riot at a World WI Convention. But who knows how Plod works . . .
jack - I've told you twice before so here for the third time - your comments mean little to me. More often they are justifiably ignored. Remember 'saying' you were using invisible font? Same thing still applies.