Am I Right To Be Feeling This Way?
Family Life1 min ago
Recently, the conservatives, the lib dems and even Liberty agreed that they are not oposed to phone taps, so why won't Charles Clarke allow phone taps to be used in court?
No best answer has yet been selected by Oneeyedvic. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I really don't understand this...........surely this is a no brainer (horrid expression, but apt in the circumstances)if ever there was one: if an al Qaeda or IRA faction is taped arranging a bombing of Krazy Ken at County Hall (unlikely as he loves both - I, ahem, hear), why on earth can't this evidence be relied on in court, particularly when virtually all other civilised (and some uncivilised) countries do.
Bananas.
No doubt there will be a typical politician reason why they don't, but clearly this will be beyond my comprehension otherwise surely it would be obvious!
one reason I heard given was that it would give information "on what sorts of people were having their phones tapped". Uh-huh....that would be bad, scary people who might do wrong. Since the evidence would only be used if a case came to trial, the "sorts of people having their phones tapped" would ostensibly be those charged with crimes. That wouldn't necessarily tell us (or the bad guys) an awful lot about who else was having their phone tapped. I'd guess (or maybe I've watched too much 24 and the like) that most baddies would expect phone tapping, especially if they were up to no good on a global scale.
The only time this might be a problem, is if a case comes to court, and phone tapping evidence, that would convict, is available from the phone of someone that no one expects to be tapped eg a member of Parliament. The CPP etc may all press for this evidence to be used to secure a conviction, but obviously the 'secret services' would want this kept under wraps, as it would immediately spark furore - especially if devices were then found in other MPs phones etc.
Not sure Charles Clarke has put forward any convincing arguments on this topic. Which doesn't inspire much confidence in me that he knows what he's doing.
OneeyedVic - I think you skip to a hasty and wrong grasp of my necessarily brief words. When I wrote, "Tape recording, except by the police, is usually inadmissible..." I meant just that. I did not mean to imply and did not say that such tapes would be of telephone conversations. Under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act, the police are permitted to make tape recordings of interviews that can then become the basis for written transcript evidence, or in certain circumstances evidence in their own right if required, to demonstrate a particular manner that would escape the transcript process, or to establish an error in the transcript process.
You are quite right, no taped phone conversations can be used as evidence in themselves, but the information gleaned from listening in to phone conversations, or even by being one of the parties to a conversation can lead to further and more accurately directed investigation with the intention of bringing a properly proved case to court.
Tape recordings, other than those covered by PACE, are most unlikely to be admissible, and the long held opinion is that these can be faked or tampered with such that a court could be fooled. I agree, modern technology can root out most fakes these days, but the courts are notorious for being just a little cautious when it comes to being "with it".