“The arresting officer will stay with his charge throughout the paperwork process. Whether that was to write up and hand him a summons, or to place him in his cell overnight to wait for an immediate court appearance for bail or remand the next day.”
Where is the evidence that an arresting PC will always “stay with his charge throughout the paperwork process”? That’s about as likely as a cod fisherman always remaining with his cod until the Sainsbury’s checkout “process”. Where is the evidence that the Barnet policeman who was present in court for the watch theft case was the same policeman who arrested Isaacs for the coat theft? I’ve explored the possibility of them being the same, but you’ve somehow mutated it into a fact, which it clearly isn’t. You’re now even suggesting that it fell to the arresting police constable to “write up and hand him a summons”, which is obviously nonsense. There is absolutely no reason – none at all – to think that the police constable who appeared at Worship Street knew where Isaacs was in the early hours of the 9th November.
“Constables appearing in court as witnesses was a regular part of police work, not only did Tyce know what was expected of him, also his Inspector knew what would be expected so he is certainly not going to send someone to represent Barnet Police who cannot provide all the answers the Magistrate is likely to ask.”
“...The alternative explanation – that the police were so eye-wateringly cretinous as to release a known habitual thief, and to then expect him to wait at a lodging house for a summons to arrive – is not even a possibility, as far as I’m concerned.
Regardless how you view it, that was the process.”
Regardless how you view it, that was the process.”
Regards,
Ben
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