Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

As many have already observed, this is bad law! The penalties for dangerous and reckless driving are already severe - as they should be! But to then add to that an additional "fine" of about $20k, plus several thousand dollars for storage costs is just gobsmacking. All of this can be based on the "reasonable suspicion" of a police officer that the vehicle in question had been used for an aggravated offence. The safeguard to the "reasonable suspicion" is that it must be given in good faith. That should prove taxing for the long arm of the law! Oh, and by the way, the nice policeman can then get a court order and use reasonable force to enter your home to get your car keys so he can impound the car. There are not too many laws that allow a cop to enter your home! So slide the back end a little on a wet road ("cause the wheels to lose traction with the road surface") and get woken up a little while later by the SWAT team!

I am not seeking to protect hoons, but this law provides penalties that are out of all proportion to any other offence (note that you can get hit by this for driving offences that are not even criminal offences!! There are plenty of criminal offences where you could not get penalties even in the same ball park as these!!! With criminal offences, no cop would dream of forcing entry into someone's house.).

The "reasonable suspicion" bit is just bad law. It leaves too much to the discretion of the officer. In the UK in the mid-80s, they repealed the so-called "sus" laws, because they were being used by police to target young people in general and young people from ethnic minorities in particular. The police and many of their supporters insisted this was not correct, but findings of "institutionalised racism" in recent years have proven the point. These laws, by the way, allowed cops to arrest someone, have then charged, convicted and fined on the grounds of reasonable suspicion that they were about to commit an offence. So they had not actually done anything. These laws were in place for many years and it took a campaign over nearly 10 years to get them repealed.

It is easy to put bad law in place. Very easy. Lazy, or plain ignorant politicians who have an eye to the populist view; an establishment that has a culture encouraging a negative view of certain groups (ethnic minorities, young people, people in modified cars); and popular sentiment whipped up by an un-imaginative and dumbed down press.

Sound familiar? You can see these conditions here and now. They even used the establishment groups to come up with the proposed law - "extensive consultation ...... with an interagency working group" - but not with the outside world!!!

The only way to prevent this becoming law, or to get it changed quickly if it happens, is to argue eloquently and incessantly against it as bad law. Don't go near the issue of the offenders and identifying yourself with them, just point out, loudly and clearly, that it is bad law. Write to your local papers, the West, your MP. Write to Colin Barnet. If we can keep him speaking out against it, he will change it if the Libs get back in. Keep the heat on Labor too. Politicians like the populist issue, but they don't like to be associated with something that is shown to be flawed. It is only by demonstrating where the flaws lie in this law that we can defeat it.

Get writing. Make a noise. Shout from the roof tops. :) Or whimper in your own little corners and watch as it becomes reality!

  • Replies 85
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

the scene as a whole needs to get well organised and put forward a well thought out and positive view that won`t be looked at as been an knee jerk reaction . also we as a whole need to make the idiots that think cutting up in a carpark full off people is cool to start to act like responsable drivers. it is a shame that a majority of these people drive hsv wanabes and can`t be made to understand that there actions impact on all owners of modifyed cars

i`m know what you are saying and been a 37yr old it makes me mad that there seems to be a view around that the worst offenders are the younger drivers. there is some younger guys who do make it bad for the rest but just watching who always cut you of on roundabouts and swap lanes without looking first it soon becomes obvious that alot of the 40plus age group in there falconsand commerdores are your worst offenders . as i said it makes me ashame to be in or near this age group who should by now know how to behave on the roads :kick:

I know this will sound biased, but i have to say, most of the hooning that goes on around my neck of the woods is by young guys in Commodores / falcons. There is one twit in an import down here, but aside form that, most of the guys who own decent cars are pretty sensible sorts.... lets face it, if you pay $$$ for a nice car, trick it up a bit, and love driving it, your not likely to do some crazy-ass burnout with the high posiblity of causing some major damage to your baby.:boinkcar:

all this aside, the law, in most cases, comes down to respect, alot of people say it, but don't seem to realise, it's gotta work both ways - If you'd just had a big night out, would you want some guy out front of your house trying to make his un-muffled, rice modified lancer break into the 10s ?:burnout: i doubt it.

so sure, the laws seem harsh, and i agree that by driving distinctive cars, we're gonna get an unfair amount of attention, but as quite a few of you guys already pointed out, if you think BEFORE pushing the pedal just a little bit more... we'll all be fine

and sorry to any mitsy guys out there, but ricey lancers :cheers:

:

so sure, the laws seem harsh, and i agree that by driving distinctive cars, we're gonna get an unfair amount of attention, but as quite a few of you guys already pointed out, if you think BEFORE pushing the pedal just a little bit more... we'll all be fine

and sorry to any mitsy guys out there, but ricey lancers :cheers:

Guys,

You have got to move above the argument of whether people are hoons or not. Sure, some people are hoons, irrespective of what they drive. Falcadores or Rice or just a bit too exuberent, they deserve to get done. But they only deserve to get done in some kind of relationship between the crime and the punishment. They also only deserve to get done if they are truly guilty. The way this law is set up, unfortunately it leaves a lot of dicretion with the police officer. Most cops are fine and they can handle that discretion. Some are not fine (as the recent royal commission showed!). But this is bad law, without the safeguards and there is a strong suspicion of a culture that will lead to the worst potential aspects of that law becoming true.

Yeah, ban the hoons, let them get what they deserve. But they don't deserve penalties that are harsher than many criminal offences. And the worry is that none of us deserve what this law will enable a cop to do to any one of us if he is having a bad day!!

Raise the level of the discussion guys! Where are you going from here?

Cheers.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • I've owned a few scooters over the years, a Vespa PX oil burner was my first scooter, followed by a few others, including a little 50cc BeeWee that I used as a barracks bike, and I've had a blast on all of them, they really are the cheapest for of city/suburb transport around The only issue with scooters in Australia is lots of people look down on them due to their size,  maybe they need a big bike to make up for something else where they are lacking, unlike Europe and Asia where every man an their dog owns one, and now that filtering is legal in NSW, local traffic is never a issue Not to say I haven't owned my share of big cc bikes over the years, but they were for more blasting through the hills or Hwy riding where it needed to sit on Hwy speeds Safety wise, I ride like everyone is always trying to kill me, everyone is running a red, or running stop/give way signs, or generally asleep at the wheel, which most people are duringtheir commute, I also ride really safe, and give myself, and everyone else enough room in case I need to pull some hasty evasive actions, I've done a few rider training days over the years, which has come in handy on more than a few occasions  As for mods, there's nothing really, and yes your right about aftermarket exhaust, all you get is loud and obnoxious noises from them, like every 250-300 cc you hear with a aftermarket muffler, in saying this I did put a rear muffler from a 125 Aprilla on one of my old 125 scooters, it was horrendous and no amount of full face helmet and ear plugs would dampen that noise As for coming from the Harley, and what a overpriced POS that was, I no longer do big rides as my poor old busted joints ache after about 1/2 an hour of riding, long cruises are so much more enjoyable now in a car, so a big bike would be pointless   
    • Oh wow, it's easy to forget how cheap these can be. Probably the cheapest way to travel. Though people in cars here tend to be morons and I would not feel very safe. Were scooters ever big in Australia? It used to be the thing growing up in Europe ~20 years ago. 50/70/125ccm Peugeot or Yamaha and some others. Utterly obnoxious Polini race exhausts. Kick stands that slant as much as possible. So loud. So much noise for really not moving very fast at all. But it felt cool at the time. Not sure where I'm going with this, but there is an aftermarket for mopeds! Though I'd have pictured you more for a Goldwing kind of guy after growing out of the Harley.
    • You need to know I am sorry for this.  
    • As the MX5 isn't apparently "manly" enough, and I need something for runs to the local shops, and also take to my part time job at the salon, basically I can keep the MX5 away from car parks and stuff......like "flying lockers", I was wondering what I could buy to fix this issue LOL, I pick up a new Yamaha 125 Delight this arvo from Trooper Lu, basically a R1 that you can fit a slab of beer on between your feet, also, it was $29400 cheaper than a R1, so actually it's 2 x better than a R1    
    • Nah. H2S. H2S is "rotten egg gas", which is what is associated with no cat. SO2 is equally nasty, and if you've ever smelt it you'll know all about it. More of a choking, acid in the back of the throat sort of thing. But you can only smell it in a narrow range up to about 1ppm. Above that, it irritates your mucous membranes, but you don't smell it.
×
×
  • Create New...