Last week my cousin pulled up behind a car at traffic light. What happened next is debatable, but the drive in front made a claim for neck injure.
It was only the fact that there was CCTV on the junction that proved the car in front reversed. So my cousin still has a clean licence.
So CCTV saved the day.
OH, the question, 'Apart from the odd TV prog, what good has come from CCTV?'
CCTV has helped to catch and convict a lot of criminals in the past... I think its a good thing!
I'm sure it is.
Strange that my local s/mart decided to remove the video cameras from the roof of the store, the ones over the changing rooms, when I gave them a dvd with a few pictures of women changing.....must still be loads floating about the net on various peepers sites....mind you, when they pay "security guards" peanuts, they're bound to act like monkeys.
CCTV has certainly quietened-down quite a few carparks, I quite a few that are dead at night now, where there used to be endless fun to be found.
CCTV used as anpr is going to change things as well, they can read your 'plates and signal "no tax/insurance/mot" to the local mob...who will then wait up the road. Even if you do have them, you will still be stopped. Note that the police do not accept a certificate of insurance as proof. They tend to impound vehicles now if the mid shows no trace. Then there's the thorny question of what happens to the info that is recorded.....
Yes, all for it...a couple of really nasty "no respect" yobos recently convicted of assault in my town as a reault of CCTV. Lock the silly irrsponsible ba****rds up I say!
Not particularly edifying viewing but it did at least make sure the horrible bastard went down:
(I'm a Newcastle fan and this makes me ashamed).
On the other hand, I personally have been mugged right under a CCTV camera, and assaulted under another, and had my bike nicked from directly under another, and the police have been unable to find any evidence. (The first two of those as a teenager in Newcastle, the third in my new home city, Liverpool... no surprises there :-))
Even today, when the government is stripping Police Officers of their discretion it is unlikely that cars are crush/ seized where an admin error has occurred.
In such cases the officer will normally act in the best intrest of the public.
On the other hand since PC are now judge by reaching targets, ie how many tickets/forms they issue, how many breath test they take; some will take action that years ago would have resulted in a verbal warnning and no further action. Government targets, the best way to stop someone doing their job!