A police officer's role is not to make decisions based on the law.
OK your officially clueless (despite your father apparently being a police officer at some time?)
Police officers all around the country every day make decisions based on the law that affect peoples liberties.
Do I arrest this person, have they commited an offence (based on reasonable suspicion) ?
Do I have legal grounds to stop and search this person?
Do I have sufficient evidence to take a case to the cps?
What police don't do is find people guilty of criminal offences.
Juries and magistrates/lay benches make decisions on the evidence presented at crown and magistrates courts respectively in relation to criminal cases. (in Crown courts judges are not responsible for assessing the evidence in trials as thats the juries function in the Crown Court - judges in Crown Court trials are responsible for directions based on the law)
Matters relating to DBS are dealt with at a lower standard because they are not criminal trials!
Why? because there is a sliding scale with regards to what test we use to judge things as a society.
Generally the more severe the consequence the higher the evidential burden.
Hence potentially imprisoning someone and convicting them of a crime comes with the highest burden of proof.
But its insane to suggest this is a sensible test to assess who shoud work with children and vulnerable adults! I can't beleive I have had to point this out so many times!
Last edited: