Speeding motorcyclist stopped in Southport.
The motorcyclist was found to have not passed his Compulsory Basic Training (CBT) Reported & Seized.
Motorcycle seized and taken to a secure compound.
Speeding motorcyclist stopped in Southport. Found to have not passed his Compulsory Basic Training (CBT)
Reported & Seized. pic.twitter.com/4UyvZgZ9PK— Roads Policing Unit (@MerPolTraffic) November 15, 2017
Police officers have the power to seize a vehicle if they have a “reasonable cause to believe” that the vehicle was, or had been, used whilst uninsured or by a driver who did not hold a valid driving licence for that type of vehicle.
If a vehicle has been seized, it may be reclaimed by the person who was the owner or keeper of the vehicle at the time it was seized. Before the vehicle will be returned, the owner or keeper must comply with certain legal requirements. Each of these requirements must be complied with within seven working days of receiving the seizure notice, which will have been given to the driver at the roadside or sent to the Registered Keeper by post.
Saturdays, Sundays, public holidays and bank holidays are not working days, all other days are working days.
If all of the requirements are not completed within seven working days, the vehicle will be disposed.
Disposal will occur 15 days after the date of the seizure, or 15 days after the service of an official notice, if the notice was sent by post to the Registered Keeper after the vehicle was seized.
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