That is clearly sufficient. You cannot admit to what you cannot remember but accepting Prosecution case on full facts is an admission. That is the basis upon which he would plead Guilty art the Court

 

Tony Marshall

Alexander Johnson Solicitors

246 Bethnal Green Road

London E2 0AA

Tel: 020 7739 1563

Fax: 020 3745 2156

tony@alexander-johnson.co.uk

 

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From: members@mail.lccsa.org.uk <members@mail.lccsa.org.uk> On Behalf Of richard berman
Sent: 27 August 2019 12:25
To: Bruce Reid <brucerzzz@googlemail.com>
Cc: Edward Jones <EJones@hja.net>; members@mail.lccsa.org.uk
Subject: Re: Police cautions

 

Equivocal or unequivocal ?

Unequivocal as not disputed ?

 

On Tue, 27 Aug 2019, 12:00 Bruce Reid (via members list), <members@mail.lccsa.org.uk> wrote:

I have had that and the OIC hesitated and said that this was not an admission, so I reiterated it as an intervention and said that he  was therefore accepting that the incident occurred as alleged. I got a caution, but I can see a rigidly thinking OIC saying no....

Bruce

 

On Tue, 27 Aug 2019 at 11:31, Edward Jones <EJones@hja.net> wrote:

Dear all

 

Has anybody had the scenario recently where police say that client eligible for a caution if admissions made, but the only truthful admission client capable of making is “I don’t remember what happened because I was so drunk but I accept that the police’s witnesses’ recollection is better than mine therefore I accept that it happened as they say it happened”? If so, did client advance that in the interview and what did the police do?

 

Edward Jones | Partner | For Hodge Jones & Allen Solicitors

 

    

Tel:

 020 7874 8369

    

    

Fax:

 020 7874 8306

Email:

 ejones@hja.net

CJSM:

 edward.jones@hja.cjsm.net

Web:

 www.hja.net

 

 

___________________________________________________________________________________________________

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DX 2101 Euston

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