Donate SIGN UP

still havnt heard anything from the police, do i have to let them know im moving house

Avatar Image
tinkerbell1972 | 18:52 Thu 02nd Feb 2012 | Law
12 Answers
ok girls and boys, its me again, the lady who was going to have a visit from a police officer after her nutty ex boyfriends g/f tried to accuse her of harrassment. Well its been over five months now and i still havnt heard anything not a whisper......the problem is im planning to move house v soon so as stupid as it may seem where do i stand with this. this is probably stupid to ask but i was never charged with anything and he never got back to me. where do i stand now, do i have to let them know im moving house or what. totally confused now help
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 12 of 12rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by tinkerbell1972. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
Are you on bail?
If you are not on bail I am not aware of any requirement to notify a change of address to anyone you don't want to.
OK, you probably aren't on bail (sorry, only skim read question, due to birthday over indulgence). If you haven't been bailed, there is no reason why you should let anyone know you are moving (other than the people you would ordinarily need to).
If you haven't heard anything in five months perhaps they decided to drop the charge. Have you got any contact numbers whereby you could contact the police and ask them what is happening?
Question Author
hi no im not on bail, they never charged me with anything, they never got back to me in saying they would come and see me to talk about it, ive basically been left hanging
Question Author
is it possible theyve charged me with harrassment without me knowing about it, i never signed anything or even saw a police officer, just dont know how the law works
You have to be there to be charged.
It is possible to be summonsed by post but if you havn't received anything yet that is extremely unlikely.
There were probably no grounds to proceed.......
Question Author
thanks, how long have they got to charge me before their time runs out, its been almost five months is there a time limit on these things
The Police Officer probably filed the complaint in the round open-topped filing cabinet on his office floor immediately after having spoken to you.

It would have been nice if someone had contacted you to tell you that nothing was going to happen.....but I suppose they may have thought that it would serve as a stern lesson *not* to get involved in such a situation again.

Move house and put everything about this behind you. :o)
Question Author
thanks for all your replies, is it worth contacting the charging officer to find out what is going on or shall i just leave it now
Stretching my memory - and I have to say I'm not certain of this - I think a notice of intended prosecution has to be served within 2 weeks and the actual papers within 6 months. But that might be just Road Traffic Act offences.
If you havn't heard by now in a criminal case I would suggest you have nothing to worry about.
If it will put your mind at rest, try and contact whoever you last spoke to. S/he may not even remember the incident, if I'm honest.

If you can put it behind you without doing so, I'd do that!

Stop fretting....:o)

1 to 12 of 12rss feed

Do you know the answer?

still havnt heard anything from the police, do i have to let them know im moving house

Answer Question >>

Related Questions

Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.