No need to apologise Frantic, Scottish law is a mystery to all of us. My greatest wish would be for a Scottish lawyer to join these groups and provide some clarity.
My limited understanding of the difference between a summons and a petition is that the latter is for more serious crimes( solemn procedure ) which we would be concerned with here - I suppose very minor sexual crimes might come into this category but I don't know.
In the spirit of further confusion, a petition can apparently be served on the person by the police, ( usually in court ) given to a family member or fixed to the door of a bail address - I seem to think they can arrive via the post as well but am typing from memory and could be wrong.
The major similarity between Scottish and English law seems to be the general lack of resources as in all public services. The television portrayal of a dedicated detective working all hours and following all leads until a case is solved is far from reality. Columbo would never have been so good if he had to split his time with the other 20 cases he was working.
My limited understanding of the difference between a summons and a petition is that the latter is for more serious crimes( solemn procedure ) which we would be concerned with here - I suppose very minor sexual crimes might come into this category but I don't know.
In the spirit of further confusion, a petition can apparently be served on the person by the police, ( usually in court ) given to a family member or fixed to the door of a bail address - I seem to think they can arrive via the post as well but am typing from memory and could be wrong.
The major similarity between Scottish and English law seems to be the general lack of resources as in all public services. The television portrayal of a dedicated detective working all hours and following all leads until a case is solved is far from reality. Columbo would never have been so good if he had to split his time with the other 20 cases he was working.
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