stop
a 'Police Stop' starts with detainment; it is a man detaining another man; it is that simple;
Chief Constable and fiction
Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011 section 2 says each police force is to have a chief constable; Schedule 2 paragraph 2 says a chief constable is a corporation sole, and paragraph 3 gives the office-name as "the Chief Constable of" with the police-force name added; a corporation sole is not a man, it is an imaginary device, it does not exist;
Police Force and fiction
Police Act 1996 section 2 says a police force is maintained for every police area listed in Schedule 1; Schedule 1 lists Cheshire as a police area;
Cheshire Constabulary, Crown, DVLA, and every like fiction is an imaginary device, it does not exist; there is only a man or woman doing deeds; see fraud;
Crown and fiction
in the House of Commons Library, The Crown and the Constitution, by David Torrence, Aug 2025, it is written that the Crown is an "abstract concept" (Nicholas Browne-Wilkinson KC) and a "convenient cover for ignorance" (F.W. Maitland); Crown is not a man, it is an imaginary device, it does not exist; see Crown;
Acts of Parliament and fiction
Acts of Parliament are Crown copyright, they are owned by Crown; an imaginary thing can not own, license, or grant authority; if a man relies on the Road Traffic Act, PACE, a Police Force or other fiction as authority for a deed, then the authority is imaginary; a fiction can not give authority to a man, it does not exist; see acts;
chain of wrong
if a man acting as constable stops the movement of another man, the first deed is detainment; from there, each further deed must be named plainly;
- detainmentthe movement of a man is stopped;
- lie - fraudthe man claims to represent Cheshire Constabulary or another statutory fiction, and uses that lie for gain or advantage;
- authority - fraudthe man relies on the Road Traffic Act, PACE, Crown, Parliament, police force, or other fiction as authority for a deed;
- assaultthe man pressures another man to produce documents issued by fiction;
- extortionthe man says, do this or this will happen, so he can wring something from another man;
- batterythe man touches another man;
- restraintthe man uses manacles;
- imprisonmentthe man puts another man in a cage;
- robberythe man takes things used by another man;
- resultthe result of such wrongs is hurt and loss, with the possibility of damage;
fraud
fraud is deceit used to gain advantage or cause loss; old use covers deceit, false representation, trickery, and gain or advantage by deceptive means;
if any sentence depends on fiction, the sentence has no root; if a man relies on fiction, for example an Act of Parliament as authority for a deed, he makes a false representation; see Crown;
partaking in fraud
if a man claims to represent fiction, and uses that false dealing to gain compliance, answer, attendance, payment, advantage, seizure, restraint, imprisonment, or control of things used by another man, the wrong is fraud; see fraud;
remedy path
where there is wrong, law must provide a path for remedy; without remedy, the wrong becomes trespass, and trespass is a grave matter for any man;