Health and Safety
Executive / Commission
Enforcement Guide
(England & Wales)
Guidance on the types of information that can be obtained, and the procedure to be followed for seeking authorisation and making a request for communications data, can be found in the Legal and Enforcement section of the intranet.
An entry, the failure to make an entry or the failure to keep a specific register may be relevant to your investigation. If the required register is produced for your inspection but is retained by the owner (for example an accident book), then you should sign and date under the last entry made and obtain a copy of the relevant section.
Photographs and drawings are useful evidence to illustrate conditions and circumstances and should be used whenever possible. Both film and digital images may be used as evidence.
Where it is intended to use digital imagery as evidence, staff should follow the guidance on the digital camera user group pages of the intranet. This will ensure that the evidential integrity of the images is maintained and can be demonstrated to the court.
Under section 20(2)(k) HSWA, inspectors have the power to require any person to produce any books or documents which must be kept under any of the relevant statutory provisions or which are necessary for them to see for the purposes of their investigation. The section also gives inspectors the power to inspect and take copies of such documents, but not to take original documents into possession.
Where you do not have access to copying facilities on site, you may need to remove an original document for copying. In such cases, the section 20(2)(k) power is likely to include the power to remove documents in order to copy them3. You may also rely on section 20(2)(m), which gives inspectors ‘any other power which is necessary' for the purpose of carrying into effect the relevant statutory provisions. Should this be necessary, you should give a responsible person a notice on form LP24, which identifies the document, states that you have taken possession of it and confirms that you will return the document as soon as the copy has been made. You should record in your notebook your reasons for taking the original for copying and also make a note when you return it.
The use of copy documents is permitted in criminal proceedings, provided they are authenticated to the court's satisfaction4. In most cases, therefore, copy documents, properly authenticated and exhibited by an appropriate witness, are likely to be sufficient for evidential purposes. Original witness statements should be made available to the court at trial, together with exhibits (see Exhibiting evidence).
In circumstances where you wish to produce at court an original document that is held by the defendant, you should consider serving a Notice to Produce or applying to the court for a summons to require a witness to produce the document. See Production of documents for further guidance. A witness summons to produce documents cannot be obtained against a defendant who is an individual.
Occasionally, a document may have such intrinsic evidential value, and be of such significance for any subsequent proceedings, that it is necessary to take the original into possession. In such circumstances, which are likely to be rare, you will have to rely on your section 20(2)(m) power. Use of the power in this way must be justifiable as necessary and proportionate, and you should make a careful note of your reasons for making the decision (see Obtaining evidence using section 20 powers). You should use form LP23 to give notice that you have taken an original document into possession, and provide the duty holder with a copy of the document in question.
In rare cases where only an original document will suffice, and you consider it inappropriate or impractical to take the original (for example, where it forms part of a much larger book or register), a witness statement should obtained from the person who owns or has custody of the document, exhibiting a copy of the entry and confirming his/her willingness to produce the original at court. Should the witness be unwilling to agree to produce the original, you should include this in the statement, make a record in your notebook and further consider using your power under section 20(2)(m) to take possession of the original.
Further guidance on the collection of evidence, including original and copy documents, can be found in OM 2001/128.