- involve its own solicitors or legal department at the earliest possible stage.
- consult the relevant consultees (a statutory requirement under section 4(11) of the 2004 Act). The police may have information which would support the application for an order. In addition it may be appropriate to discuss the proposed ASBO application with the procurator fiscal.
- collect the evidence, bearing in mind the importance of obtaining statements from as many witnesses as possible at an early stage. If the order is defended, it would be helpful to have more than one source of evidence. The local authority or RSL applicant has to show that the behaviour caused or was likely to cause alarm or distress and so can arrange for the behaviour to be witnessed and evidence provided by, for example, its own staff or the police. The normal civil evidence rules will apply (e.g. hearsay evidence admissible).
- indicate in writing the possibility of an application to the person against whom the order would be sought, offer a meeting to discuss the matter and advise them to seek legal advice from a solicitor or citizens' advice bureau. The person may agree to modify the behaviour so that an order is no longer necessary. For 12-15 year olds, the young person's parent or guardian and social worker (where they have one) should be fully involved in this part of the process and any meetings which are scheduled.
- decide what the terms of the order sought should be to prevent further antisocial behaviour. The terms must be only those necessary to protect persons in the area of the local authority from further antisocial acts or conduct. They can be prohibitory only, and cannot therefore require the person to take any particular action or to undergo supervision or training. They should be specific, and in terms that are easily understood so that it will be readily apparent to the person and to the local community what constitutes a breach. Unless the circumstances are exceptional, the terms should not be such as to prevent the person from practising his or her religion or attending work or school/further education.
- decide what duration of the order to seek, up to and including an indefinite period of time (section 4(5). In considering the duration sought, it should be remembered that the prohibitions are those necessary for protecting relevant persons from further antisocial acts.
- consider whether further measures of support would be appropriate. If it was considered to be appropriate, this information should be put in the application so that the sheriff can consider this. If an ASBO is granted in a case involving an under 16 and the case referred to the reporter to convene a hearing to consider support measures, this information can be provided.
- instruct solicitors/ legal department to apply for an order through a summary application to the sheriff in the court district where the alarm or distress is alleged to have been caused. The application should include information on the action taken by the local authority, any other relevant landlord and any complainer to resolve the problem, and/or an explanation as to why other steps are inappropriate in the particular case.
- liaise closely with the sheriff clerk over the possibility of an application being made, and any need for it to be dealt with particularly quickly.
- throughout, keep the complainer, the police and anyone else affected by the antisocial behaviour informed.
Geographic scope of orders