Clearly pre-lock down so not really relevant, but none-the-less.
Both before and during. He came back into the country on 18th March and lockdown was from 23 March. He had the cough during lockdown and so I looked up the symptoms on the internet and determined that he was not displaying any of the accepted symptoms.
Sure, but until or unless you'd verified through a reasonable route (e.g. 111) that you did not need to self isolate you are expected to work on the basis of worse case scenarios, so to self isolate until released as it were.
Not sure where you are getting that from? If you do not have the accepted symptoms you were not required to self-isolate.
Unless she and Cummings are both simply lying it is clear that they both believed she may have COVID-19 so they needed to self isolate until they'd ascertained that it was not necessary.
Where does it say that on the NHS website? I looked it up at the time and the NHS website said call 111 if you have the following symptoms of coronavirus - new continuous cough, high temperature - and you will be advised what to do. It did not say anything about assuming the worst even if you do not have the accepted symptoms and self-isolating until you can get through to the NHS.
Also while my aunt was busy puking continuously while lying on her floor moaning from severe abdominal pain, I called 111 and there was a recorded message that said there would be a wait of at least 1 hour before I would get through to speak to someone, So think it is a bad idea to advise people to phone 111 about coronavirus unless they actually have symptoms as I don't think 111 are coping with the current call volumes.
I decided not to wait for an hour to speak to someone. I spoke to a relative who was a doctor. He said he could not diagnose anything over the phone as to why she could be puking and shouting in pain so I asked my husband to drop me and my aunt off at A&E instead.
And as I keep pointing out it makes no odds whether they were self isolating or just in lock-down - a 260 mile journey was against the rules even if they were in lock down rather than self isolation.
The police are investigating further. We know the police provided advice at the time - I don't think it has been revealed what advice they gave. But remember the police have discretion - if they see that rules or laws have been broken, at their discretion, they may choose to prosecute, fine, advise or do nothing. That the police chose not to fine anyone does not mean that they did not consider that Cummings had broken the rules.
So currently we have no view from the police whether Cummings broke the rules. Ok so let's wait for the police to comment on that even if they choose not to fine him.
But there are two elements to this - firstly whether under the law the police might get involved - but there is the point about his position. It is extremely common for someone to be sacked from a role, or be asked to resign with having broken a law in police terms - because the rules around professional conduct are very different to the criminal or civil law.
So currently we have no view from the police whether Cummings broke the rules. I assume you meant in your above comment that someone can be asked to resign
without breaking the law. So who determines whether the rules of professional conduct have been breached in this situation and that Cummings should be asked to resign?