Ace the SAIWA Challenge 2026 – Unlock Your Security Superstar Potential!

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What is 'reasonable grounds' in detaining someone?

A hunch or gut feeling

A court order

A mere suspicion

A factual basis based on observations that indicate a crime may have occurred or is about to occur

Reasonable grounds means the officer has a factual basis drawn from identifiable observations or information that would lead a reasonable person to believe a crime has occurred, is occurring, or is about to occur. It isn’t a hunch or mere suspicion; it must be supported by concrete facts or circumstances that can be explained and justified. For example, noticing someone flee a store after a theft report, or seeing someone acting nervously and matching a suspect description near the scene, provides observable elements that form a factual basis. A court order, while it may authorize detention in certain cases, is not what establishes reasonable grounds on the spot in a street encounter. Relying on gut feelings or vague unease is not enough. The standard asks for objective, articulable facts that a reasonable observer could rely on to infer potential criminal activity, helping protect both safety and individual rights.

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