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6.—(1) If an authorised person seizes any waste under paragraph 5, he must give to the person in control of it a notice (a “seizure notice”)—
(a)giving the grounds for seizing it; and
(b)setting out the rights under this paragraph to make a claim, and the address for the service of the claim.
(2) If an authorised person is not immediately able to remove any waste seized under paragraph 5, he may mark it in any way he sees fit and serve a notice on the person in control of it, identifying it and prohibiting its removal from the premises until it is collected by, or under the direction of, an authorised person.
(3) Any person (other than an authorised person or a person acting under his direction) who removes waste referred to in sub-paragraph (2) from the premises is guilty of an offence.
(4) If it appears that the waste seized is—
(a)waste from a shipment that cannot be completed as intended, as referred to in Article 22; or
(b)an illegal shipment, as referred to in Article 23,
and it is seized in an area that is not under the jurisdiction of the competent authority with responsibility for take-back pursuant to those Articles, the competent authority that seizes it must store it pending action by the competent authority with such responsibility.
(5) If the owner of the waste claims that the waste was not liable to seizure he may, within 28 days of the seizure, notify his claim to the competent authority at the address specified in the seizure notice, setting out the grounds in full.
(6) If a notification of a claim is not received within 28 days, the competent authority must take such steps as it considers appropriate to ensure the recovery or disposal of the waste and for these purposes may serve a notice on the notifier requiring him to recover or dispose of the waste in the manner and within the time period specified in the notice.
(7) If a notification of a claim is received within 28 days, the competent authority must either return the waste or take proceedings for an order for the confirmation of the notice and the recovery or disposal of the waste in a magistrates’ court (or, in Scotland, the sheriff) and if the court confirms the notice it must order its recovery or disposal.
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