Personal Injury Attorney & Personal Injury Lawyer Blog

July 24, 2010

UK Motoring Offences And Penalties

The UK has an abundance of road laws, and if you’re a driver on the UKs roads then chances you have at some point fell fowl of one of them. Surprisingly most of the UKs drivers are not actually aware of what they are being charged with and why when they are stopped. In this article, you will find a short list of the most widespread traffic offences, shedding light on the details and penalties you can look forward to for some of the more frequent motoring offences.

Excessive Speed: The actual offence here is defined as ‘Driving on a road exceeding the prescribed speed limit’. This offence carries a 60 fine and three points on your driving licence. The maximum penalty here is 1000 and 6 points on your licence depending on the speed you were doing. If you are caught driving at more than 30 miles above the set limit you can expect a ban.

If caught speeding and you are offered a fixed penalty, usually 60, then you are almost certainly best off simply paying the fine and accepting the points as any court appearance will most likely result in a larger fine or even a ban. If you do decide to challenge a speeding fine, then potential reasons to do so include: You were simply not speeding, it wasn’t you driving or that you were driving an exempt vehicle due to emergency.

Failing to stop: This crime is clear; ‘A driver of a mechanically propelled means of transport in attendance when a road traffic accident occurred where personal injury or damage was caused to another person and or vehicle’. Further to this, if you also fail to stop after injuring an animal not in the vehicle or properties on or near the road and fail to stop then you break the above law. Penalties for this type of offence are strict, with at least 6 months in jail and a fine of a 5000 likely.

Motorway speeding: if you are caught exceeding the national speed limit in the UK on a motorway then the maximum penalty is a fine of 2500 and six driving licence points. If you a caught in excess of 100mph then the probably outcome is a ban coupled with the fine.

If you have been given a Drink Driving Ban, then visit Freeman Keep On Driving expert Driving Solicitors.

July 12, 2010

Britain’s Most Lucrative Speed Camera

It has materialised that a new speed camera erected on a road where there has been just one severe accident in over ten years, has brought in over 1.3m pound in profits from speeding motorists per year. It has been daubed Britain’s most lucrative speed camera and has been named and shamed by an angry local community.

With the average cost of a speeding fine now reaching 60 the camera has earned 1,327,140 each year. This means that the ‘most lucrative’ camera in Britain has on average captured 1,843 motorists each and every month.

The camera can be found in Poole, Dorset where it was erected to catch motorists jumping red lights on a 30mph stretch of road on a dual carriageway. However, back in November last year the camera became one of the first in the country to be converted to catch unaware motorists speeding through the lights when they were on Green.

Official statistics show that only one serious accident has taken place on this road in over ten years with no fatalities. This has led to fears by motoring groups who are concerned that the only reason the camera has been converted is to ‘milk the motorist’, they also believe the low 30mph speed limit on a dual carriageway that usually commands a 40mph limit adds to the high number of issued tickets.

As a result of the cameras positions, the low speed limit and the fact it works regardless of green or red lights, drivers who thought they were driving legally have been caught travelling just a few miles over the limit. The road the camera is situated upon is a wide dual carriageway, with an industrial estate on one side, and a harbour on the other. The revenue generated by this one camera dwarfs the amount generated by other cameras, delivering evidence that something is seriously wrong with the setup.

In May this year a temporary Camera at road works on the A1139 in Peterborough was issuing an average of 3000 tickets per month, netting over 3.2m per year.

If you have been given a Drink Driving Ban, then visit Freeman Keep On Driving expert Driving Offence Solicitors.

June 21, 2010

Convicted Of Drunk Driving – On A Mobility Scooter.

Eight policemen in three police cars have made an arrest of a man driving after consuming three times the legal drink driving limit. The man was pulled over as he made his way home from a local pub, on his mobility scooter.

The pensioner, travelling at around 4mph on a pavement close to his Chesterfield home was surrounded by the policemen when he failed to stop. One policeman thought it necessary to mount the pavement with his vehicle to prevent the pensioner from continuing his journey whilst another took his keys.

The disabled pensioner, who has the scooter thanks to blocked arteries in his legs, was pulled over after an evening playing dominoes with his friends and had consumed around six or seven pints before setting off home.

He was kept in police cells for 12 hours, fingerprinted and had his DNA taken. Mr Donohoe commented “Anybody would think that I was a bank robber or a member of Al-Qaeda, I can’t believe how they treated me”.

He continued; “They must have known, like I did, that the rules of the road don’t apply when you’re riding a mobility scooter down the pavement at three and a half miles an hour, but it didn’t seem to matter one jot.”I didn’t stop at first because I wanted to get home, and I wasn’t doing anything wrong.”

Mr Donohoe was found to be three times over the legal UK drink driving limit after he failed a roadside breath test. He has been banned from driving; however he has not been banned from driving his mobility scooter as it is not actually classed as car.

There have recently been several publicised drink driving cases, the most high profile being Welsh rugby star Andy Powell, convicted after driving a golf buggy down the motorway, while a milkman was recently convicted for being drunk whilst driving a milk float.

If you have been convicted of Speeding, then visit Freeman Keep On Driving expert Speeding Solicitors.

June 15, 2010

Put The Brakes On Drink Driving

There were 11,000 recorded drink and drug related vehicle incidents in the UK in 2008. 1 in ten road deaths are caused by drunk drivers with 269 of these being a direct result of drivers being found over the limit.

Brake, which is a road safely charity has conducted some research into drunk driving related statistics. The findings have revealed that that up to 14 per cent of drink related accidents have been caused by what is regarded as ‘at work’ drivers. An at work driver is one that has commuted to or from a work based event where alcohol has been consumed during or after, resulting in the driver being over the limit when getting back behind the wheel.

These drivers admitted to consuming three or more units of alcohol before taking control of a vehicle. This is compared to just 6 per cent of other drivers on the road. A statistic that sees double the number of at work drivers acting irresponsibly.

The findings are targeted toward aiding managers and company bosses into thinking more about the role they play in ensuring that their employees do not drink drive the next time an event takes place. The usual procedure for these events is after a day of meetings the attendees generally wind down by consuming some form of alcoholic drink.

It is of course the responsibility of the individual to retrain themselves with regards to alcohol consumption; however the managers can play a role in organizing public transport to and from the event, and even allowing the employee the morning off work the day after the event.

Brake is doing its bit by launching a new campaign called ‘Face Facts’. Posters and e-guides are available to assist managers in alerting company drivers of the risks of drunk driving.

If you have been convicted of speeding, then visit Freeman Keep On Driving Road Traffic Solicitors.

June 12, 2010

Bus Driver Arrested For Drunk Driving

25 passengers were on board a double decker bus, ran by Blustar when it was pulled over on suspicion that the driver was thought to have been drunk driving.

25 passengers were on board the double decker bus, ran by Blustar at the time of the incident. The passengers onboard included children and elderly people when the police pulled over the vehicle before breathalysing and then arresting the driver for drunk driving.

One shocked passenger who does not want to be named commented: “We couldn’t hear the police officers after they had stormed in and were talking to the driver. We all panicked but did not know what to think. We just didn’t have a clue what was happening when we saw the blue flashing lights.”

One passenger travelling on the bus said: “We just didn’t have a clue what was happening when we saw the blue flashing lights. We all panicked but did not know what to think. We couldn’t hear the police officers after they had stormed in and were talking to the driver.

The driver was immediately detailed by the arresting officers and Bluestar dispatched a replacement driver who arrived to take control of the bus within minutes. Public relations manager at Blustar Chris Harris said because of the serious nature of the incident the employee was suspended immediately.

He went on to say: “It is a strict rule that all Bluestar employees are required to be completely sober at all times when on duty; the consumption of alcohol while on duty or reporting for duty while under the influence of alcohol is expressly forbidden. ”

It is important that companies such as Bluestar act quickly in response to drink driving allegations in order to reassure customers and take potentially dangerous drivers off the road. The safety of passengers aboard Blustar vehicles is paramount to their operations, so it is important to reassure passengers through swift response to issues such as this one that they are willing to do what is necessary to ensure safety.

The driver in question has been bailed until later in the year.

If you have been convicted of drink driving and been given a Driving Ban, then visit Freeman Keep On Driving expert Road Traffic Solicitors.

May 31, 2010

Driver Blames UFO To Avoid Paying A Parking Ticket

Filed under: Lawyer — Tags: , , , , , , , — Jon hunter @ 12:57 pm

Are you one of the many UK motorists that believe they have been the victim of an unfair motoring charge? If you are currently nodding your head, then don’t despair, try using one of these genuine explanations given to one London borough council in the hope, albeit slim, that you may be able to overturn your motoring conviction.

With the average cost of a parking ticket in or around London now topping a whopping 120, have to admire these unlucky motorists for trying their hand. Anyway, just what is the point of having a valid ticket when the council have now introduced a law for displaying more than one ticket in your car, even if one of these tickets is valid?

One motorist issued with a parking fine tried to blame spotting a UFO for his failure to pay his fine, a south London council has revealed. According to the driver, he was so shaken up by what he saw in front of him, he drove into a bus lane and was unduly fined.

Are you colour blind? If so you may want to try this one; another unjustifiably fined motorist stated that they were unable to distinguish colour, and the yellow line they were parked upon was actually green at the time.

A council spokesperson has said that the imagination of some motorists was “quite impressive”. What’s the weather like outside today? Well if it’s currently raining you may believe you can park anywhere you fancy right? Well according to this motorist, bad weather is a given for a free for all: “It was raining. I thought I could park anywhere if the weather was bad.”

Director of environment and housing, Gill Davies said: “UFOs and colour blindness unfortunately do not count as legitimate reasons to overturn a ticket. The imagination of some of these drivers is quite impressive. ”

Director of environment and housing at Southwark Council, Gill Davies said: “The imagination of some of these drivers is quite impressive, but UFOs and colour blindness unfortunately do not count as legitimate reasons to overturn a ticket.”

It’s not all parking doom and gloom however, with Westminster City Council stating that some motorists who park illegally in central London could receive written or verbal warnings instead of a 120 fine.

Need a Motoring Lawyer? Then visit Freeman Keep On Driving to find expertMotoring Lawyers.

May 26, 2010

Drink Driving – Who Are The High Risk Offenders?

Filed under: Lawyer — Tags: , , , , , , , — Paul Myers @ 4:37 am

All the essential ingredients of a safe driver – a person’s reactions times, perception, judgment and co-ordination are affected by the depressant drug alcohol. Even in small amounts, alcohol can make driving almost impossible for a driver to assess their driving ability. This is because alcohol provides the driver with a false sense of confidence and ability, which in turn fuels risk taking and the perception that they are in total control of their vehicle, even when they are not.

Unless a blood or road side breath test is performed it is absolutely impossible for a driver to know the amount of alcohol still present in their system when they get behind the wheel. Knowing the drink drive limit and stopping drinking when you reach the current drink drive limit is just not enough. Everyone processes alcohol through their bodies at different rates; this is due to a number of different reasons. For a start, a person’s height, weight and gender affects the rate of processing alcohol. Also their age and metabolism of their body is a big factor as is the time you last ate a meal and the person’s age.

There is no scientific way to measure exactly how long it takes to sober up completely after you have been drinking, and it’s probably a lot longer than you think. It can take over ten hours, yes TEN hours for your body to process the alcohol, even if you drink less than four pints the night before.

Who are the high risk offenders?

The driving limit is, or blood alcohol concentration (BAC) currently stands at 80mg. the average BAC of a convicted drink driver is 160mg, exactly twice the legal limit. Studies show that when you are at this point, you are exactly 20 times more likely to be involved in a serious road traffic accident. The majority of drink driving offenders can now be classified into the following groups;

Younger drivers with little or no respect for the law.

Older, heavy drinkers that regularly drink drive and have so far evaded the law.

Chronic alcoholics that convince themselves that they are capable to drive. Often they may not even realize they are drunk even before they start their journey.

Often they may not even realize they are drunk even before they start their journey.

In particular, drivers without a valid license and drivers repeatedly stopped for having no tax, MOT or insurance provide a clear pattern of offenders that have a long list of motoring offences that can be classified as high risk.

A high risk offender is a person whose behavior is out of control and therefore a person that is difficult to be governed by law which leads to the question; how do you stop these offenders?

Driver education; teach them about the risks of exceeding the daily BAC.

Publically appeal to the offender’s sense of humanity and selfishness and promote the risks of being caught and the penalties associated.

Want to find adriving offence solicitor, then visit Freeman Keep On Driving to find expert driving offence solicitors.

categories: drink driving,driving law,lawyers,solicitors,legal advice,motoring,vehicle

February 24, 2010

Department of Transportation Passes Law Banning Texting While Driving

Distracted drivers can cause accidents on the road. Truck and bus drivers, that drive commercially, log a lot of hours on the road and use of cell phones while driving is rampant. The Department of Transportation is hoping that a new law helps cut down on the number of accidents by reducing the distractions of drivers.

Just recently, the Department of Transportation put a new law in effect that bans commercial truck and commercial bus drivers from texting while they are driving. Any who are caught doing so will face possible civil or criminal fines. The fines can total up to $2,750.

The Department of Transportation’s new law will attempt to decrease the use of technology, including cell phones and texting, that is becoming more frequent. Commercial drivers are on the road quite a bit and have dashboard mounted computers as well as cell phones that they use which can sometimes be a distraction if used while driving. The new law hopes to help this. However, it fails to address the use of the dashboard computers, which can also be distracting.

Interestingly, research has shown that texting while driving requires the driver to take their eyes off the road for as long as five seconds. Truckers who text are up to twenty three times more likely to get into an accident than those that don’t.

The law banning texting is a good first step in an effort to improve safety on the roads.

A driver that is distracted can lead to an increased chance of an accident. It’s a good sign that the government is taking steps to improve safety on the road, but accidents that do occur as a result of a distracted driver can lead to injury. If you have been in the unfortunate situation of being injured in a truck or bus accident, be sure to contact a personal injury lawyer to discuss your issue.

Being involved in a truck or bus accident can be a stressful situation. It’s a good idea to speak with NJ injury law firms about your case. New Jersey injury law firms can help you to you understand your rights and educate you about your situation.