Caught Speeding Advice Needed
Discussion
gtidreamer said:
I'd suggest attending court, pleading guilty and saying that you are very, very sorry. If genuinely sorry and able to show it you may not be given the maximum points/fine that the court can give.
Exactly this. Turn up. Basically beg for your life and say your sorry and in retrospect regardless of the conditions being favourable it was a silly speed to be going at. You won't be doing it ever again and as the reality of the situation has hit you and you'd be handicapped for work without this privilege of having a license. Obviously be well dressed and speak well.
You'll be ok. I was in similar situation. I got told all sorts of stories. I'll be banned. Get the chair. Have my balls stun gunned.
I got points and I fine but I done worse than you! lesson learned from my younger days.
Also try not to get too bogged down with the harsher comments on here. All these powerful directos all have 911s, amgs, m5 etc but don't go a tick over 70mph.....
Thanks, points and a fine I can deal with (although my insurance if a different story) but a ban would prove to be an absolute nightmare.
I genuinely feel my case will be better represented in a letter than a court appearance based on how nervous I would be.
I'm under the impression (based on googling) if they intent to ban you they do not give you the option to plead guilty by post, the officer who pulled me over said anything 30 over the limit is usually an automatic ban
I genuinely feel my case will be better represented in a letter than a court appearance based on how nervous I would be.
I'm under the impression (based on googling) if they intent to ban you they do not give you the option to plead guilty by post, the officer who pulled me over said anything 30 over the limit is usually an automatic ban
https://www.sentencingcouncil.org.uk/wp-content/up...
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4-6 points or a short ban (not both) although 6 points would revoke your licence which is in their gift if they choose.
I think you're better off attending and being very apologetic because it matters that much to you.
Your motorbike may be an argument to stop the 24 month rule but you're best off avoiding the question all together if you can
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4-6 points or a short ban (not both) although 6 points would revoke your licence which is in their gift if they choose.
I think you're better off attending and being very apologetic because it matters that much to you.
Your motorbike may be an argument to stop the 24 month rule but you're best off avoiding the question all together if you can
Edited by Jonsv8 on Tuesday 5th May 07:02
I was in the same position as you insofar that I went from a full motorcycle license (held for 10 yrs) to a car license (18 months ago) and was naturally concerned that I would have to go through the whole 2 yr new driver/6 points malarky again. As far as I could tell, because my car entitlement was simply an additional category added to my 10 yr old 'driving' license, the probationary period did not apply.
anarki said:
If it's any conciliation, my workmate got caught doing 102 in a 70. No previous points or convictions in 8 years.
He went to court, represented himself, admitted guilt and was extremely apologetic. Hated every single second of it and described it as absolutely nerve wrecking.
He ended up with a 30 day ban, court fees and I think 6 points on his license. (May of been 3) As you'd imagine he was happy with that outcome.
You maybe ok and end up with a similar punishment. Good luck
I didn't think you could get points AND a ban?He went to court, represented himself, admitted guilt and was extremely apologetic. Hated every single second of it and described it as absolutely nerve wrecking.
He ended up with a 30 day ban, court fees and I think 6 points on his license. (May of been 3) As you'd imagine he was happy with that outcome.
You maybe ok and end up with a similar punishment. Good luck
Last year i was summoned for 86 in a 50. When i got to court i pointed out respectfully that the photograph showed 83mph and not 86. Apologised dlfor speeding and plead guilty to 83. 6 points huge bking and was told lucky not to be banned. I presented 2 character references and a letter from my employer stating i do on call at times when public transport is not an option. Suit/apoligise/polite/acknowledge your error and hope they take into account your submission and early guilty plea if you do make one
Rusty569 said:
The other issue troubling me is the new drivers limit of 6 points in the first 2 years, I have only been driving for a year and a half but had a full bike license for 3 years before that, the police officer informed me that they are considered different and if I got 6 points I would probably loose my license. I didn't agree with this but didn't argue at the time, ive since been on the internet and found this https://www.gov.uk/penalty-points-endorsements/new... which says:
'There isn’t another 2 year period if you pass a test for another category of vehicle, eg to drive a heavy goods vehicle.'
Can anybody please shed some light on this issue..
Either the officer's comments were misinterpreted, or he was just plain wrong - the 2 year probationary period commences when you first pass a test, be it car or motorcycle. The clock is not restarted when another test is passed, even if it is for another class of vehicle.'There isn’t another 2 year period if you pass a test for another category of vehicle, eg to drive a heavy goods vehicle.'
Can anybody please shed some light on this issue..
Regarding the court process, fines, etc - this is a good place to start.
budfox said:
You've been driving for 18 months and you've been done for 97mph. In my opinion, which probably won't be the opinion of many others on here, is that you deserve a ban of at least six months, preferably a year.
Did you read the part where he's had a motorbike license for 3 Years before that?In my early 20's I was stopped on the M62 doing 101. At the time the Police seemed more concerned that I was doing that speed in a small car (Fiesta) rather than the speed itself, which was quite refreshing, but I digress: I represented myself in court and put a defence together to explain what a mistake it was - which it was, genuinely - and what I would do going forward to ensure I improved.
Court itself was an unpleasant experience because of some of the detritus I had to share a waiting room with but the actual hearing is no worse than making a presentation at Uni or work. I received five points and no fine as at the time I was at Uni and couldn't afford it. No ban.
I recommend going to court to represent yourself. It’ll also have the effect of making you think in the future if you feel like taking the risk again.
Court itself was an unpleasant experience because of some of the detritus I had to share a waiting room with but the actual hearing is no worse than making a presentation at Uni or work. I received five points and no fine as at the time I was at Uni and couldn't afford it. No ban.
I recommend going to court to represent yourself. It’ll also have the effect of making you think in the future if you feel like taking the risk again.
If there isn't a fixed penalty available then 97/70 is most likely 5 points. Band B fine is the starting point before discount. Not much point attending in person. Identify offence and offender mitigation and put it in writing.
Agree with SS2 about the inapplicability of the New Drivers Act. Thanks for the link!
Agree with SS2 about the inapplicability of the New Drivers Act. Thanks for the link!
gtidreamer said:
I'd suggest attending court, pleading guilty and saying that you are very, very sorry. If genuinely sorry and able to show it you may not be given the maximum points/fine that the court can give.
I agree with this.I was caught speeding in very similar circumstances to you. I went to court (scared stless that I'd lose my licence), grovelled, got 5 points and a fine and costs.
The copper who pulled me asked me what the stopping distance was from 100mph; needless to say I didn't know. I worked it out from the Highway Code stopping distances* and recited that at the "do you have anything to say?" part. It painted a picture that I'd given serious thought to what I'd done.
*it doesn't state it, you've just got to follow the pattern; it doesn't matter if they're correct 50 years after they were first published, it's what the guideline the authorities follow.
Edited by xRIEx on Tuesday 5th May 14:43
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