1 in 6 drivers in N Wales escape fines
1 in 6 drivers in N Wales escape fines
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206xsi

Original Poster:

49,321 posts

268 months

Thursday 4th September 2003
quotequote all
...cont

The only stretch of the A55 - the road most likely to be used by most foreign visitors - where Arrive Alive vans operate is near Penmaenbach.

"We have had operations at that location where we targeted foreign vehicles. We have stopped them further down the road and told them they have been caught speeding.

"We do not take them to court but we give them a warning and tell them they are endangering lives," said Ms Richardson.

Arrive Alive has also had multilingual leaflets printed which set out the police attitude to speeding in North Wales and these have been handed to foreign drivers with their boarding cards at Holy-head ferries.

Some speeding vehicles may prove difficult to trace. Arrive Alive works alongside number plate recognition vans which are on the look-out for everything from tax and MOT dodgers to known criminals, including drug dealers and paedophiles.

Last year speeding tickets brought in £3.2m in fines in North Wales, money which all goes towards the operation of the scheme.

206xsi

Original Poster:

49,321 posts

268 months

Thursday 4th September 2003
quotequote all
Up yours Brunstrom:

http://icnorthwales.icnetwork.co.uk/news/regionalnews/content_objectid=13368090_method=full_siteid=50142_headline=-6%2D000%2Ddrivers%2Ddodge%2Dticket%2Dfor%2Dspeeding-name_page.html

6,000 drivers dodge ticket for speeding Sep 4 2003

By Carl Butler


UP to one in six drivers caught in speed traps in North Wales escape paying fixed fines, it emerged yesterday.

Foreign motorists and cars which prove difficult to trace are among those to escape the £60 penalty.

The Daily Post revealed yesterday that about 33,000 motorists have been caught on camera speeding in North Wales between April and August.

But on average an estimated 18pc - nearly 6,000 - will escape prosecution.

Arrive Alive, the anti-speeding campaign which has nine mobile speed trap vans on key problem roads in North Wales, yesterday explained why so many escape the net.

"We have to serve a notice of impending prosecution to a UK address," said spokeswoman Beth Richardson.

"Foreign vehicles which have an address outside the UK cannot be served a notice."

For someone facing a straightforward fixed fine, the administrative work in trying to recover payment from abroad would also be too costly. But it does not mean foreign drivers escape scott free.

If a foreign driver's speeding amounted to reckless or dangerous driving, he could be pulled over by police and face prosecution like anyone else.

...cont

justme

140 posts

268 months

Friday 5th September 2003
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drug-dealers, paedophiles and terrorists he he...

That's the politically-correct set of baddies nowadays.

Everything is done to protect us from them - Scameras, surveillance you name it

Even the US spy-centre in the Yorshire Dales is supposed to be protecting us from these people (not industrial, military & political espionage, nooooo)

marvelharvey

1,869 posts

270 months

Friday 5th September 2003
quotequote all
206xsi said:


If a foreign driver's speeding amounted to reckless or dangerous driving, he could be pulled over by police and face prosecution like anyone else.



Do they have those new cameras in Wales? You know, the ones which take pictures of dangerous and wreckless driving as well as speeders?

Richard C

1,685 posts

277 months

Friday 5th September 2003
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Unfortunately not. They seem to have lots and lots of LTI2020's. They are not going to catch any 'dangerous or reckless foreigners' anyway, the vans while manned by BiB volunteers, are too slow.

The chief propaganda professional BTW is Ms Beth Mitcheson not Richardson for those who want to write to 'Arrive Alive ...but with Empty Wallet and No Licence'