Want to speed? Buy a Tesla
Discussion
Tesla has been convicted at least 18 times and ordered to pay more than £20,000 for repeatedly failing to co-operate with UK police forces.
In one incident, South Wales Police wrote to Tesla Financial Services in a bid to identify the driver of a Tesla which had been speeding at 80mph (128km/h) on the M4 near Llantrisant, Rhondda Cynon Taf, in July 2025.
Court papers show a Tesla company director, Becky Hodgson, pleaded guilty for the firm by email in late November, saying it had tried to enter the plea online but "encountered a technical issue on the Online Plea Service portal".
Although the company admitted the criminal charge, Hodgson suggested in her email that it had complied with the police request, adding that its internal processes were followed and the nomination was sent via post.
A conviction was handed out at Merthyr Tydfil Magistrates' Court on 6 January and ended in Tesla receiving a £1,000 fine, an order for £120 costs and a £400 victim surcharge.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0r44zpprg7o
In one incident, South Wales Police wrote to Tesla Financial Services in a bid to identify the driver of a Tesla which had been speeding at 80mph (128km/h) on the M4 near Llantrisant, Rhondda Cynon Taf, in July 2025.
Court papers show a Tesla company director, Becky Hodgson, pleaded guilty for the firm by email in late November, saying it had tried to enter the plea online but "encountered a technical issue on the Online Plea Service portal".
Although the company admitted the criminal charge, Hodgson suggested in her email that it had complied with the police request, adding that its internal processes were followed and the nomination was sent via post.
A conviction was handed out at Merthyr Tydfil Magistrates' Court on 6 January and ended in Tesla receiving a £1,000 fine, an order for £120 costs and a £400 victim surcharge.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0r44zpprg7o
Mammasaid said:
Tesla has been convicted at least 18 times and ordered to pay more than £20,000 for repeatedly failing to co-operate with UK police forces.
In one incident, South Wales Police wrote to Tesla Financial Services in a bid to identify the driver of a Tesla which had been speeding at 80mph (128km/h) on the M4 near Llantrisant, Rhondda Cynon Taf, in July 2025.
Court papers show a Tesla company director, Becky Hodgson, pleaded guilty for the firm by email in late November, saying it had tried to enter the plea online but "encountered a technical issue on the Online Plea Service portal".
Although the company admitted the criminal charge, Hodgson suggested in her email that it had complied with the police request, adding that its internal processes were followed and the nomination was sent via post.
A conviction was handed out at Merthyr Tydfil Magistrates' Court on 6 January and ended in Tesla receiving a £1,000 fine, an order for £120 costs and a £400 victim surcharge.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0r44zpprg7o
Isn't the story saying Tesla as a company is not providing driver details when its company-registered vehicles trigger a camera, rather than Tesla buyers 'getting away with' speeding (because those vehicles will be registered to the purchasers)?In one incident, South Wales Police wrote to Tesla Financial Services in a bid to identify the driver of a Tesla which had been speeding at 80mph (128km/h) on the M4 near Llantrisant, Rhondda Cynon Taf, in July 2025.
Court papers show a Tesla company director, Becky Hodgson, pleaded guilty for the firm by email in late November, saying it had tried to enter the plea online but "encountered a technical issue on the Online Plea Service portal".
Although the company admitted the criminal charge, Hodgson suggested in her email that it had complied with the police request, adding that its internal processes were followed and the nomination was sent via post.
A conviction was handed out at Merthyr Tydfil Magistrates' Court on 6 January and ended in Tesla receiving a £1,000 fine, an order for £120 costs and a £400 victim surcharge.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0r44zpprg7o
edit: Wait, I skipped the financial services reference... so the post below would be accurate.
Edited by RSTurboPaul on Friday 23 January 15:25
Evanivitch said:
Um lease, but yeah.
Still smacks of that guy who kept getting business fines for failing to identify that he was driving the company-owned car. But ultimately avoided collecting any points...
I thought "the company director" took the hit, including points on his/her licence, for FTF.Still smacks of that guy who kept getting business fines for failing to identify that he was driving the company-owned car. But ultimately avoided collecting any points...
paul_c123 said:
Evanivitch said:
Um lease, but yeah.
Still smacks of that guy who kept getting business fines for failing to identify that he was driving the company-owned car. But ultimately avoided collecting any points...
I thought "the company director" took the hit, including points on his/her licence, for FTF.Still smacks of that guy who kept getting business fines for failing to identify that he was driving the company-owned car. But ultimately avoided collecting any points...
MDMA . said:
paul_c123 said:
Evanivitch said:
So why isn't director of Tesla UK Finance getting points?
I don't know, I guess its up to the courts to set the penalty.Evanivitch said:
paul_c123 said:
Evanivitch said:
Um lease, but yeah.
Still smacks of that guy who kept getting business fines for failing to identify that he was driving the company-owned car. But ultimately avoided collecting any points...
I thought "the company director" took the hit, including points on his/her licence, for FTF.Still smacks of that guy who kept getting business fines for failing to identify that he was driving the company-owned car. But ultimately avoided collecting any points...
Evanivitch said:
MDMA . said:
paul_c123 said:
Evanivitch said:
So why isn't director of Tesla UK Finance getting points?
I don't know, I guess its up to the courts to set the penalty.Evanivitch said:
paul_c123 said:
Evanivitch said:
Um lease, but yeah.
Still smacks of that guy who kept getting business fines for failing to identify that he was driving the company-owned car. But ultimately avoided collecting any points...
I thought "the company director" took the hit, including points on his/her licence, for FTF.Still smacks of that guy who kept getting business fines for failing to identify that he was driving the company-owned car. But ultimately avoided collecting any points...
Perhaps they should have done, then she would have been fined and given 6 points if she didn’t reply adequately or used a statutory defence to defend the charge.
paul_c123 said:
Evanivitch said:
Um lease, but yeah.
Still smacks of that guy who kept getting business fines for failing to identify that he was driving the company-owned car. But ultimately avoided collecting any points...
I thought "the company director" took the hit, including points on his/her licence, for FTF.Still smacks of that guy who kept getting business fines for failing to identify that he was driving the company-owned car. But ultimately avoided collecting any points...
Of course the whole premise behind the story seems to be a bit silly. It's faulty inevitable that a large organisation managing tens of thousands of cars will have occasional instances of errors, oversights or (as apparently in this case) replies being posted but not delivered. So are Tesla particularly bad in this respect. The article says they've been convicted 18 times - that's out of how many s172 requirements, the breat of which were presumably responded to correctly? Is that a better or worse record than other comparable lease or car hire companies? The article doesn't tell us any of that. It just gives us a single factoid with no context and invites is to tut at it.
Aretnap said:
Of course the whole premise behind the story seems to be a bit silly. It's faulty inevitable that a large organisation managing tens of thousands of cars will have occasional instances of errors, oversights or (as apparently in this case) replies being posted but not delivered. So are Tesla particularly bad in this respect. The article says they've been convicted 18 times - that's out of how many s172 requirements, the breat of which were presumably responded to correctly? Is that a better or worse record than other comparable lease or car hire companies? The article doesn't tell us any of that. It just gives us a single factoid with no context and invites is to tut at it.
All the company has to do is provide the information required of them. If they do that then there is no offence.Simple.
If the company officers act the ar5e then they should be sent personal requirements so they become personally liable and in the frame for 6 points.
A limited company doesn’t limit criminal liability for the directors.
2020vision said:
All the company has to do is provide the information required of them. If they do that then there is no offence.
Simple.
If the company officers act the ar5e then they should be sent personal requirements so they become personally liable and in the frame for 6 points.
A limited company doesn t limit criminal liability for the directors.
Yes it’s in the legislation, but I don’t recall it ever happening Simple.
If the company officers act the ar5e then they should be sent personal requirements so they become personally liable and in the frame for 6 points.
A limited company doesn t limit criminal liability for the directors.
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