Phones.....
Author
Discussion

Munter

Original Poster:

31,330 posts

264 months

Monday 12th July 2004
quotequote all
Just wondering...

Say a member of public was stopped at a red light, and was using their phone while stationary. A police car joins the queue 2 - 3 cars back and sees them on the phone but put it away as the lights go green.

Would you:
A)pull them over and give them a scare
B)pull them over and book them
C)Ignore it as they got off the phone before moving their vehicle?

KITT

5,345 posts

264 months

Monday 12th July 2004
quotequote all
AFAIK the rule is you can only use a phone in the car if it's stationary with the engine not running so I guess they could book him.

Streetcop

5,907 posts

261 months

Monday 12th July 2004
quotequote all
A or B depending on the circumstances; ie: previous convictions, attitude of driver, urgency of call etc etc..

I stopped two drivers today for mobile phone use. The second I followed for about a mile, in order to find a safe place to pull him. Throughout that mile, he didn't look in his mirror once. Turned out he was a solicitor...

Both were issued fixed penalties. The solicitor was very apologetic as he was looking at being reported for due care and attention, such was the distance followed and the fact he negotiated a roundabout whilst on the phone.

Street

>> Edited by Streetcop on Monday 12th July 17:36

Munter

Original Poster:

31,330 posts

264 months

Monday 12th July 2004
quotequote all
Yeah I knew it was against the rules.....but I just wondered if most BiB would give a ticking off rather than book someone as the car was stationary.

FLAT_STEVE

1,535 posts

270 months

Monday 12th July 2004
quotequote all
What if you saw a car in a car park, with the engine on and the driver on the phone, but on closer inspection saw a large steering wheel lock still on the wheel, and said driver gave the explanation that as it was a hot day he was letting the aircon work and had no intention of driving while using the phone?

towman

14,938 posts

262 months

Monday 12th July 2004
quotequote all
A real smartarse question this....what if it`s one of those hybrid cars running off the leccy?

madant69

847 posts

270 months

Monday 12th July 2004
quotequote all
Streetcop said:
A or B depending on attitude of driver

Absolutely THE most important test you'll ever pass...the attitude test.

No other test failure can lead to fines, points, CS inhalation and ASP bruises

Anyway shaddup I got me skippers exam tomorrow and need to start revising...

Buffalo

5,475 posts

277 months

Monday 12th July 2004
quotequote all
Streetcop said:
A or B depending on the circumstances; ie: previous convictions, attitude of driver, urgency of call etc etc..

I stopped two drivers today for mobile phone use. The second I followed for about a mile, in order to find a safe place to pull him. Throughout that mile, he didn't look in his mirror once. Turned out he was a solicitor...

Both were issued fixed penalties. The solicitor was very apologetic as he was looking at being reported for due care and attention, such was the distance followed and the fact he negotiated a roundabout whilst on the phone.

Street

>> Edited by Streetcop on Monday 12th July 17:36


I'm glad someone is pulling people over for this.

I didn't agree with a specific ruling for mobile phones, but i am VERY convinced that people cannot drive safely when using a phone held in their hands or under their chin.

If you see a car do something stupid lately 9 out of 10 times IME it has a person using a mobile phone at the wheel. Its usually always where they need two hands or more concentration, i.e. roundabout, hill start etc.

Watched a guy yesterday in Bath trying to do a hillstart on a very steep hill, pulling out from a T-junction obscurred by parked cars, with the phone under his right ear. His first three attempts resulted in him going more backwards thatn forwards. Then he burnt his clutch trying get up the hill then turned right whilst chaging to second - still with his right hand holding the phone, allowing the wheel to spin back to centre, aiming him at the wall of a house. He then snatched the wheel and whipped it to the right again narrowly missing the curb and the parked cars on the other side of the road....

It never once occured to him to even put the phone on the seat to get out of the junction and carry his on with conversation when on the straight road again... That would have been better than nothing!

It seems to be more common now, unless its bugging me so much that i just notice it more.

>> Edited by Buffalo on Monday 12th July 20:07

Streetcop

5,907 posts

261 months

Monday 12th July 2004
quotequote all
I caught up with one of the drivers whilst he was in standing traffic (after I'd performed a U-turn to get to him)...

The other drivers in front and behind him, clapped as I blue lighted him..(Obviously the phone use had been bugging them also... )

Street