Four Brits Face Harsh Penalties for Speeding
Four Brits Face Harsh Penalties for Speeding
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Alickadoo

Original Poster:

3,061 posts

40 months

Monday 17th June 2024
quotequote all
Four British men could face up to 4 years! in jail and have their sports cars confiscated for speeding in Switzerland.

https://www.thelocal.ch/20240617/speeding-brits-ha...

bigandclever

14,073 posts

255 months

Monday 17th June 2024
quotequote all
And?

cherryowen

12,196 posts

221 months

Monday 17th June 2024
quotequote all
You can tell how draconian Swiss roads policing is - IME the fastest cars on European motorways outside Switzerland all have "CH" on the back!


JulianHJ

8,850 posts

279 months

Monday 17th June 2024
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Isn't it common knowledge that the Swiss have a zero tolerance approach to speeding?

poo at Paul's

14,458 posts

192 months

Monday 17th June 2024
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One of my former Swiss colleagues was imprisoned for speeding for a month and they let him out during the day to come to work!
Was pretty funny tbh!

MOBB

4,100 posts

144 months

Monday 17th June 2024
quotequote all
JulianHJ said:
Isn't it common knowledge that the Swiss have a zero tolerance approach to speeding?
Exactly

CLK-GTR

1,561 posts

262 months

Monday 17th June 2024
quotequote all
cherryowen said:
You can tell how draconian Swiss roads policing is - IME the fastest cars on European motorways outside Switzerland all have "CH" on the back!
When i was living on the Italian border they were renowned for their speeding and parking. They know they can get away with it.


Everybody knows the Swiss live for rules, when in Switzerland at least. I'd never go stupidly over the limit when there.

zzrman

670 posts

206 months

Monday 17th June 2024
quotequote all
CLK-GTR said:
When i was living on the Italian border they were renowned for their speeding and parking. They know they can get away with it.


Everybody knows the Swiss live for rules, when in Switzerland at least. I'd never go stupidly over the limit when there.
I frequently drive there on business. It's rare to see a marked police car but they do have a fleet of unmarked BMW 5 series Tourings so beware.

If you want to take the piss then Switzerland is not the place to do it.

CLK-GTR

1,561 posts

262 months

Monday 17th June 2024
quotequote all
zzrman said:
I frequently drive there on business. It's rare to see a marked police car but they do have a fleet of unmarked BMW 5 series Tourings so beware.

If you want to take the piss then Switzerland is not the place to do it.
The Ticino police are creatures of habit and always frequent the same spots, you get to know them after a while. My favourite was the bridge where they'd wait to get people crossing the solid white line when changing lanes a couple of metres before it ended. rolleyes

AW10

4,549 posts

266 months

Monday 17th June 2024
quotequote all
What’s the plural for dumbass? Dumbasses? That’s what they are. They were caught doing silly speeds on what’s normally quite a congested piece of motorway. And 4 of them together. Did they think it would end well?

the tribester

2,761 posts

103 months

Monday 17th June 2024
quotequote all
125mph in a 75mph limit. Oh well.

GT9

8,107 posts

189 months

Monday 17th June 2024
quotequote all
bigandclever said:
And?
I'd say it was very big or clever of them.

vaud

55,583 posts

172 months

Monday 17th June 2024
quotequote all
MOBB said:
JulianHJ said:
Isn't it common knowledge that the Swiss have a zero tolerance approach to speeding?
Exactly
Yes.

It's not hard to research.

I love the country, but it is also where your neighbour will report you the police for speeding in the village. Or any other number of violations.

Metric Max

1,656 posts

239 months

Wednesday 19th June 2024
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Just come back from holiday in Europe. The Belgiums are just generally not very good at driving. The italians are insane and aggressive behind the wheel. The Swiss like to tailgate you really close even though you are doing a bit over the speed limit (GPS figure).
Then when you indicate and pull over they won't pass until you stop. They then carry on driving at the same speed as before, not faster. That's a real good way to encourage people to come to your country and spend money.
If the Swiss are as hot as I've heard about speeding I don't understand what is going on here

vaud

55,583 posts

172 months

Wednesday 19th June 2024
quotequote all
Metric Max said:
They then carry on driving at the same speed as before, not faster. That's a real good way to encourage people to come to your country and spend money.
If the Swiss are as hot as I've heard about speeding I don't understand what is going on here
They don't like speeding or other violations. It is your neighbour that is likely to report you for something, even a minor thing.

if you want to speed in Switzerland, find a valley that doesn't go anywhere and do a sighting run first, and don't speed through the villages or you mind find the police waiting for you at the bottom on your return.

Swiss go to France, Germany and Italy to speed.

sunnyb13

1,125 posts

55 months

Thursday 20th June 2024
quotequote all
As long as the cars are on finance, the authorities will have to return the cars

fourthpedal

104 posts

21 months

Thursday 20th June 2024
quotequote all
Metric Max said:
Just come back from holiday in Europe. The Belgiums are just generally not very good at driving. The italians are insane and aggressive behind the wheel. The Swiss like to tailgate you really close even though you are doing a bit over the speed limit (GPS figure).
Then when you indicate and pull over they won't pass until you stop. They then carry on driving at the same speed as before, not faster. That's a real good way to encourage people to come to your country and spend money.
If the Swiss are as hot as I've heard about speeding I don't understand what is going on here
Hah - I live in Switzerland, and yes following distance is an anathema. I think to some degree it's a combination of trying to not lose any time (that's the culture here) combined with trying to minimise fines and therefore eeking out the tolerances on speed cameras. Also the fines don't scale linearly: https://www.ch.ch/en/travel-and-emigrate/holidays-... . 1-5km/h is cheap, 6-10 starts hurting, and you don't want to get near 20.

They also don't care how close you are behind either: even on a quiet Sunday morning on the motorway I had multiple drivers swerve in very close in front of me after an overtake - no cars whatsoever in the vicinity, minimal speed difference because I was at around the limit.

vaud said:
They don't like speeding or other violations. It is your neighbour that is likely to report you for something, even a minor thing.
Never been reported for anything yet... The Swiss are actually very conflict avoidant in general. 200km/h on the motorway is going to be quite a shock to anyone.

But to combine the two: they're putting up more and more following-distance cameras on the motorway here, I think that's a pretty good thing actually.

fourthpedal

104 posts

21 months

Thursday 20th June 2024
quotequote all
sunnyb13 said:
As long as the cars are on finance, the authorities will have to return the cars
It's nuanced - links in German: https://www.nzz.ch/schweiz/auch-geleaste-fahrzeuge... which references federal court case https://www.bger.ch/ext/eurospider/live/de/php/aza... .

They don't have to return it if the driver is still likely to have access to the vehicle. It'll be up to the owners to figure out how to get it back.

vaud

55,583 posts

172 months

Thursday 20th June 2024
quotequote all
fourthpedal said:
Never been reported for anything yet...
Maybe it's just a Vaud / Valais thing wink

Mont Blanc

2,066 posts

60 months

Thursday 20th June 2024
quotequote all
Alickadoo said:
Four British men could face up to 4 years! in jail and have their sports cars confiscated for speeding in Switzerland.

https://www.thelocal.ch/20240617/speeding-brits-ha...
Idiots.

No sympathy from me.

I have driven in Switzerland numerous times recently, and had no issues at all. Just drive carefully, courteously, and stick to the speed limits like any normal person. I found Switzerland very pleasant to drive in.